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Gilead won the 2005 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the National Book Critics Circle Award. It is an epistolary novel, as the entire narrative is a single, continuing, albeit episodic, document, written on several occasions in a form combining a journal and a memoir. It comprises the fictional autobiography of John Ames, an elderly, white Congregationalist pastor in the small, secluded town of Gilead, Iowa (also fictional), who knows that he is dying of a heart condition. At the beginning of the book, the date is established as 1956. Ames explains that he is writing an account of his life for his seven-year-old son, who will have few memories of him.
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The Bible faculty at my high school were all Anglican except one Presbyterian pastor. He would say one of the saddest misconceptions of Calvin was that he thought the world was and people are evil. Anyway, I'm sure he read this book
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