Thomas Merton was a Trappist monk in Kentucky; Dorothy Day the founder of the Catholic Worker in New York; Flannery OConnor a “Christ-haunted” literary prodigy in Georgia; and Walker Percy a doctor in Louisiana who had quit medicine in order to write. Although they never met as a group, for three decades they read one anothers work, corresponded, and grappled with what Percy called a “predicament shared in common”: their desire to reconcile the claims of faith and art. A friend came up with a name for themthe School of the Holy Ghost. The Life You Save May Be Your Own is Paul Elies now-classic group portrait of these four writers and the artistic and religious milieu they made their own. It is a riveting history of Americas first Catholic literary momentas the four go on pilgrimage from the God-obsessed literary past of Dante and Dostoevsky out into the chaos of postwar American life. It is a narrative of the ways faith took on forms the faithful could not have anticipated through memoir and modernist fiction, in soup kitchens and street protests. And it is a story about the ways we look to great books and writers to help us make sense of our experience. With a new afterword by the author, The Life You Save May Be Your Own demonstrates the power of great writing to changeand saveour lives.