- Home
- biography & autobiography
- religion
- In the House of My Pilgrimage
In the House of My Pilgrimage
Violence, Noetic Healing, and Personhood
Edited by Xenia Sheehan
Foreword by Stephen Freeman
Imprint: Resource Publications
Donald Sheehan (1940–2010) earned a PhD in English from the University of Wisconsin (1969); he was executive director of The Frost Place in Franconia, New Hampshire (1978–2005), and senior lecturer in English, classics, and master of arts in liberal studies at Dartmouth College (1989–2004). He is author of The Psalms of David: Translated from the Septuagint Greek (2013); The Grace of Incorruption (2015); and The Shield of Psalmic Prayer (2020); and co-translator with Olga Andrejev of Pavel Florensky’s Iconostasis (1996).
Xenia Sheehan is a retired editor with a BA in philosophy (1963), an MA in counseling (1987), and graduate study in English (UW) and a full range of Orthodox subjects at St. Vladimir’s and St. Tikhon’s Seminaries.
“Donald Sheehan combined his cultured erudition and literary gifts with deep and all-embracing faith. As this volume attests, he had an uncanny ability to traverse the expanses of the biblical, patristic, and literary worlds and to present them to others with the insight and meekness of his Orthodox Christian heart. Reading him provides nourishment for the mind and a balm for the soul.”
—Alexis Torrance, associate professor of Byzantine theology, University of Notre Dame
“Greeks of the Orthodox tradition speak of a man like Donald Sheehan as a κοσμοκαλόγερος—a monk in the world. Through a life of noetic prayer, he stands solidly in the world while apprehending the invisible reality of God’s nearness. Such persons become the intimate friends of God. You might say that they become prayer. With this book, Sheehan and his beloved Xenia show us how such lives occur, how far such lives reach.”
—Scott Cairns, author of Slow Pilgrim
“In the House of My Pilgrimage is so rich that to categorize it would inevitably be reductive, for it contains Donald Sheehan’s own poems, brilliant and utterly original readings of others’ poetry, autobiographical reflections, and preeminently, meditations on his own spiritual journey. The book is radically eclectic, yet also truly coherent by way of the enlightened and enlightening spirit that informs it. That spirit will be familiar to generations of colleagues and students, and welcomed by new acquaintances.”
—Sydney Lea, Vermont poet laureate (2011–2015)
“One man’s journey to Christ from a life of street fighting and estrangement, animated with a lifetime search for God, Donald Sheehan’s work tells a moving story of overcoming violence and confusion with love and faith. Courageous and spiritual, this book conveys both the capriciousness of human life and the awesome permanence of God.”
—Lasha Tchantouridze, Davis Center associate, Harvard University