From “one of the greatest storytellers we have” (Robert Bly), an urgent invitation to allow the oldest stories — and the Greatest Story — to reshape our own.
There’s an old Irish belief that if you aren’t wrapped in a cloak of story you will be unprepared for what the world will hurl at you. You remain adolescent at just the moment a culture worth its salt requires you to become a real, grown, human being.
In Liturgies of the Wild, acclaimed mythographer, storyteller and Christian thinker Martin Shaw argues that we live in a myth-impoverished age and that such poverty has left us vulnerable to stories that may not wish us well. Drawing on the “ancient technologies” of myths and initiatory rites, Shaw provides a road to wholeness, maturity and connection. He teaches us to read a myth the way it wants to be read; provides vivid retellings of tales powerful enough to carry you through life’s travails; and shows you how to gather and reshape your own
thrown-away stories. Most vividly, he shares how these ancient technologies led him—unexpectedly—to Christ, “the True Myth,” by way of a thirty-year journey and a 101-night vigil in a Dartmoor forest.
Combining scholarly erudition with nimble storytelling in the tradition of C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien, Liturgies of the Wild is a thrilling counsel of resistance and delight in the face of many modern monsters.
“From one of the master storytellers of our time, here is a rosary of soaring myth, gripping narrative and deep wisdom, all told with breathtaking verve that enchants and sweeps us along, from first word to last. A superb, inspiring read.” – Gabor Maté M.D.
“It is only in myth, and through its counterpart in liturgy, that the true depth of meaning in our world can be brought forth. Martin Shaw is our greatest living storyteller, and here he offers an enraptured validation of all that is awe-inspiring and profoundly implicit in a world where we are cabined, cribbed, confined by the explicit and banal. I celebrate the message of this wonderful book.” – Iain McGilchrist, author of The Master and His Emissary and The Matter With Things
“Shaw is at home with the strangeness of the natural world as much as with the far stranger world of spirit, collapsing the distinction between the two, illuminating grit and earthiness with shafts of light. I loved this tender, honest book for the way it defamiliarizes the well-worn pathways of religion, bringing to life the power within and compelling the reader to take note: here be dragons, but also grace in almost indecently extravagant abundance. I read of Shaw’s midlife baptism and wept. I hope you will do too”. – Catherine Coldstream, author of Cloistered: My Years as a Nun
“Decades of learning, practice and refinement shine in every line of Liturgies of the Wild. And what makes it doubly exciting to read is that Martin Shaw’s personal story continues to unfold in ways that he shares with his readers. Which is to say Shaw dwells in a living and expansive tradition. The vitality alive in him is movingly transmitted through his wonderful work” – Mark Vernon, author of Awake! William Blake & the Power of the Imagination