Synopses & Reviews
A fascinating, intelligent, and sometimes funny tour of the human relics at the root of the worlds major religionsBy examining relicsthe bits and pieces of long-dead saints at the heart of nearly all religious traditionsPeter Manseau delivers a book about life, and about faith and how it is sustained. The result of wide travel and the authors own deep curiosity, filled with true tales of the living and dubious legends of the dead, Rag and Bone tells of a California seeker who ended up in a Jerusalem convent because of a nuns disembodied hand; a French forensics expert who travels on the metro with the rib of a saint; two young brothers who collect tickets at a Syrian mosque, studying English beside a hair from the Prophet Muhammads beard; and many other stories, myths, and peculiar histories.
With these, and an array of other digits, limbs, and bones, Manseau provides a respectful, witty, informed, inquisitive, thoughtful, and fascinating look into the "primordial strangeness that is at the heart of belief," and the place where the abstractions of faith meet the realities of physical objects, of rags and bones. Peter Manseau is the author of the memoir Vows and the novel Songs for the Butcher's Daughter. He is also the coauthor (with Jeff Sharlet) of Killing the Buddha: A Heretic's Bible. The editor of Search: The Magazine of Science, Religion, and Culture, he lives with his wife and two daughters in Washington, D.C., where he teaches writing and studies religion at Georgetown University. The impulse to preserve and revere the body parts of the holy deceased has been part of the human experience since the Buddha lost his baby teeth and John the Baptist lost his head. With postmortem accounts of Jesus, Buddha, Muhammad, and a crowd of other holy souls, Peter Manseau's Rag and Bone tells the hidden histories of these bodies that have meant so much to so many. Along the way, we meet a California seeker of a nuns disembodied hand, a French forensics expert who rides the metro with the rib from what may have been a saint, two young Syrian brothers who study English beside a hair from the Prophet's beard, and discover many more true tales of the living and dubious legends of the dead. By examining these relicsthe bits and pieces of long-dead saints found in most religious traditionsManseau has written a tremendously moving book about life, the varieties of faith, and how both life and faith are sustained. The result of wide travel, the author's own deep curiosity, and visits with those living who take care of those dead, Rag and Bone stitches together a portrait of the world's religions. And it delivers a respectful, witty, and fascinating look into the place where the abstractions of faith meet the realities of physical objects, of rags and bones. "From Damascus to Jerusalem to Philadelphia (oddly, one of the relic capitals of the world), Manseau recounts his journey to find religious objects that have captivated the faithful for centuries and his encounters with modern pilgrims along the way . . . Manseau's vivid recollections of each trip, combined with personal anecdotes and interesting tidbits (did you know that every Roman Catholic Church in the U.S. has a relic?), provide a fascinating look into an ancient and complex topic."M. J. Stephey, Time
"Peter Manseau embarks on a global odyssey in search of the 'dismembered toes, splinters of shinbone, stolen bits of hair, burned remnants of an anonymous rib cage, and other odds and ends' belonging to saints and other sacred figures. The result is an entertaining, sometimes affecting inquiry into mans yearning for spiritual transcendence through the worship of holy relics, real or otherwisefrom the Shroud of Turin ('considered by some to be Christianitys most holy artifact, mocked by others as little more than a medieval towel smeared with ink') to more obscure bits of clothing and body parts. The book could have been ghoulish, but Manseaus irreverent approach and enthusiasm keep the tone surprisingly light. He examines the curious dissemination of pieces of saints around the globe, meets a cast of fellow enthusiastsincluding a French paleopathologist who spends his spare time rummaging through the supposed bone fragments of Joan of Arcand explores the fringes of religious devotion. Most notable is the pious Portuguese woman who, in a fit of ecstasy, is said to have bitten off the little toe of St. Francis Xavier, whose damaged cadaver lures Manseau to the Roman Catholic enclave of Goa, India: 'To look closely at the foot nowwith at least three digits missingis to wonder if she got away with an even bigger bite.'"Joshua Hammer, The New York Times Book Review
