Good Read
April 2025

Stone Yard Devotional by Charlotte Wood

Suzanne Shanahan

Leo and Arlene Hawk Executive Director, Institute for Social Concerns

I feel chastened by the world… Nick Cave

Charlotte Wood’s Stone Yard Devotional (2023) is an eloquently spare and finely observed novel about a middle aged woman’s quest to make sense of her life and the world around her. The Booker Prize short listed novel, framed as a journal, begins as the main character is retreating from her life—her environmental work and her husband–to an isolated religious community in desolate New South Wales close to her family home she left some thirty years prior after the death of her parents. The woman is not religious, thinks little of God and is perplexed by prayer. The odd choice to take refuge in a community of religious sisters focuses her lurking despair. Unreconciled guilt and grief quietly torment her but she finds an unexpected comfort in the secluded and rhythmic nature of daily life in this community. The woman notes, “The beauty of being here is largely the silence, after all. Not having to explain or endlessly converse.” One reviewer called the novel an extended meditative vigil. 

Wood has an uncanny appreciation for detail and the banality of daily life. You are able to see how strangely attractive—freeing, calming, soothing– a life apart and constituted by nothingness might be. As another reviewer notes “It is a novel driven by moral crisis rather than worldly action.” The subtle narrative and simplicity of day to day life in the refuge is marked by three events: a mouse infestation, the remains of a Nun being returned and the arrival of a person from the woman’s past. Each is viscerally disquieting. In this remote place so apart from the world a sound, a look can take on significant meaning. But each event also pushes the protagonist to confront her own past. Stone’s persistent refusal to cast clear judgment on the woman feels somehow generous.

The novel is odd, haunting, wrenching and in many ways unsatisfying if you are seeking a neat resolution. Ultimately it is a book about what it means to be good. Taken as such it can be an extraordinary read that leaves you with a sense of abundant grace.

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