Reviews
Thurston's work is unique and any study of the gospel of Mark would be enriched by her work.
The Christian Librarian
If you want to see something new in the work of the first evangelist, a couple of hours spent with this book might well be the prompting that you need.
The Way
Poetry (the author's own, and that of others, including R.S. Thomas), references to spiritual writers--including several to Thomas Merton--and to other parts of Scripture are scattered throughout each chapter such that the writing never becomes dull or predictable. . . . It would make an excellent gift for anyone at any stage of the journey of discipleship, including the bored, the busy, and the beginner.
The Merton Journal
This lovely book originated as a series of retreat conferences to the Society of the Sacred Cross Tymawr convent in Wales. . . . The term 'landscape' is significant because that is the approach Thurston, a biblical scholar who has given strong emphasis to the spirituality of the biblical text, takes in reflecting on the message of Mark. For each symbolic part of the landscape the author offers the reader probing reflections on the meaning of the gospel for Christian life.
The Bible Today
This lovely book originated as a series of retreat conferences to the Society of the Sacred Cross Tymawr convent in Wales. . . . The term 'landscape' is significant because that is the approach Thurston, a biblical scholar who has given strong emphasis to the spirituality of the biblical text, takes in reflecting on the message of Mark. For each symbolic part of the landscape the author offers the reader probing reflections on the meaning of the gospel for Christian life.
The Bible Today
The importance of this book is . . . that Thurston is able to draw fresh insights from thinking spatially, propelling the reader into engagement with the Gospel text and with the compelling person of Jesus. . . . Thurston speaks from a place where scholarship and prayer intersect. Her prose reflects a deeply internalized reading of Mark's Gospel. This is not an erudite study, but rather an imaginative enlivening of the Gospel.
National Catholic Reporter
Bonnie Thurston has more than done her homework on the Gospel of St. Mark. In this book she narrates insight from her lectio. Christians are never done with the Gospels and it is imperative that we each have our own direct access to that precious text, but sometimes there's commentary from the person on the path ahead of you. With this book we are invited to that retreat once upon a time in Wales.
Meg Funk, MegFunk.com, Our Lady of Grace Monastery, Beech Grove, Indiana
This timely work (as we enter a new lectionary cycle) will bless my preaching without question. In this accessible piece Jesus comes close to us. Not only was my mind fed, but this book `spoke to me' intimately. The painful places in my life became comforted. The uncertain became a welcomed friend, and a holy place. This will likely become required reading for those seeking standing in our tradition. . . . This book is simply a gift. I receive it as grace-Good News!
The Reverend Thaddaeus Burwell Allen, Regional Minister, The Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), Parkersburg, West Virginia
In recent decades the panorama of Markan studies has been dotted with many studies of the geography and topical references in Mark, and of their theological importance. Thurston's work truly breaks new ground by sounding the depths of settings such as the desert, valleys, journeys and the mountains. By combining the skill of an exegete, the imagination of a poet, and the religious sensitivity of a wise woman, Thurston, in good company with the first commentary on Mark, has brought from her storehouse things old and things new (Matt 13:52).
John R. Donahue, SJ, Research Professor in Theology, Loyola College in Maryland
Bonnie Thurston invites us to join her on a journey that begins in the wilderness and ends in a garden. On the way she opens our eyes to the significance of the details in St. Mark's story that we so easily miss-details about where events take place-not just in the wilderness and the garden, but in the house and by the sea, on the mountain and in the city. For Mark, however, the garden of the resurrection is not, after all, the end of the story, but the setting for an invitation to continue the journey into unknown territory. In this book, spirituality is based on sound scholarship. To read St Mark's story through Bonnie Thurston's eyes is, as she herself puts it, to make the Gospel `dance.
Morna D. Hooker, Lady Margaret's Professor Emerita, University of Cambridge