"Manseau notes that he is moved not 'merely by questions of their authenticity, but also simply by the fact of them, the fleshy actuality of what they are.' He's awe-struck that, however dubious their provenance, these holy artifacts'often frankly repulsive'are not just a 'what' but a 'who.' They are, literally, matters of life and death. Rag and Bone begins with a 13th century 'blackened and shriveled' tongue (allegedly that of St. Anthony), displayed on the altar of an Italian basilica, where a thousand devout tourists line up daily to kneel and pray before it. (Objects of worship can be secular too; Manseau mentions a museum in Georgia where fans can view 'Possibly Elvis's Toenail.') The whiskers of Muhammad, the jumping heart of a recently dead Tibetan lama, the apocryphal scorched rib of Joan of Arc and the even more putative prepuce of (apologies in advance) Jesus are among the relics with 'macabre magnetism' explored by the author. He also delves into the history of plundering, which has played 'as much a part of the tradition of relics as veneration has.' Manseau offers plenty of interesting trivia too: Neanderthals first decided to bury the dead about 70,000 years ago. And Jerusalem once boasted the greatest number of relics, but now it falls behind Rome and even, unbelievably, Pittsburgh, second only to the Vatican in its vast collection. Ultimately, all of these remnants tell a similar story. They reveal the enduring power of faith, regardless of ideology, and the obsessive nature of religious beliefwhich, as this entertaining book amply proves, is all too capable of taking peculiar turns."Carmela Ciuraru, Los Angeles Times
"If you're wondering why even a divine being would have more than the usual compliment of body parts, it's because over the centuries relics have been found, made, sold, traded and gifted with great enthusiasm, both in honor of their connections to holiness and their ability to draw visitors and money to the institutions that house them. And like all high-demand items, relics tend to inspire counterfeit knock-offs. But Peter Manseau argues in his book Rag and Bone: A Journey Among the World's Holy Dead that what's really important about relics is not strict authenticity but how people feel about the sacred remains. While researching the book, Manseau asked a Muslim who was visiting Mohammed's beard, 'Do you come here to feel closer to the Prophet?' The man answered, 'No, I come here to remind myself how far I have to go.' Sentiments like this deepen what could have been nothing more than a macabre tourist guide, and while Manseau obviously delights in sharing the bizarre and often humorous aspects of his subject, in the end this is a book that compassionately explores the good, bad and ugly aspects of faith."David Ian Miller, San Francisco Chronicle "You might be confident that the risen Christ is the Messiah, but would you be more so if you could venerate a piece of his remains: his foreskin, for example? Peter Manseau's Rag and Bone, a travelogue in which the author details his search for body parts of the holy deceased, tackles the curious relationship between faith and the physical evidence relics offer. 'A relic concentrates the beliefs surrounding it until they can be seen . . . like shining sunlight through a magnifying glass,' Manseau writes of his pilgrimages to view bits of the departed, including Muhammad's whisker in Kashmir, one of the Buddha's teeth in Sri Lanka and Jesus' prepuce in Jerusalem. Of course, there's a lot of room for the word 'alleged' when scrutinizing remains over two millennia old, but aside from a chapter devoted to a researcher trying to determine whether a scorched human rib found in a French museum belonged to Joan of Arc, Manseau is less interested in the legitimacy of relics than in how people use them to support belief. Christianity, Islam and Buddhism thrive by convincing the uninitiated that dogma preached by long-dead figureheads is universal truth. As the author points out, what better 'portable form of sanctity' is there for evangelicals than St. Francis Xavier's toe, Lama Yeshe's leg or St. Anthony's tongue? Born to a former nun and a priest who married but refused to renounce the Church, Manseau brings the same expansive perspective on belief to Rag and Bone that fueled his 2005 memoir, Vowsthe understanding that every leap of faith can benefit from a little push."Justin Moyer, The Washinton Post
"From Damascus to Jerusalem to Philadelphia (oddly, one of the relic capitals of the world), Manseau recounts his journey to find religious objects that have captivated the faithful for centuries and his encounters with modern pilgrims along the way . . . Manseau's vivid recollections of each trip, combined with personal anecdotes and interesting tidbits (did you know that every Roman Catholic Church in the U.S. has a relic?), provide a fascinating look into an ancient and complex topic."M. J. Stephey, Time
