It’s
official! Willa Cather will join the short list of Fanda’s favorite female
writers. Other than Agatha Christie, J.K. Rowling, and Edith Wharton, most of
my favorite writers have been males.
Ruth
has told me that it is a slow-moving
read, very quiet, a-lazy-day reading. And since my previous reading is Siddharta, which was so deep and
meditative, I was so grateful to get next into this book (and will definitely read
more of Willa Cather!).
Actually Death is based on life and career of two
historical French Catholic priests who served as missionaries on the New Mexico
around 19th century. Cather then wove them into this beautiful and
quiet narrative; following neither plot, nor chronology. From scattered stories
or events, Cather took us to learn not only the missionaries’ struggles against
rooted faith of the Mexicans and Indians, but also the unfriendly landscape, the
corrupt priests, and the injustice suffered by the innocent people.
With her
slow pace, Cather was able to show vividly the raw but beautiful wild nature
among the desserts and prairies. It is interesting and at the same time
entertaining. And she was also brilliant in building the characters and
highlighting the two priests’ sweet and mutual friendship. Their friendship,
especially, is so sweet—how they were so different, but could understand each
other, and always ready to support the other when needed. And through Cather’s
deep scrutiny of these two personalities, we can see what make a good missionary.
Bishop (later
archbishop) Latour is really fit for the post; he’s intelligent, healthy, mature,
organized, with high discipline and self-respect. However he always feels
lonely and unfulfilled, though he has achieved his ambition to build a
cathedral, in the end his mission felt like a duty satisfyingly accomplished,
and that’s all. The very opposite of his archbishop, Father Joseph “Blanchet”
Vaillant is a warm, humble, and easy going person with weak health. He might
not have had brilliant achievement, but he does his works with humble joy, even
when he must sacrifice his own comfort. I think Father Joseph is the true
missionary—he is chosen by God to do His Wish. And with his simplicity, he
earned many souls. But in the end, both are really chosen by God—side by side,
each with all in his power—to plough His Field in New Mexico.
What a
refreshing, calm reading this has been!