A provocative novel about faith, ritual, and the people who live between tradition and change.
George Cusack’s The Red Rag of Ritual follows life in a parish where old rituals collide with modern attitudes. The story opens with a curious eight-year-old visitor who asks to see a Catholic church, sparking a quiet drama about belief, authority, and belonging. Through the vicar and his helpers, the book explores how faith shapes daily life, relationships, and the small tensions hidden in a community.
Set against church life, family dynamics, and the politics of ritual, the narrative looks at what it means to be faithful in a changing world. It balances warmth and satire as it introduces memorable figures and the quiet moments that reveal deeper yearnings.
- Character-driven drama centered on a parish and its clergy
- Exploration of faith, ritual, and personal longing
- Witty, observant depiction of parish life and its tensions
- A blend of humor and humane insight into community expectations
Ideal for readers of period fiction that examines religion, society, and the human heart within a charitable, critical eye.