Skip to content

Little Saint
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

Little Saint Paperback - 2001

by Hannah Green

Ostensibly the story of one day, the 24 hours described in "Little Saint" have 20 centuries woven through them. In this exquisite book, Green provides a wondrous and lyrical portrait of a small French village, and of Saint Foy, who was martyred as a 12-year-old girl in the year 303.


From the publisher

Hannah Green was born in Ohio, studied writing with Vladimir Nabokov and Wallace Stegner, wrote for The New Yorker, and created one memorable novel that Richard Ellmann described as possessing "the ecstasy that is fiction, is art." The reviewers' comments about that novel, The Dead of the House, have particular pertinence to the book at hand. Of Little Saint it may also be said, as The New York Times said of Hannah Green's novel, "[She] writes under the eye of eter-nity. . . . Time flows in and around the events in her book like some tune that ties all events together." As Stegner said, "This is evocation at the level of magic."

When the novel was reissued recently by Books & Company Turtle Point Press, the Times observed: "Her classic work [has] been received with almost as much critical enthusiasm as its original publication a generation ago." Again, this echoed the judgment in The Washington Post of her writing as "a kind of dream, a protracted prose poem of singular delicacy, filled with generosity, love, and wisdom."

From the jacket flap

In the early 1970s, Hannah Green and her husband came upon a small village called Conques, curled like a conch shell in the mountains of south-central France. Entranced, she returned to this numinous place again and again, drawn to the story of the little saint whose spirit fills the lives of the people there. Housed in the village's yellow stone basilica sits the gold reliquary of Sainte Foy, who was beheaded in the fourth century for refusing to deny her faith before a Roman consul. Little Saint, a book written in ecstasy, is at once a moving and passionate tribute to Sainte Foy, a lyrical evocation of daily life in Conques, and a vivid chronicle of the author's intensely felt spiritual journey.

Details

  • Title Little Saint
  • Author Hannah Green
  • Binding Paperback
  • Edition 1ST
  • Pages 300
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Modern Library, NY
  • Date 2001-07-03
  • Features Maps
  • ISBN 9780375757471 / 0375757473
  • Weight 0.83 lbs (0.38 kg)
  • Dimensions 8.6 x 5.5 x 0.54 in (21.84 x 13.97 x 1.37 cm)
  • Themes
    • Chronological Period: Ancient (To 499 A.D.)
    • Cultural Region: French
    • Religious Orientation: Christian
  • Library of Congress subjects Foy, Conques (Aveyron, France) - Religious life
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 2001030447
  • Dewey Decimal Code 270.109

Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

MORNING: DESCENT INTO THE TREASURE


On the far side of the cloister in the long, chapel-like room called the Treasure, she sits on her throne--a small stiff gold figure robed in gold and covered with jewels and crowned with a golden diadem.

Up the hill from there, Jack stands tall beside the fountain behind the little house we have rented for the summer. Here we are once again after several returns, here we are in the month of June, not yet St. John's Day. Jack is about to mend his bicycle tire. This afternoon we arc going to Lunel.

The springwater flows forth through the mouth of a mask deep in a niche in the stone embankment of the hillside and splashes into the round basin below. Sunlight quivers on the surface of the water, and dapples of watery sunshine fly like lunar moths on the stones of the niche above, and across the mottled face of the mask, which resembles the grimacing head that guards the church from the outer wall of the tribune on the north, high above the western entrance. The bells ring for eleven o'clock.

Sunbrowned and strong, Jack takes the inner tube in his competent hands, good hands, and plunges it into the water.

"Ah, mais il est beau! Il est fin! Il est un bon garcon!" old Madame Benoit was saying this morning, smiling her smile of infinite sweetness, her eyes as blue as the sky, her face and her hair as white as the clouds. I was in her tiny apartment in the old convent for a few minutes to pick up a book she wanted to lend me. "I am not afraid of death," she said quietly. "I have my faith." And she lifted her right hand in a gesture like a bird flying off, a gesture so perfect that I could see as she did it how her soul would fly out of the window and up, and she would go down there--la bas--to the cemetery below the church. She waved her hand in that direction. "I have my reservation," she said with a mixture of pride and humor.

Sometimes she speaks triumphantly: "I will go on the cloak of the Virgin," she says.