"Talk about a long, strange trip. Manseau journeys around the world seeking Muhammad's whiskers, Buddha's tooth (there's a Temple of the Holy Tooth in Sri Lanka) and even Jesus' foreskinor at least the people who believe these saintly relics exist. Of course, there really is 'La Chapelle dell Reliquie' is Padua, Italy, the home to Saint Anthony's tongue. There's proper respect for believers and a nod and a wink for the others (the traveling Heart Shrine Relic van, for example, reminds him of the Scooby-Doo gang's Mystery Machine)."Billy Heller, New York Post
"Because he is serious but not heavy, Peter Manseaujournalist, novelist, memoirist, teacher, studentmakes an amusing traveling companion in Rag and Bone, his tour of the bits and pieces of saints and saviors that we have been moved to worship . . . Manseau's pleasure is to roam the globe, dropping in at the basilica in Goa that houses the shriveled remains of St. Francis Xavier, or the shrine to the Buddha's tooth in Sri Lanka. But his point is that such relics, whether spurious or with provenance, are one of the ways in which humankind connects to something beyond itself . . . Part history, part hagiography, part travel book and part memoir, Rag and Bone is an elegantly crafted tribute to the ways in which life and death connect."David L. Beck, St. Petersburg Times
"Manseau begins his entertaining book with memories of his trip to a chapel in Italy to view, in the company of a crowd of tourists from across Europe, the tongue of St. Anthony. Later he goes to India to see St. Francis Xavier's toes, to France to discuss a rib that might have belonged to Joan of Arc, to Jerusalem to view the bones of a Russian nun who was martyred in 1918 when Bolshevik police threw her into a well, to Kashmir to consider a hair from the Prophet Muhammad's chin (that's right, a single whisker), and to Sri Lanka in a surreal and funny attempt to see Buddha's tooth. But this isn't a religious book. It's a book about religion. Inspiration is not Manseau's goal as he addresses the history and conflict behind relics, and the 'macabre magnetism' that inspires us to venerate scraps of the holy dead. He's a droll and engaging tour guide in the strange territory he covers. Whether it's quaint or barbaric, he writes, we treat 'what remains of those we admire as conduits to something greater than ourselves.'"The Arizona Republic
"Lets start with this: when I was carrying this book around with me, while reading it for the purposes of this review, someone who knows me well noticed the coverwith the title, and the picture of a praying skeletonand started laughing. 'Boy,' he said, 'is that ever up your alley.' And it is. Thats the truth about Rag and Bone: it is a very specific, narrowly focused sort of book, and if this is your sort of thingpoking among the religious curiosities of the world, with an eye for the mystical, the mythic and the mundanethen this book will really be your sort of thing. Because it cant be faulted in approach or in execution; Peter Manseau is too canny a reporter, and writer, for that. Subject matter is what this one boils down to, friends, and you will either love it or recoil from it. If you love it, you will love it a lot . . . Manseaus tone, through all of these wanderings, is even-tempered and genial. He does not wear the scornful smile of the skeptic, but he does not write from a place of gullibility, either. Instead, he is respectful and good-humoreda just-about-unbeatable combination, when dealing with a topic such as this."Charity Vogel, The Buffalo News
"What would possess people from all walks of life to marvel at and venerate leathery tongues, detached toes, bone fragments, skin fragments, and a dead persons ashes or hair? Well, for a start, religion. Peter Manseau, a student of religion at Georgetown University, gives us a tour of both the holy body parts and the people who treasure them in his new book, Rag and Bone: A Journey Among the Worlds Holy Dead. Manseau has traveled around the world in search of sacred relics, from the alleged tongue of Saint Anthony to the alleged hair of the prophet Muhammed, and the sometimes sketchy history behind them. The book, part personal storytelling and part historical narrative, is a delight to read. The simple prose reads like a well constructed documentary film with Manseau as your guide . . . This is a quick but fascinating read that is sure to interest you if you wonder at all about the world of sacred body parts. And who doesnt? Highly recommended."James Tracy, An Atheist
Review
“An entertaining… affecting inquiry into mans yearning for spiritual transcendence.”The New York Times Book Review
"A globe-traveling tale of the one thing all humanity shares: the body."USA Today
