Some years ago, newly grief-stricken, I sat immersed in the “blessing-laced encounter” of a Night of Grief and Mystery and knew myself to be in the presence of folk well-versed in the hard work of grappling with the immovable. Few there are who go willingly into the dark places where demons dwell and come back with such tender, heart-opening renderings of what they have encountered there. Trembling, Still is just such a text and testimonial.
Vulnerability is all too often dissonant in a culture obsessed with competence. Genuine devastation, as Stephen attests, brings with it a deep draught of frailty, it invites hard questions about consistency, and it forces a fumbling acceptance of the inadequacy of much of our bodily being.
Trembling, Still is an honouring of the beauty and brittleness of pottery, the resistance of beans, the affordances of having a hand in the provisioning of our daily bread, and it is an invitation and invocation to cultivate joy and gratitude in the midst of troubling times.
—Dr. Jonathan Code, senior lecturer in Sustainable Land Management at the Royal Agricultural University, Gloucestershire, UK