Just now I remember to tell Jack. "Oh, Madame Benoit was saying earlier this morning, 'Oh, but he is handsome, he is fine, he is a good boy. Everyone agrees!'" Jack laughs, pleased. He will be fifty in November. But Madame Benoit is ninety-one.

Ninety-one! "Quatre-vingt-onze!"

"Quatre-vingt-onze et un demi," said my friend Rosalie, correcting me, nodding her head tenderly up and down. (Not in Madame Benoit's presence.)

La Rosalie de bon matin
S'en va t'au jardin
Pour y culir la brioulete
La belle fleur ...


One fine morning Rosalie
Goes out to her garden
To cut the brioulete,
That pretty flower

So sings Madame Benoit, who sings, who sings, who has a song for every occasion, and who, ninety-one and a half, and tiny and plump and limber as a rag doll in her soft clothes, her soft shoes, goes with her cane up and down the steep streets of Conques with a swiftness and agility so remarkable that someone--I could not make out who she was talking about, but someone, another woman--had gotten very excited and somewhat angry, declaring she was on this account "Pas normale." "Pas normale!" she repeated, echoing her friend's anger, and laughing.

The other day when Madame Benoit was walking with her cousin Madame Fabre (from whom we rent our house), out the Rue du Chateau, beyond the old Porte du Foumouze with its Romanesque fountain and, a little farther on, the lacy iron cross that rises above an ancient stone Virgin, now beheaded, there, Madame Fabre told us, Madame Benoit tripped and fell down on her knees in a mud puddle. Madame Fabre lifted her hands to her face to show us how aghast she'd been. But in that very moment, Madame Benoit turned her head and looked up. I am doing the Stations of the Cross," she said.

Madame Benoit is a force. I am moved by her and drawn to her. It makes me feel warm to sit near her. Her breath smells of strawberry jam. Sometimes she says, like a litany, in her warm low voice, "Sainte Foy, holy martyr who died for Christ, Sainte Foy protects us here at Conques" and she smiles her smile of pride.

And besides she has a memory that goes back further than her ninety-one years, straight back through her mother and her grandmother and her great-grandmother, so she can tell you, for instance, the story of the great complot of 1791 when the people of Conques saved the statue of Sainte Foy and the rest of the golden treasure from the soldiers who were coming to confiscate it. "Oh, there was a terrible storm that night," she says. "There was thunder and lightning and the rain fell in torrents, the streets turned into rushing rivers and veritable cascades. No one dared to go out . . ."

The bells ring eleven a second time. It is their way. To the south, a quarter of a mile off and up in the sun-green afternoon, the wooden cross at the high outermost point of the gorge of the Ouche stands tall and thin and slightly askew against the sky. Above us bees hum in the wisteria that grows over the fence along the wall. Below us the stone roofs glint in the sunlight.


Les lauzes they call these stones cut from the schist rock and laid like slates in a scalloped pattern as beautiful as shining fish scales across the steep roofs of Conques. The schist stones are blue-gray with a sheen of silver (mica) or rose-beige with gleams of gold (mica), and the dark lichens and mosses have grown over them, as they have over the craggy rocks that jut forth from the mountainsides here and rise up like castle ruins in the chasms. Cut in irregular slabs and laid on their sides and bound and covered with the pinkish mortar and stucco made from the red sand of the Dourdou, these are the stones from which the houses of Conques are built.

Carrying my notebook and my pencil in my tiny deerskin Indian bag, I descend in among them, down through the roses, down the stairs that form the little street--la ruelle--that runs past our house, and down through the narrow stone streets below. From above me, from their kitchens half-shuttered against the noon heat, come the happy voices of the Conquois finishing their lunches.

The Place de l'Eglise is still empty. And it is silent except for the hoarse whistling screeches of the swallows (the dark swifts) soaring, wheeling, darting into and out from the ancient yellowed walls of the basilica; and the splashing of the Plo--the spring whose virtues were already praised in the twelfth-century Guide for the Pilgrim to Saint James of Compostela because Sainte Foy of Conques had become a major stop along the Via Podiensis, the route of Notre Dame du Puy, one of the four pilgrim routes that lead across France toward that far Finis-terre (end of the earth) to the west, beyond the Pyrenees, where, toward the end of the eighth century, the body of Saint James was discovered by the hermit Pelayo beneath an ancient shrine on a thickly wooded hill over which a great star hovered.