“Reveal[s] the enduring power of faith, regardless of ideology, and the obsessive nature of religious belief -- which, as this entertaining book amply proves, is all too capable of taking peculiar turns.”Los Angeles Times
“Manseau … lavishly scatters gems … as he travels the world in search of the bones, teeth, hair and other scraps from the religiously renowned…. A lively lope among fragments from famous faith figures.”Publishers Weekly
“Adroit, worldly … Transports readers around the globe to check out places accessible and remote where fabric, wood, sinew and other materials are venerated…. An amusing romp.”Kirkus Reviews
“Talk about a long, strange trip…. There's proper respect for believers and a nod and a wink for the others.”Billy Heller, The New York Post
"Manseau brings the same expansive perspective on belief to "Rag and Bone" that fueled his ... memoir, "Vows" -- the understanding that every leap of faith can benefit from a little push." Washington Post
“A beautiful, and at times very funny and insightful journey of faith, culture, religious history, and exotic locales…. A truly great book.”Sacramento Book Review
"Manseaus unerring eye for detail makes for a fascinating travelogue. But Rag and Bone is more than that. Drawing on history, spiritual traditions, legend and contemporary reports, this book is a totally exuberant compendium of human beliefs, certain to satisfy devotees of all stripes."Barnes & Noble Review
“A thoughtful invitation to explore locations, myths, legends, and truths of relics…. In Rag and Bone, Manseau brings bare bones to life, and he has composed an intriguing … travelogue that takes the reader around the world, exploring truth and legend, but more importantly on a journey of understanding why they matter.”Beliefnet
“Dry bones dance in Rag and Bone, as Peter Manseau brings death to life through his fascinating exploration of religious relics: the skull fragments, detached digits, and ashes of the holy. This is a book that might have been written in the 15th century just as easily as now, but we're lucky to have here the unique 21st century voice of Manseau--a Yiddish-speaking, Buddha-curious son of a Catholic priest and a nun--and one of the most peculiar and most entertaining travelogues in years.”Jeff Sharlet, New York Times bestselling author of The Family: The Secret Fundamentalism at the Heart of American Power
“Peter Manseaus Rag and Bone reads like a novel, entertains like a television docudrama, and educates like the best college professor you ever had. It is at once informative, quirky, and funny. Do people really think that the leathery tongue of a 12th century saint can bless them with good fortune? They do. Why do people believe in such weird things as the holy relics of religion? Read this book to find out. WARNING: you may very well discover that you also hold beliefs in holy relics and not even know it!”Michael Shermer, Publisher of Skeptic magazine, monthly columnist for Scientific American, author of Why People Believe Weird Things and Why Darwin Matters
“A text for the devoted and devoutly lapsed, Rag and Bone is part religious study and part travelogue. Peter Manseau proves a reliable guide, getting both the concepts and the corpses right: the idea of the thing, and the thing itself. And how far afield his curiosities take us – fellow pilgrims one and all – for whom the dead may be more than the sum of parts.”Thomas Lynch, author of The Undertaking: Life Studies from the Dismal Trade
“The dead may tell no tales, but the relics they leave behind do, if only we will listen to what they have to say. Happily, one of Americas best young writers has his ear to the ground at reliquaries from San Francisco to Sri Lanka. The result is an intriguing tour of the worlds most holy hairs, hearts, and hands that refuses to lapse into the sort of confessional cant that deadens much writing on religion today. Rag and Bone is alive with both humorous and heartbreaking observations about the chicanery and mystery of things seen and unseen.”Stephen Prothero, Professor of Religion at Boston University and author of the New York Times bestseller Religious Literacy
“A dead saints bones, an ancient prophets whisker, the Buddha's tooth: As Peter Manseau traces the trail of religious relics, he merges the holy and the human with keen insight. The language shines and the humor delights, but even more, we come away having learned something profound about the making of religious meaning.”Barbara J. King, author of Evolving God
Review
“An entertaining… affecting inquiry into mans yearning for spiritual transcendence.”The New York Times Book Review
"A globe-traveling tale of the one thing all humanity shares: the body."USA Today
