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.

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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.

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Best of 2023 Book Awards

Our favorite books that we reviewed in 2023. If you want Catholic literature but don’t know where to start this, (and previous award winners) is the list for you.

Shadowmancer by G.P. Taylor

A dark fantasy along the lines of Revelation itself.

The Fisherman’s Bride by Catherine Magia

The wife of Peter takes up her pen to tell her side of the story, and forces us to examine our ideas of perfection and holiness.

The River of Life by Diana González Tabbaa

The death of little Anthony’s father shakes his faith until a heaven-sent friend helps him find his way back to God.

Horrorstor by Grady Hendrix

Finally, someone’s done it. Someone’s written a horror novel about a haunted IKEA. And boy is it done well.

Somewhither by John C. Wright An Unwhithering Realm

What if the Multi-verse were not a theory to disprove God? What if he created it, and all humanity must unite to fight the powers of Babel?

Do Carpenters Dream of Wooden Sheep? by Corinna Turner

A poignant retelling of the Holy Family in a cyberpunk universe.

Unrepeatable: Cultivating the Unique Calling of Every Person By Luke Burgis and Joshua Miller, PhD

Every person is gifted with a primary vocation from birth based on motivational patterns.

Christmas Spirits by Karina Fabian

A dragon PI and a Faerie nun try to save a businessman from the Ghosts of Christmas.

The Wind That Shakes The Corn: Memoirs of a Scots Irish Woman by Kaye Park Hinckley

Sold into slavery on her wedding night, an 18th-century Irishwoman struggles to free herself from her thirst for vengeance.

The Light of Tara by John Desjarlais

As the power of Rome crumbles, a teenage St. Patrick must decide between his home and sacrificing himself for those who had enslaved him.

Anna Lucia: Book 2, The Casa Bella Chronicles By Liz Galvano

Can Lucinda heal from her past and learn to love again?

In Pieces by Rhonda Ortiz

Is a marriage without love the only way to save Molly Chase’s reputation?

Introducing Our New Editor, Eric Postma

Eric Postma of Gingerman Editorial joins the team as our Catholic Horror editor!

Zeal & Zest: Where to Begin with Hillaire Belloc

Belloc was known as a Catholic polemicist with a vicious talent for skewering his opponents. Anyone struggling to persevere as a Christian in the fields of journalism or media should read him. His children’s books have an acerbic humor that will appeal to bored veterans of political correctness, especially teens.

The Blackbird and Other Stories By Sally Thomas

How does the human heart cope and soar from within breakage?

The Exorcist by William Peter Blatty

I knew this book was going to be scary. What I did NOT expect was to be left with a deep feeling of peace and comfort.

Saint Magnus: The Last Viking by Susan Peek

A young Viking Prince evades a warlord while finding his own harrowing path to sainthood.

Defend the Tabernacle by Deacon Patrick Augustin Jones

Catherine and Bernard get whisked away to do battle on the Soulscape, where the true nature of things is revealed.