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In Ferrara, Italy, visits to Corpus Domini and Sant’Antonio in Polesine provided emotional as well as physical geography, while the city itself is so welcoming and visually evocative of its past that I fail to understand why it isn’t overwhelmed by tourists (though that is also one of its great pleasures).

I am grateful to Professor Elissa B. Weaver and to Cambridge University Press for allowing me to quote some lines of translation from her 2001 book on convent theater (details in the bibliography).

As always, deepest thanks go to Clare Alexander and Sally Riley my agents; my American editor, Susanna Porter; and in London, Elise Dillsworth and the one and only Lennie Goodings, head of Virago Press.

Writers are not the most even-keeled of human beings when working on a book. I’d like to apologize to my daughters, Zoe and Georgia, for the excessive number of conversations about nuns in our house, and, for their critical support, to thank Eileen Horne, Christopher Bollas, Gillian Slovo, Maria Maragonis, Don Guttenplan, Ian Grojnowski, Scarlet MccGwire, Joseph Calderone, Sue Woodman, Christina Shewall, and Isabella Planner. But final thanks must go to Tez Bentley who, as well as giving my words the polish of his rigorous subeditor’s pen, suffered (and I do not use the word lightly) alongside me when the going got really rough. It is fitting, perhaps, that for a novel with no men within it there should have been one on the outside whose sanity and generosity kept me from madness.

— London

May 2009

www.sarahdunant.com

BIBLIOGRAPHY

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Baernstein, P. Renee. A Convent Tale. Routledge Press.

Baxandall, Michael. Painting and Experience in Fifteenth-Century Italy. Oxford University Press.

Bell, Rudolph M. Holy Anorexia. University of Chicago Press.

Bornstein, Daniel, editor. Women and Religion in Medieval and Renaissance Italy. University of Chicago Press.

Broedel, Hans Peter. The Malleus Maleficarum and the Construction of Witchcraft. Manchester University Press.

Brown, Judith C. Immodest Acts: The Life of a Lesbian Nun in Renaissance Italy. Oxford University Press.

Burke, Peter. Popular Culture in Early Modern Europe. Scholars Press.

Bynum, Carolyn Walker. Holy Feast and Holy Fast: The Religious Significance of Food to Medieval Women. University of California Press.

________. Jesus as Mother. University of California Press.

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________. Bread of Dreams. Cambridge Polity Press.

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Cardono, Girolamo. “The Book of My Life.” New York Review of Books, 2002.

Clark, Stuart. Thinking with Demons. Clarendon Press.

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Weinstein, Donald, and Rudolph M. Bell, editors. Saints and Society. University of Chicago Press.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

SARAH DUNANT is the author of the international bestsellers The Birth of Venus and In the Company of the Courtesan, which have received major acclaim on both sides of the Atlantic. Her earlier novels include three Hannah Wolfe crime thrillers, as well as Snowstorms in a Hot Climate, Transgressions, and Mapping the Edge, all three of which are available as Random House Trade Paperbacks. She has two daughters and lives in London and Florence.

www.sarahdunant.com