An account of how Christian monks identified distraction as a fundamental challengeâand how their efforts to defeat it can inform ours, more than a millennium later.
What The Reviewers Say
Jennifer Szalai,
The New York Times Book Review
The subtitle of The Wandering Mind is 'What Medieval Monks Tell Us About Distraction,' which is a tantalizing, if somewhat misleading, proposition. This is a charming and peculiar book. I can’t blame Kreiner for using the cultural obsession with distractibility to train our focus elsewhere, guiding us from the starting point of our own preoccupations to a greater understanding of how monks lived..
Dominic Green,
The Wall Street Journal
The Wandering Mind is a lucid and vivid examination of how early Christian monks created habits of contemplation.
Casey Cep,
The New Yorker
[Kreiner is] a wry and wonderful writer. In The Wandering Mind, she eschews nostalgia, rendering the past as it really was: riotously strange yet, when it comes to the problem of attention, annoyingly familiar.
Kirkus
Kreiner uses a wide array of primary sources spanning the entirety of medieval Christendom, creating a pleasantly readable result. Good proof that the problem of distraction is nothing new..