From Union Square to Rome
by Dorothy Day
Edited by: Robert Ellsberg
Back in print, Dorothy Day's original account of her conversion
"A spiritual gem essential reading for contemporary Catholics."--Jim Martin, America magazine
"I have said, somewhat flippantly, that the mass of bourgeois smug Christians who denied Christ in His poor made me turn to Communism, and that it was the Communists and working with them that made me turn to God."--Dorothy Day
Dorothy Day, co-founder of the Catholic Worker, has been called "the church's least likely yet most plausible saint." In this early autobiographical work (published in 1938), Day offered the first account of her dramatic conversion, a story later expanded in her classic autobiography, The Long Loneliness (1952). In this concise and passionate work her purpose was more specific: to give an account to her former comrades in the radical movement of the steps that led to her to embrace Christ and the Catholic Church. Long unavailable, From Union Square to Rome is an essential book for all those fascinated by Day's unique brand of holiness and activism.