“Reveal[s] the enduring power of faith, regardless of ideology, and the obsessive nature of religious belief -- which, as this entertaining book amply proves, is all too capable of taking peculiar turns.”Los Angeles Times
“Manseau … lavishly scatters gems … as he travels the world in search of the bones, teeth, hair and other scraps from the religiously renowned…. A lively lope among fragments from famous faith figures.”Publishers Weekly
“Adroit, worldly … Transports readers around the globe to check out places accessible and remote where fabric, wood, sinew and other materials are venerated…. An amusing romp.”Kirkus Reviews
“Talk about a long, strange trip…. There's proper respect for believers and a nod and a wink for the others.”Billy Heller, The New York Post
"Manseau brings the same expansive perspective on belief to "Rag and Bone" that fueled his ... memoir, "Vows" -- the understanding that every leap of faith can benefit from a little push." Washington Post
“A beautiful, and at times very funny and insightful journey of faith, culture, religious history, and exotic locales…. A truly great book.”Sacramento Book Review
"Manseaus unerring eye for detail makes for a fascinating travelogue. But Rag and Bone is more than that. Drawing on history, spiritual traditions, legend and contemporary reports, this book is a totally exuberant compendium of human beliefs, certain to satisfy devotees of all stripes."Barnes & Noble Review
“A thoughtful invitation to explore locations, myths, legends, and truths of relics…. In Rag and Bone, Manseau brings bare bones to life, and he has composed an intriguing … travelogue that takes the reader around the world, exploring truth and legend, but more importantly on a journey of understanding why they matter.”Beliefnet
“Dry bones dance in Rag and Bone, as Peter Manseau brings death to life through his fascinating exploration of religious relics: the skull fragments, detached digits, and ashes of the holy. This is a book that might have been written in the 15th century just as easily as now, but we're lucky to have here the unique 21st century voice of Manseau--a Yiddish-speaking, Buddha-curious son of a Catholic priest and a nun--and one of the most peculiar and most entertaining travelogues in years.”Jeff Sharlet, New York Times bestselling author of The Family: The Secret Fundamentalism at the Heart of American Power
“Peter Manseaus Rag and Bone reads like a novel, entertains like a television docudrama, and educates like the best college professor you ever had. It is at once informative, quirky, and funny. Do people really think that the leathery tongue of a 12th century saint can bless them with good fortune? They do. Why do people believe in such weird things as the holy relics of religion? Read this book to find out. WARNING: you may very well discover that you also hold beliefs in holy relics and not even know it!”Michael Shermer, Publisher of Skeptic magazine, monthly columnist for Scientific American, author of Why People Believe Weird Things and Why Darwin Matters
“A text for the devoted and devoutly lapsed, Rag and Bone is part religious study and part travelogue. Peter Manseau proves a reliable guide, getting both the concepts and the corpses right: the idea of the thing, and the thing itself. And how far afield his curiosities take us – fellow pilgrims one and all – for whom the dead may be more than the sum of parts.”Thomas Lynch, author of The Undertaking: Life Studies from the Dismal Trade
“The dead may tell no tales, but the relics they leave behind do, if only we will listen to what they have to say. Happily, one of Americas best young writers has his ear to the ground at reliquaries from San Francisco to Sri Lanka. The result is an intriguing tour of the worlds most holy hairs, hearts, and hands that refuses to lapse into the sort of confessional cant that deadens much writing on religion today. Rag and Bone is alive with both humorous and heartbreaking observations about the chicanery and mystery of things seen and unseen.”Stephen Prothero, Professor of Religion at Boston University and author of the New York Times bestseller Religious Literacy
“A dead saints bones, an ancient prophets whisker, the Buddha's tooth: As Peter Manseau traces the trail of religious relics, he merges the holy and the human with keen insight. The language shines and the humor delights, but even more, we come away having learned something profound about the making of religious meaning.”Barbara J. King, author of Evolving God
Synopsis
“Peter Manseaus Rag and Bone reads like a novel, entertains like a television docudrama, and educates like the best college professor you ever had.” —Michael ShermerBy examining relics—the bits and pieces of long-dead saints at the heart of nearly all religious traditions—Peter Manseau delivers a book about life, and about faith and how it is sustained.
