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Echoes of the Inquisition
Charmaine Craig told MPR's Euan Kerr that her story has many echoes today, both in her own life and the world at large.

AS HEARD ON
All Things Considered,
January 29, 2002
Hear the complete interview with MPR's Euan Kerr.
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READING
January 29, 2002
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RELATED LINKS
Charmaine Craig filmography

Chapter One, an excerpt from The Good Men

 

More All Things Considered books

The Good Men: A Novel of HeresyThe Good Men: A Novel of Heresy
By Charmaine Craig
Putnam Publishing Group, 2002

(from the publisher) Charmaine Craig was studying medieval history at Harvard when she first encountered the startling testimony of Grazida Lizier, a young woman tried by the Inquisition in 1320. Even after she was accepted into the MFA program at the University of California at Irvine, Craig found she couldn't stop thinking about the seven-hundred-year-old document and knew she had to write a novel based on it.

The Good Men is the gripping, epic story of what happened when religious persecution turned Christian against Christian and neighbor against neighbor in Montaillou, a small village in southwest France. Three generations of characters are torn between desires for spiritual grace and fleshly pleasure.Historically accurate and pitch-perfect, The Good Men movingly dramatizes how relatively small, and at times barely comprehensible, differences in faith served as the impetus behind a tragedy of enormous proportions. Charmaine Craig reanimates questions of religious belief and faith that are as relevant now as in the 14th century and, in the process, exposes human nature in all its baseness as well as beauty.

This remarkable first novel brilliantly evokes a horrific event in history, with a scope and emotional power that call to mind Victor Hugo's Les Miserables.

The Good Men includes an epigraph that discusses the history on which the novel is based, and other apparatus, including maps, a glossary of heretical terms, and two time lines.

 

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