"The Burgundians and the Teutons who go to Saint James by the Via Podiensis must go to venerate the relics of Sainte Foy, virgin and martyr," writes the author of the Guide (traditionally thought to be Aymery Picaud); and he tells us the manner of her martyr-death at Agen and that of the blessed Caprais, bishop of the town, whom she inspired. "Finally," he writes, "the very precious body of the blessed Faith, virgin and martyr, was entombed with honor in a valley called, in the common speech, Conques (Conquas), and over her sepulcher was built a beautiful basilica, where for the glory of God, even up to our own day, the Rule of Saint Benedict is observed with the greatest care; many graces are granted to those who come to venerate the relics of Sainte Foy, both to those who come in good health and to the sick; in front of the doors of the church there flows forth a most excellent source whose virtues are more admirable than anyone can say. Her fete is celebrated on the sixth of October."

Media reviews

Praise for Little Saint

"The majority of novels aren't half as well written as Little Saint... At bottom and essentially, this is a book about Faith."
-- The New York Times Book Review

"Not only a record of religious experience but a rapturous hymn to the saint and her devoted villagers."
-- The New Yorker

"A miracle ... utterly endearing.... Little Saint should endure as long as the bones of Conques."
-- Chicago Tribune

"This strange and beautiful book, with its magical sentences that dance and sing right off the page into the reader's heart, seamlessly weaves the remote past into the living present more than any work I know. Learned, complex, exuberant, and deeply personal, this meditation on the millennia-long life of a French child martyr is a fitting climax to Hannah Green's devoted life of letters."
-- Alix Kates Shulman, author of Drinking the Rain

"In this glorious work, Hannah Green takes us to the ancient village of Conques, into the world of the sacred and the simple everyday. As she and her husband, Jack, are embraced by the villagers, we too feel intimately welcomed. We meet the wonderful ninety-one-and-a-half-year-old (!) Madame Benoit, the artist Kalia, and hear stories of hardship, joy, and faith, even of the mischievous streak of their beloved saint. It is one day; it is Eternity. When Hannah writes about her discovery of Sainte Foy, she writes of rapture, and this fills Little Saint with mysterious life, magnificent light."
-- Fae Myenne Ng, author of Bone

Citations

  • New York Times, 09/02/2001, Page 20

About the author

Hannah Green was born in Ohio, studied writing with Vladimir Nabokov and Wallace Stegner, wrote for The New Yorker, and created one memorable novel that Richard Ellmann described as possessing "the ecstasy that is fiction, is art." The reviewers' comments about that novel, The Dead of the House, have particular pertinence to the book at hand. Of Little Saint it may also be said, as The New York Times said of Hannah Green's novel, "[She] writes under the eye of eter-nity. . . . Time flows in and around the events in her book like some tune that ties all events together." As Stegner said, "This is evocation at the level of magic."

When the novel was reissued recently by Books & Company Turtle Point Press, the Times observed: "Her classic work [has] been received with almost as much critical enthusiasm as its original publication a generation ago." Again, this echoed the judgment in The Washington Post of her writing as "a kind of dream, a protracted prose poem of singular delicacy, filled with generosity, love, and wisdom."

Back to Top

More Copies for Sale

Little Saint (Modern Library (Paperback))
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

Little Saint (Modern Library (Paperback))

by Green, Hannah

  • Used
Condition
UsedGood
ISBN 10 / ISBN 13
9780375757471 / 0375757473
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Skokie, Illinois, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
A$7.72
A$6.07 shipping to USA

Show Details

Description:
UsedGood. There is either a name, note, or insciprtion on the inside cover. We flipped through this book and didn't notice any notes or underlines. The cover has visible markings and wear. There are some tears on the corners of the spine but doesn't effect biding Fast Shipping - Each order powers our free bookstore in Chicago and sending books to Africa!
Item Price
A$7.72
A$6.07 shipping to USA
Little Saint (Modern Library (Paperback))
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

Little Saint (Modern Library (Paperback))

by Green, Hannah

  • Used
Condition
Used - Good
ISBN 10 / ISBN 13
9780375757471 / 0375757473
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Frederick, Maryland, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 4 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
A$7.83
A$6.07 shipping to USA