The result of wide travel and the authors own deep curiosity, filled with true tales of the living and dubious legends of the dead, Rag and Bone tells of a California seeker who ended up in a Jerusalem convent because of a nuns disembodied hand; a French forensics expert who travels on the Metro with the rib of a saint; two young brothers who collect tickets at a Syrian mosque, studying English beside a hair from the Prophet Muhammads beard; and many other stories, myths, and peculiar histories.
With these, and an array of other digits, limbs, and bones, Manseau provides a respectful, witty, informed, inquisitive, thoughtful, and fascinating look into “the primordial strangeness that is at the heart of belief,” and the place where the abstractions of faith meet the realities of physical objects, of rags and bones.
Synopsis
Manseau offers a fascinating, intelligent, and sometimes funny tour of the human relics at the root of the world's major religions.
Synopsis
A fascinating, intelligent, and sometimes funny tour of the human relics at the root of the worlds major religionsBy examining relicsthe bits and pieces of long-dead saints at the heart of nearly all religious traditionsPeter Manseau delivers a book about life, and about faith and how it is sustained. The result of wide travel and the authors own deep curiosity, filled with true tales of the living and dubious legends of the dead, Rag and Bone tells of a California seeker who ended up in a Jerusalem convent because of a nuns disembodied hand; a French forensics expert who travels on the metro with the rib of a saint; two young brothers who collect tickets at a Syrian mosque, studying English beside a hair from the Prophet Muhammads beard; and many other stories, myths, and peculiar histories.
With these, and an array of other digits, limbs, and bones, Manseau provides a respectful, witty, informed, inquisitive, thoughtful, and fascinating look into the "primordial strangeness that is at the heart of belief," and the place where the abstractions of faith meet the realities of physical objects, of rags and bones. Peter Manseau is the author of the memoir Vows and the novel Songs for the Butcher's Daughter. He is also the coauthor (with Jeff Sharlet) of Killing the Buddha: A Heretic's Bible. The editor of Search: The Magazine of Science, Religion, and Culture, he lives with his wife and two daughters in Washington, D.C., where he teaches writing and studies religion at Georgetown University. The impulse to preserve and revere the body parts of the holy deceased has been part of the human experience since the Buddha lost his baby teeth and John the Baptist lost his head. With postmortem accounts of Jesus, Buddha, Muhammad, and a crowd of other holy souls, Peter Manseau's Rag and Bone tells the hidden histories of these bodies that have meant so much to so many. Along the way, we meet a California seeker of a nuns disembodied hand, a French forensics expert who rides the metro with the rib from what may have been a saint, two young Syrian brothers who study English beside a hair from the Prophet's beard, and discover many more true tales of the living and dubious legends of the dead. By examining these relicsthe bits and pieces of long-dead saints found in most religious traditionsManseau has written a tremendously moving book about life, the varieties of faith, and how both life and faith are sustained. The result of wide travel, the author's own deep curiosity, and visits with those living who take care of those dead, Rag and Bone stitches together a portrait of the world's religions. And it delivers a respectful, witty, and fascinating look into the place where the abstractions of faith meet the realities of physical objects, of rags and bones. "From Damascus to Jerusalem to Philadelphia (oddly, one of the relic capitals of the world), Manseau recounts his journey to find religious objects that have captivated the faithful for centuries and his encounters with modern pilgrims along the way . . . Manseau's vivid recollections of each trip, combined with personal anecdotes and interesting tidbits (did you know that every Roman Catholic Church in the U.S. has a relic?), provide a fascinating look into an ancient and complex topic."M. J. Stephey, Time
