Review of Jody Hedlund's Luther and Katharina
By Rachel Kovaciny
Luther and Katharina, by popular Christian
novelist Jody Hedlund, is a fictional account of how Martin Luther and
Katharina von Bora met and married. I had high hopes for this book
because, from what I have learned of them over the years, both Martin and Katie
were unusual, strong-minded individuals who made difficult decisions and lived
through some extraordinary circumstances. I knew that a fictional
retelling of their lives could be fascinating, thought-provoking, and
inspiring. Having read a few non-fiction biographies of them both years
and years ago, I was eager to see what kinds of deeper insights a novelization
could provide. I was hoping for a book about a real relationship instead of yet
another formulaic romance.
Luther and Katharina begins promisingly,
following Katie as she flees the convent where she has lived since a
child. She and several other nuns have read Luther's writings in secret,
and some of them have been severely punished for daring to do so. Luther,
himself a former monk, insists that married life as a layman is no less holy
than serving God in a monastery or nunnery. He has been adjuring monks
and nuns to leave monastic life if they feel a desire to marry and start
families, and many do so. Roman Catholic officials see their power threatened
and strike out toward any monks and nuns who might be trying to rejoin the
world. The first few chapters of the book are like a suspense novel, as
Katie and her friends elude their would-be captors several times on their way
to Wittenberg, where Dr. Luther teaches, preaches, and lives.
Hedlund expertly illuminates the world of Reformation
Germany--her details and descriptions are evocative and realistic. I
greatly enjoyed the way she wrote about the physical world around the
characters, as well as the current events such as the Peasant's Revolt.
And her characters are also well-rounded. In addition to Katie and
Martin, many other names from history, like Phillip Melancthon and Justus
Jonas, are attached to fully-realized, interesting characters.
However, for the most part, the characters bearing those
names felt much too modern in their thoughts, actions, and attitudes.
Now, I'm not adverse to tossing some modernity into a historical story to
help present-day audiences understand how people long ago were similar to
people today. However, Martin and Katie in particular could have been
interchanged with any
longing-to-be-together-but-having-lots-of-misunderstandings couple from any
romantic novel you can think of. They felt too much like standard romance
characters who happened to share names and circumstances with a couple of
historical figures. Also, I can't recall ever reading anything that even
implied that Katie's first suitor, Jerome Baumgartner, was only courting her
because he was a womanizer who wanted to deflower the former nun. I'm
afraid this book felt like yet another sensationalization of a true story.
It dismisses the truly interesting depth and richness of the people
involved in favor of more conventional development.
All of which means that overall, I was disappointed
by Luther and Katharina. Technically, it was well-written, but it
felt too much like any other Christian historical romance. I wanted to
learn about how the strong-willed, salty-tongued, endlessly intelligent Martin
Luther came to marry equally strong-willed, fiercely practical, outspoken
Katharina von Bora. Instead, I got two lonely, conflicted people who
spent far too much time necking and thinking about physical intimacy. I
was uncomfortable with how much detailed sensuality was included. Hedlund
never quite crossed the line into eroticism, but she came awfully close several
times.
If you're a fan of Christian historical romance and think of this not as a
novelization of the relationship between two very real and unusual people, but
simply fiction, it's probably a fine book. But for me, it deviated too
far from what I have learned about the real Luthers to enjoy the changes
Hedlund has made.
***
Rachel Kovaciny was homeschooled K-12, then attended Bethany Lutheran College for four years. A month after graduating with a BA in Liberal Arts, she married her first and only boyfriend. Now she passes the time by reading, writing, baking, watching movies, crocheting, blogging, and homeschooling her three children. Her least-favorite activities include house-cleaning and wearing shoes, and she's been known to go to great lengths to avoid both. Rachel is a regular contributor to the online magazine Femnista, and she blogs under the nom de blog "Hamlette" about books at The Edge of the Precipice, and about movies, writing, and life at Hamlette's Soliloquy.
Wonderful review, Rachel! This one started out promising for me too, but I had a lot of the same issues that you did. The sensual content is especially awkward considering the characters were real people. :/
ReplyDeleteThanks, Hayden! Yes, the love scenes were really uncomfortable for me because these were actual people -- like reading a romance novel about my parents or something. Just too weird.
DeleteDrat.
ReplyDeleteWhen I heard of this book, I had semi-high hopes for it. I'm sorry to hear it's fairly typical romantic fiction. Oh, well.
Charity, I know! Right? I was really hopeful. Bummer.
DeleteExcellent review!! And it's a pity about the content as the cover IS so lovely.... sigh.
ReplyDelete(Btw, thoroughly like your picture at the bottom. ;))
Heidi, thanks! I know, I'm pretty disappointed. It could have been awesome -- guess that book I hoped for is still waiting to be written.
DeleteAnd thanks -- that's from when we were at the beach in May :-D