"Carlos Eire analyzes Teresa of Avila's Life and chronicles its reception from the late sixteenth century to the present with profound erudition, insight, and conviction. His carefully documented survey of trends in editing, translation, and artistic production makes a significant contribution to the history of the book and readership, as well as women's writing, spirituality, and the Catholic intellectual tradition." --Jodi Bilinkoff, author of The Avila of Saint Teresa: Religious Reform in a Sixteenth-Century City "Carlos Eire leads readers expertly and learnedly through the composition of the Life and its fortunes over the centuries. Not only does he slice, dice, and classify with the skill of a medieval theologian, he does so with the wit of a philosophe and with an unusually sensitive understanding of the mystical Teresa. I loved this book even more than I expected I would." --Craig Harline, author of A World Ablaze: The Rise of Martin Luther and the Birth of the Reformation "Carlos Eire's brilliant account of the creation, meaning, and subsequent history of Teresa of Avila's autobiography deftly examines the historical, theological, artistic, and cultural aspects of what is perhaps the most famous presentation of a mystical life in the Christian literary canon." --Bernard McGinn, University of Chicago "Eire has an uncanny ability to write scholarly work in an engaging and accessible style. He knows how to get to the heart of the matter.
This is the story of a mystic and her book but also a story of how reactions to extreme religious experiences have changed--and been deployed--over centuries." --Alison Weber, author of Teresa of Avila and the Rhetoric of Femininity.