Takeaway: Pastoral wisdom like this is rare.
Lila (the third of the trilogy that starts with Gilead) came out just over a year ago. I read it immediately and then reread it about a month later. It is in my short list of best books I have read.
It has been three years since I read Gilead, and while I remember enjoying it, I wanted to reread it before I went back and read the second novel of this trilogy (Home).
Gilead is a slow novel. I can understand why people would not like it. There is a story, but the action is almost entirely internal. John Ames is a 76-year-old pastor in a small Iowa town. Late in life, he married Lila, and they had a son. John has been having heart problems, and he has been told to prepare for death. So the book is a series of letters (no real chapters, just pauses between letters) to his son about his life and what he thinks is important about the world.






