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SLOW READ: The Stand (Chapter 45 - Mother Abagail)

SLOW READ: The Stand (Chapter 45 - Mother Abagail)

Published 3 months ago
Description

Welcome to SLOW READ, where we tackle the books you’ve always wanted to read at a pace you can handle.

Hosted by Sarah Stewart Holland and Laura Tremaine

We are currently reading The Stand by Stephen King (unabridged version)

You can find our full Reading Schedule here

Join the SLOW READ community on Substack for bonus episodes, book club meetings, and Side Quests with Sarah & Laura

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If you prefer to read instead of listen, below is a cleaned up transcript of the episodes as well as links to all the books and Substacks we mentioned in this episode…and several fun bonus links and videos!

Mentioned in this episode:

The Shack by William P. Young

Two Old Women: An Alaska Legend of Betrayal, Courage and Survival by Velma Wallis

The Correspondent by Virginia Evans

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Sarah: I might cry recording this chapter.

Laura: Why?

Sarah: Because I loved it so much. I cried reading it. I just loved it.

Laura: Well, this is why we dedicated a whole episode to just this chapter.

Sarah: That was very wise of us. And by us, I mean you.

Seminal Moments and 500 Pages of Lead-up

Sarah: We separated this chapter out because it is such a seminal moment in The Stand. Oh, my gosh. I love her. Do you?

Laura: Yes. She is like a literary icon.

Sarah: I am obsessed. I loved every word of this chapter—okay, that’s not true, there were a couple words I didn’t love—but she feels so real. I struggle to say “character” because I just want to say “woman.”

Laura: This is the first time in the book where we finally get to know more about her. She’s kind of only showed up in dreams so far. Finally, we’re seeing that the pandemic isn’t the villain, really. Campion isn’t the villain. We’re starting to get what people mean when they say The Stand is a story about the battle of good and evil.

Sarah: Let’s start where the chapter starts: Mother Abagail at her house in Nebraska, playing her guitar on the porch. We’re starting to find out her theology. On the first page, she says, “God brought down a harsh judgment on the human race.” What’s so striking is that she has such acceptance and calm about what has happened.

Laura: And you found it peaceful as opposed to detached?

Sarah: English doesn’t even have the right words for this, because “detachment” has a negative connotation. But it is an acceptance of what you can control and what you cannot. I thought that was just emanating from her.

108 Years of Perspective

Laura: In this round of reading, I did notice a complete lack of grief. She realizes everybody is dead—her grandkids were checking on her, but she hadn’t seen them since February.

Sarah: Listen, in my mid-40s, sometimes I don’t have energy for big emotions. When I’m 108? My grandmother is about to turn 90, and I grew up with a bevy of great-grandparents. I have spent time with 100-year-olds, and this rang completely accurate to me. When you get to the point where death would be a relief, it change

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