Then Came Heaven

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If you want a fast paced novel that keeps you on the edge of your seat, don’t bother with this one. But if you enjoy a leisurely book that captures the life of a bygone time, you will probably enjoy Then Came Heaven. This is LaVyrle Spencer’s last novel and I am going to miss her. She is responsible for three of my favorites; Morning Glory, Bittersweet, and Years. Even when I didn’t like all of her books, I could not fault her storytelling ability.

Then Came Heaven is set in Browerville, Minnesota, a small Polish-Catholic town where community life is centered around St. Joseph’s church and school. Two of the most respected members of the community are Eddie Olczek, the janitor for the church and school and his wife Krystyna. They are always ready to help anybody in any way they can. When the book opens, Krystyna’s car stalls on a railroad crossing and she is killed. Eddie’s grief is painful. He and Krystyna loved each other devotedly and he is lost without her. The whole town grieves with him, including the teachers at the school who are Benedictine nuns. Their rules of life restrain them from giving into their grief and openly expressing their sympathy, which is especially hard on Sister Regina.

Sister Regina has been a nun since she was 17. Her family always expected that she would join the convent and for years she has been happy with her teaching and her life, but lately she has been having doubts. The rules of the community, which once had provided her with a sense of comfort and stability, now seem like a straitjacket – binding her, and preventing her from expressing her feelings.

The death of Krystyna brings all Sister Regina’s doubts about her life as a nun to the fore and she applies for a dispensation from her vows. Jean (her name after she leaves the convent) has always admired the devotion Eddie has shown to his family, but her attraction to him is only one of the reasons why she leaves the convent. Jean goes back home to her family, does some soul searching and finally realizes that she wants to be a wife and mother and that she loves Eddie and he loves her. They are both afraid though, that if they marry they will scandalize the town.

I began this book with some trepidation. I went to St. Joseph’s School in Bowling Green, Kentucky in the mid 1950’s and have happy memories of that time. I was all set to bristle if Spencer put down the nuns or slighted religious life. I need not have worried. The nuns and their life are depicted with truth and fairness. These are well-rounded characters – neither dried-up bitter women nor plaster saints, but real people. Spencer writes of many of the practices of old-fashioned Catholicism that had me weeping with nostalgia. The Angelus bell, fasting during Lent, and the smell of candlewax and incense in church are all just some of the old customs she writes about.

I enjoyed this book as a piece of Americana, but to be truthful, it did not have the emotional intensity of Morning Glory nor the sweep of Years. Eddie and Jean were likable characters, but they were not as memorable as Jesse and Abigail from Hummingbird. All in all, I was glad I had read the book, but it did not make me want to go out and grab people and say, “You’ve got to read this book”! Still if you’re a fan of LaVyrle Spencer, you probably won’t be disappointed.

Reviewed by Ellen Micheletti

Grade: C+

Sensuality: Subtle

Review Date: 13/02/98

Publication Date: 1999

Recent Comments …

  1. excellent book: interesting, funny dialogs, deep understanding of each character, interesting secondary characters, and also sexy.

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