Simple Gifts
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REVIEW BY EVELYN MINSHULL
For one fleeting, "iridescent" moment, that crucial summer of 1972, June Sprigg considered committing to the Shaker way of life. In a way, she has. She didn't, of course, sign the Covenant; even if she wanted to, the Shakers no longer accepted converts. Since celibacy formed an important tenant of their faith, and membership had peaked more than a century earlier, only a few of their number remained. In that remnant -- mostly female and faltering physically -- faith, duty, and love burned as brightly as ever, igniting in the then-19-year-old Sprigg a hunger to discover and internalize their quality of contentment. During her first summer at a Shaker community in Canterbury, New Hampshire, the direction of the author's life changed forever. Sprigg searched photo albums and the absorbing journals of Shaker Elders, she guided tours and immersed herself in the aura of days long past -- yet startlingly present. There, she recorded her observations in journal entries and drawings; there, Simple Gifts finds its genesis. With Simple Gifts, Sprigg continues to enliven the history of this unique tradition and its followers. "Hands to work, hearts to God" shapes the Shaker ethic, in which the community is emphasized over the individual; precision is paramount in craftsmanship, in relationships, and in personal actions; technology is embraced when it leads to proficiency and product, rejected when it threatens unity. Perhaps dearest to young June while in Canterbury were Lillian, a gifted musician, 80 years a Shaker, who had come as a teenager and unexpectedly found her calling, and Bertha, consummate cook, who functioned as a "simple Kitchen Sister." Sprigg now enriches others' lives by perpetuating the record of this remarkable sect through her writing and sketches. The author's crystalline imagery, insightful observations, and gentle portraits transport the reader to a serenity not often achieved. With Sprigg, readers walk a rich path. Perhaps, with such a knowledgeable tour guide, readers will explore deeper possibilities for their own life experiences. Evelyn Minshull is a freelance writer in Mercer, Pennsylvania.
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