Spiridion by George Sand

(10 User reviews)   4595
Sand, George, 1804-1876 Sand, George, 1804-1876
French
Picture this: a young, idealistic monk named Angel arrives at a crumbling Italian monastery in the 1700s. He's searching for spiritual truth, but what he finds is a place haunted by secrets. The monks are divided, the library is locked, and everyone whispers about a forbidden book written by the monastery's founder, Spiridion. Angel becomes obsessed with finding it, believing it holds the key to a purer faith. But as he digs deeper, he uncovers a dangerous legacy of heresy, rebellion, and ghostly warnings. It's less a quiet prayer and more a gothic detective story set behind cloistered walls. If you like mysteries wrapped in philosophical questions, this hidden gem from 1839 will pull you right in.
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George Sand's Spiridion isn't your typical historical novel. It starts with a frame story—a narrator finds a mysterious manuscript—before plunging us into the diary of Angel, a young monk in 18th-century Italy.

The Story

Angel joins the Abbey of *** (the name is pointedly left blank), hoping for peace and enlightenment. Instead, he finds a monastery rotting from the inside. The monks are lazy and corrupt, split into bitter factions. The library, which should be a treasure, is sealed shut. The ghost of the founder, a monk named Spiridion, is said to walk the halls. Driven by a desperate need for real faith, Angel becomes fixated on finding Spiridion's lost theological treatise, a book rumored to challenge everything the modern church stands for. His search turns into a perilous quest, unearthing a history of religious persecution and intellectual freedom that the current order wants buried forever.

Why You Should Read It

What grabbed me was how modern it feels. Sand, writing under a male pen name, uses this gothic setting to ask huge questions: What happens when an institution betrays its original ideals? How do you find truth when those in power hide it? Angel isn't a perfect hero; he's arrogant and impatient, which makes his journey more compelling. The atmosphere is incredible—you can almost smell the damp stone and hear the whispers in the shadowy corridors. It's a page-turner with a brain.

Final Verdict

Perfect for readers who enjoy thoughtful historical fiction with a gothic edge, like The Name of the Rose but more intimate. It's for anyone who's ever questioned dogma or been fascinated by hidden histories. Don't let the 1839 publication date scare you; Sand's voice is passionate, clear, and surprisingly urgent. Just be prepared—you might start looking at old libraries a little differently.



📚 Open Access

You are viewing a work that belongs to the global public domain. Knowledge should be free and accessible.

Melissa Jones
1 year ago

Clear and concise.

Betty Lewis
1 year ago

Comprehensive and well-researched.

Daniel Wright
9 months ago

The index links actually work, which is rare!

Barbara Torres
9 months ago

Compatible with my e-reader, thanks.

Jennifer Wright
1 month ago

Read this on my tablet, looks great.

5
5 out of 5 (10 User reviews )

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