"Peter Manseau embarks on a global odyssey in search of the 'dismembered toes, splinters of shinbone, stolen bits of hair, burned remnants of an anonymous rib cage, and other odds and ends' belonging to saints and other sacred figures. The result is an entertaining, sometimes affecting inquiry into mans yearning for spiritual transcendence through the worship of holy relics, real or otherwisefrom the Shroud of Turin ('considered by some to be Christianitys most holy artifact, mocked by others as little more than a medieval towel smeared with ink') to more obscure bits of clothing and body parts. The book could have been ghoulish, but Manseaus irreverent approach and enthusiasm keep the tone surprisingly light. He examines the curious dissemination of pieces of saints around the globe, meets a cast of fellow enthusiastsincluding a French paleopathologist who spends his spare time rummaging through the supposed bone fragments of Joan of Arcand explores the fringes of religious devotion. Most notable is the pious Portuguese woman who, in a fit of ecstasy, is said to have bitten off the little toe of St. Francis Xavier, whose damaged cadaver lures Manseau to the Roman Catholic enclave of Goa, India: 'To look closely at the foot nowwith at least three digits missingis to wonder if she got away with an even bigger bite.'"Joshua Hammer, The New York Times Book Review
"Manseau notes that he is moved not 'merely by questions of their authenticity, but also simply by the fact of them, the fleshy actuality of what they are.' He's awe-struck that, however dubious their provenance, these holy artifacts'often frankly repulsive'are not just a 'what' but a 'who.' They are, literally, matters of life and death. Rag and Bone begins with a 13th century 'blackened and shriveled' tongue (allegedly that of St. Anthony), displayed on the altar of an Italian basilica, where a thousand devout tourists line up daily to kneel and pray before it. (Objects of worship can be secular too; Manseau mentions a museum in Georgia where fans can view 'Possibly Elvis's Toenail.') The whiskers of Muhammad, the jumping heart of a recently dead Tibetan lama, the apocryphal scorched rib of Joan of Arc and the even more putative prepuce of (apologies in advance) Jesus are among the relics with 'macabre magnetism' explored by the author. He also delves into the history of plundering, which has played 'as much a part of the tradition of relics as veneration has.' Manseau offers plenty of interesting trivia too: Neanderthals first decided to bury the dead about 70,000 years ago. And Jerusalem once boasted the greatest number of relics, but now it falls behind Rome and even, unbelievably, Pittsburgh, second only to the Vatican in its vast collection. Ultimately, all of these remnants tell a similar story. They reveal the enduring power of faith, regardless of ideology, and the obsessive nature of religious beliefwhich, as this entertaining book amply proves, is all too capable of taking peculiar turns."Carmela Ciuraru, Los Angeles Times
"If you're wondering why even a divine being would have more than the usual compliment of body parts, it's because over the centuries relics have been found, made, sold, traded and gifted with great enthusiasm, both in honor of their connections to holiness and their ability to draw visitors and money to the institutions that house them. And like all high-demand items, relics tend to inspire counterfeit knock-offs. But Peter Manseau argues in his book Rag and Bone: A Journey Among the World's Holy Dead that what's really important about relics is not strict authenticity but how people feel about the sacred remains. While researching the book, Manseau asked a Muslim who was visiting Mohammed's beard, 'Do you come here to feel closer to the Prophet?' The man answered, 'No, I come here to remind myself how far I have to go.' Sentiments like this deepen what could have been nothing more than a macabre tourist guide, and while Manseau obviously delights in sharing the bizarre and often humorous aspects of his subject, in the end this is a book that compassionately explores the good, bad and ugly aspects of faith."David Ian Miller, San Francisco Chronicle "You might be confident that the risen Christ is the Messiah, but would you be more so if you could venerate a piece of his remains: his foreskin, for example? Peter Manseau's Rag and Bone, a travelogue in which the author details his search for body parts of the holy deceased, tackles the curious relationship between faith and the physical evidence relics offer. 'A relic concentrates the beliefs surrounding it until they can be seen . . . like shining sunlight through a magnifying glass,' Manseau writes of his pilgrimages to view bits of the departed, including Muhammad's whisker in Kashmir, one of the Buddha's teeth in Sri Lanka and Jesus' prepuce in Jerusalem. Of course, there's a lot of room for the word 'alleged' when scrutinizing remains over two millennia old, but aside from a chapter devoted to a researcher trying to determine whether a scorched human rib found in a French museum belonged to Joan of Arc, Manseau is less interested in the legitimacy of relics than in how people use them to support belief. Christianity, Islam and Buddhism thrive by convincing the uninitiated that dogma preached by long-dead figureheads is universal truth. As the author points out, what better 'portable form of sanctity' is there for evangelicals than St. Francis Xavier's toe, Lama Yeshe's leg or St. Anthony's tongue? Born to a former nun and a priest who married but refused to renounce the Church, Manseau brings the same expansive perspective on belief to Rag and Bone that fueled his 2005 memoir, Vowsthe understanding that every leap of faith can benefit from a little push."Justin Moyer, The Washinton Post