Show Details

Description:
Random House Publishing Group. Used - Good. Good condition. A copy that has been read but remains intact. May contain markings such as bookplates, stamps, limited notes and highlighting, or a few light stains.
Item Price
A$7.83
A$6.07 shipping to USA
Little Saint (Modern Library (Paperback))
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

Little Saint (Modern Library (Paperback))

by Green, Hannah

  • Used
Condition
Used - Very Good
ISBN 10 / ISBN 13
9780375757471 / 0375757473
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Frederick, Maryland, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 4 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
A$7.83
A$6.07 shipping to USA

Show Details

Description:
Random House Publishing Group. Used - Very Good. Very Good condition. A copy that may have a few cosmetic defects. May also contain light spine creasing or a few markings such as an owner’s name, short gifter’s inscription or light stamp.
Item Price
A$7.83
A$6.07 shipping to USA
Little Saint

Little Saint

by Hannah Green

  • Used
  • very good
  • Paperback
Condition
Used - Very Good
Binding
Paperback
ISBN 10 / ISBN 13
9780375757471 / 0375757473
Quantity Available
2
Seller
Seattle, Washington, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 4 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
A$9.11
FREE shipping to USA

Show Details

Description:
Random House Publishing Group, 2001. Paperback. Very Good. May have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed.
Item Price
A$9.11
FREE shipping to USA
Little Saint

Little Saint

by Hannah Green

  • Used
  • good
  • Paperback
Condition
Used - Good
Binding
Paperback
ISBN 10 / ISBN 13
9780375757471 / 0375757473
Quantity Available
3
Seller
Seattle, Washington, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 4 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
A$9.11
FREE shipping to USA

Show Details

Description:
Random House Publishing Group, 2001. Paperback. Good. Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed.
Item Price
A$9.11
FREE shipping to USA
LITTLE SAINT (Modern Library (Paperback))
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

LITTLE SAINT (Modern Library (Paperback))

by Green, Hannah

  • Used
  • Paperback
Condition
Used - Very Good
Binding
Paperback
ISBN 10 / ISBN 13
9780375757471 / 0375757473
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
A$9.12
A$5.32 shipping to USA

Show Details

Description:
Random House, Inc. Used - Very Good. 2001. Paperback. Pap. Minor shelf-wear. Very Good. (Subject: Theology).
Item Price
A$9.12
A$5.32 shipping to USA
LITTLE SAINT (Modern Library (Paperback))
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

LITTLE SAINT (Modern Library (Paperback))

by Hannah Green

  • Used
  • Paperback
Condition
USED Very Good
Binding
Paperback
ISBN 10 / ISBN 13
9780375757471 / 0375757473
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Montclair, New Jersey, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
A$10.64
A$7.59 shipping to USA

Show Details

Description:
Random House, Inc., April 2008. Paperback. USED Very Good.
Item Price
A$10.64
A$7.59 shipping to USA
LITTLE SAINT (Modern Library (Paperback))
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

LITTLE SAINT (Modern Library (Paperback))

by Hannah Green

  • Used
  • Paperback
Condition
USED Very Good
Binding
Paperback
ISBN 10 / ISBN 13
9780375757471 / 0375757473
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Montclair, New Jersey, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
A$10.64
A$7.59 shipping to USA

Show Details

Description:
Random House, Inc., April 2008. Paperback. USED Very Good.
Item Price
A$10.64
A$7.59 shipping to USA
Little Saint (Modern Library (Paperback))
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

Little Saint (Modern Library (Paperback))

by Green, Hannah

  • New
  • Paperback
Condition
New
Binding
Paperback
ISBN 10 / ISBN 13
9780375757471 / 0375757473
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Alexandria, Virginia, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
A$12.16
A$6.08 shipping to USA

Show Details

Description:
Paperback. New.
Item Price
A$12.16
A$6.08 shipping to USA
Little Saint
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

Little Saint

by Green, Hannah

  • Used
Condition
Used - Very Good
ISBN 10 / ISBN 13
9780375757471 / 0375757473
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Mishawaka, Indiana, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
A$19.55
FREE shipping to USA

Show Details

Description:
Random House Publishing Group. Used - Very Good. Used book that is in excellent condition. May show signs of wear or have minor defects.
Item Price
A$19.55
FREE shipping to USA