Genre: Fiction; Spiritual

Year Published: 1964

Author’s Worldview: Catholic

Themes: Prayer, Intercessory Prayer, Purgatory, Sacrifice, Forgiveness, Creativity, Writing, Perfectionism

Audience: Christian Teen to Adult

Leaf by Niggle is well-known among Tolkien fanatics, but for those who have only read The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings, it will be something brand new and well worth your time.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter to Get Catholic Books 50% off to FREE

Niggle is perhaps best described in three ways: artist, perfectionist, and procrastinator. In his small home, in an equally small and quiet English village Niggle has been working for years on the painting of a tree, but not just any tree. Niggle is painting something in which each individual leaf is its own work of art. Every line must be perfect and every line must work with every other line. It is the greatest work of his life.

Yet, his perfectionism makes it a necessarily slow process, and he often goes backward, redoing large portions of the painting before he can move on.

Niggle’s procrastination comes into play as well and the tree will go untouched for long periods of time. Not that he is terribly productive during those breaks. He often uses the painting as an excuse to avoid interacting with people or with helping them when he could.

The latter is a problem that only got worse as time progressed. Realizing that time was getting short, Niggle focused on the painting obsessively, which made him more resentful of any claim on his time. The artist’s resentment came into sharp focus when his neighbor, Parish, came to ask for help in getting to the doctor for his sick wife and at least in contacting a builder to repair his leaky roof, if not help to repair it. Niggle does help, reluctantly by contacting the doctor and builder for Parish but refuses the greater sacrifice of using some his canvas (i.e. his painting) to help repair the roof.

Shortly after this, Niggle does in fact run out of time. A Driver comes to remove him, to a very unpleasant workhouse, leaving his painting behind. He is forced first into back-breaking carpentry and then into back-breaking labor for he knows not how long until he overhears two voices, apparently discussing what to do with him, whether to give him more labor or what is described as Gentle Treatment. The latter wins out and Niggle is taken by train far into the country. I won’t describe further what happens as it is best discovered for yourself.

The story, of course, is not a conventional narrative and could be described as an autobiographical allegory, two things Tolkien has a well-known disdain for. Others describe it less as an allegory and more as a parable. In any case, it is a beautiful, moving short story about how even the little choices we make in this life affect those around us, our fate, and even leave ripples in reality that can move people long after we have finally climbed that barely glimpsed mountains and crossed into the far green country of Heaven.

You can find Leaf by Niggle in various collections of Tolkien’s work, including The Tolkien Reader and the more recently released Tales from the Perilous Realm.

Get the audiobook on Audible

or

Buy the Paperback for $5.42

OR

Subscribe to Our Newsletter to Get Catholic Books 50% off to FREE

 

Revelation by Flannery O’Connor

Flannery O’Connor takes us into the mental experience of one of those people Jesus condemned.

A Good Girl by Johnnie Bernhard

When an old man dies his daughter must trace her family tree to find the ability to forgive him.

Champion of Valdeor by Sandralena Hanley

Fed up with modern 1st person, present tense narratives bursting with ‘hip’ characters? Look no further!

Lord of the World by Robert Hugh Benson

Does Pope Francis think the world is about to end?

St. Agnes and the Selkie by G. M. Baker

Cast up by the sea. Courted by the king. Followed by danger.

The Mystic Next Door and Triumph of the Cross by Edward Jozsa

What if your examination of conscience was a revelation from God about the state of your soul?

Pilgrim River: A Spiritual Memoir by Kenneth Garcia 

“I see a small-time scholar and a semi-autistic loner, a flawed man who has persistently sought the Holy. The Quiet One.”

End of Year Releases

The newest stories in Catholic literature! End your year with a good book.

Books to Pray With: April, For the Role of Women

A book list with prayerful reflection on the gift of women in the church. Pray and read along with us and the Pope’s monthly reflections for 2024.

Theology In the Bottle: Where Cana Meets the Cross By A. P. Schreck

Prayerful meditations to pair with your journal and a glass of wine.

Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter M. Miller Jr.

In a post-apocolyptic world a small Catholic monastery fights to preserve civilization for the next age.

Nightside The Long Sun by Gene Wolfe

A groundbreaking classic that conveys the practical need for ritual and a Priesthood to a secular world.

The City and The Dungeon by Matthew P. Schmidt

Who knew fighting monsters in a D&D dungeon could convince him that not everything can be attributed to a chance roll of the dice?

Best Books of 2018

2018 was a fantastic year for Catholic fiction! Check out our best picks of the year and let us know your favorites.

Seeking Allah Finding Jesus by Nabeel Qureshi

When a Muslim man asks God to show him who he is, he is unprepared for the answer.

Why Reading Fiction Made Me a Better Catholic

How reading fiction became a crucial step in my conversion to the Catholic Church.

Our Lady of the Roses by Janice Lane Palko

Could Rome spark romance between a fashionista and an inventor-engineer?

What Are Bridge Books?

We don’t just promote books by Catholic authors, but also books that explore values in common with Catholicism, incidental or not.

Dying for Compassion by Barbara Golder

This is the feisty lady-doc origin story I have been waiting for. Golder proves herself to be an excellent character writer in the mystery genre.

PANIC! (unSPARKed #3) by Corinna Turner

It’s a three hour drive unSPARKed, and for city-folk, anything might cause PANIC!