|
Share the article on
this page with a friend.
Click
here.
|
|
|

The Keys
of the Kingdom
by A.J. Cronin
by Marilyn
Green Faulkner
A.J. Cronin
lived a long and interesting life, with two brilliant careers, first
as a doctor and then as one of the most successful authors of the
twentieth century. Cronin was born in a small town in Scotland in
1896. His fathers early death plunged the family into poverty,
and the Cronins were forced to rely on the charity of relatives
who despised them for their Catholicism. (His Protestant mother
had converted against her familys wishes.) It was in this
harsh environment that Archibald formed the two priorities that
guided his life, a need for independence and a dream of tolerance
between all men.
In that day the only choices available to a poor boy that wanted
to rise in the world were the clergy or medicine. Choosing what
he termed the lesser of two evils, Cronin worked his
way through medical school and began his practice in the mining
towns of Northern England. After nine years he had a lucrative practice
in the west end of London, a wife and two sons, but he was unhappy
with his life. He had always loved to write and felt that if he
only had the time he could write a novel based on his unique experiences.
He sold his practice and moved his family into a cottage in Scotland,
and in three months had completed a novel, Hatters Way, which
became an immediate best seller. Cronin went on to write more than
a dozen novels that sold in the millions of copies. Several of his
books were made into films, and he wrote one of the most successful
television series ever to air on British television.
One of the keys to the popularity of Cronins work was its
timing. In a day when the modern novel was full of cynicism and
despair, Cronin told old-fashioned stories of love and loss, stories
that reaffirmed belief in the triumph of the individual in an evil
world. With the world at war and Hitlers atrocities in the
papers, readers welcomed his reassuring tone and the underlying
religious faith so rare in modern works of fiction. The Keys of
the Kingdom was published in 1941, and Cronins story of a
faithful priest who models his life after the Savior reached number
one on the bestseller list the week it was published.
Though Cronin lacks the subtle artistry of Forster or the linguistic
mastery of Dickens, he has the instinctive ability to tell a good
story in a way that pulls the reader along. Hes a realist
as well, treating with candor such subjects as incest, abuse, and
religious bigotry without sacrificing his hopeful tone. His deep
ambivalence about organized religion is balanced by his faith in
the gospel of Christ and his interest in the individual. Father
Chisholm expresses the feelings of his creator when he says:
If we
have the fundamentals love for God and for our neighbor
surely were all right? And isnt it time for
the religions of the world to cease hating one another, and unite?
The world is one living, breathing body, dependent for its health
on the billions of cells which comprise it
and each tiny
cell is the heart of a man. (294)
The Keys of
the Kingdom is a simple tale, but Francis Chisolm will work his
magic in your heart as he does in the hearts of his parishioners.
Cronins greatest novel will, Im sure, become a favorite
of yours as it is of mine. Write and share your thoughts with all
of us and Ill post them the last week of the month.
Write
and share your thoughts about doubt, faith, true Christianity,
even Catholicism! There is much to talk about here.
Click
here to sign up for Meridian's FREE email updates.
© 2001 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
|
|
| About
the Author: |
|

Marilyn Faulkner
likes to read and talk about books. After graduating with a degree
in Humanities from Brigham Young University, she served a mission
to Japan and went to work for the Disney Corporation in Southern
California, where she met her husband, Craig. When Craig, a financial
planner, decided to start a publishing company to create marketing
materials for the financial services industry, Marilyn served as
the writer for the original products, and later coordinated the
national advertising. The company, Emerald Publications, was recently
sold to a large financial institution. Marilyn went back to school
the day her fifth child entered pre-school and earned a Master's
Degree in English Literature from San Diego State University. The
Faulkners have two sons serving missions, one in Siberia and one
in Florida, two daughters in high school, and one son young enough
to still like to be read to. They live in Poway, California.
|
| Join
the Best Books Club |
|
Join like-minded
individuals from around the world and read the classics together
with the Best Books Club.
To join, email
bestbooks@meridianmagazine.com.
|
| Article
Archive: |
|
Back
to the Best Books Archive
|
| What
do you think? |
| Share
your thoughts, feelings, comments, and impressions about this article. |
Format
for Print
Click Here |
| |
|