"From Damascus to Jerusalem to Philadelphia (oddly, one of the relic capitals of the world), Manseau recounts his journey to find religious objects that have captivated the faithful for centuries and his encounters with modern pilgrims along the way . . . Manseau's vivid recollections of each trip, combined with personal anecdotes and interesting tidbits (did you know that every Roman Catholic Church in the U.S. has a relic?), provide a fascinating look into an ancient and complex topic."M. J. Stephey, Time
"Talk about a long, strange trip. Manseau journeys around the world seeking Muhammad's whiskers, Buddha's tooth (there's a Temple of the Holy Tooth in Sri Lanka) and even Jesus' foreskinor at least the people who believe these saintly relics exist. Of course, there really is 'La Chapelle dell Reliquie' is Padua, Italy, the home to Saint Anthony's tongue. There's proper respect for believers and a nod and a wink for the others (the traveling Heart Shrine Relic van, for example, reminds him of the Scooby-Doo gang's Mystery Machine)."Billy Heller, New York Post
"Because he is serious but not heavy, Peter Manseaujournalist, novelist, memoirist, teacher, studentmakes an amusing traveling companion in Rag and Bone, his tour of the bits and pieces of saints and saviors that we have been moved to worship . . . Manseau's pleasure is to roam the globe, dropping in at the basilica in Goa that houses the shriveled remains of St. Francis Xavier, or the shrine to the Buddha's tooth in Sri Lanka. But his point is that such relics, whether spurious or with provenance, are one of the ways in which humankind connects to something beyond itself . . . Part history, part hagiography, part travel book and part memoir, Rag and Bone is an elegantly crafted tribute to the ways in which life and death connect."David L. Beck, St. Petersburg Times
"Manseau begins his entertaining book with memories of his trip to a chapel in Italy to view, in the company of a crowd of tourists from across Europe, the tongue of St. Anthony. Later he goes to India to see St. Francis Xavier's toes, to France to discuss a rib that might have belonged to Joan of Arc, to Jerusalem to view the bones of a Russian nun who was martyred in 1918 when Bolshevik police threw her into a well, to Kashmir to consider a hair from the Prophet Muhammad's chin (that's right, a single whisker), and to Sri Lanka in a surreal and funny attempt to see Buddha's tooth. But this isn't a religious book. It's a book about religion. Inspiration is not Manseau's goal as he addresses the history and conflict behind relics, and the 'macabre magnetism' that inspires us to venerate scraps of the holy dead. He's a droll and engaging tour guide in the strange territory he covers. Whether it's quaint or barbaric, he writes, we treat 'what remains of those we admire as conduits to something greater than ourselves.'"The Arizona Republic
"Lets start with this: when I was carrying this book around with me, while reading it for the purposes of this review, someone who knows me well noticed the coverwith the title, and the picture of a praying skeletonand started laughing. 'Boy,' he said, 'is that ever up your alley.' And it is. Thats the truth about Rag and Bone: it is a very specific, narrowly focused sort of book, and if this is your sort of thingpoking among the religious curiosities of the world, with an eye for the mystical, the mythic and the mundanethen this book will really be your sort of thing. Because it cant be faulted in approach or in execution; Peter Manseau is too canny a reporter, and writer, for that. Subject matter is what this one boils down to, friends, and you will either love it or recoil from it. If you love it, you will love it a lot . . . Manseaus tone, through all of these wanderings, is even-tempered and genial. He does not wear the scornful smile of the skeptic, but he does not write from a place of gullibility, either. Instead, he is respectful and good-humoreda just-about-unbeatable combination, when dealing with a topic such as this."Charity Vogel, The Buffalo News
About the Author
Peter Manseau is the author of the memoir Vows and the novel Songs for the Butchers Daughter. He is also the coauthor (with Jeff Sharlet) of Killing the Buddha: A Heretics Bible. The editor of Search: The Magazine of Science, Religion, and Culture, he lives with his wife and two daughters in Washington, D.C., where he teaches writing and studies religion at Georgetown University.