Stone Yard Devotional
By Charlotte Wood
Published 2023
Read Nov 2025
A woman takes a break in a small convent near where she grew up. She is taking a break from her work of trying to keep species from disappearing from the world and apparently from her marriage. She ends up staying—moving from the guest dormitory to the main dormitory over time. She isn’t staying for religious reasons of any sort. She only slowly realizes that the various prayer times that interrupt the women’s daily work might actually be the real work of the convent.
In contrast to vanishing species, the area suffers an amazing plague of field mice that have apparently been driven to the area due to some unnamed climate thing. The women slowly learn they need to protect their food in glass vs bags or plastic jars to keep the mice from devouring it. They buy and set countless traps and devise other ways to lower the population of mice. Our narrator has the task of purchasing the various equipment. All without interrupting the work.
Two other major things happen at the convent: the remains of a former sister who had been lost in Thailand have been returned to them and the sister who accompanies the remains, Helen Parry, is a former schoolmate of the narrator. Helen Parry has gone from being a bullied child to an internationally known activist in climate issues. The narrator is much more impacted by her arrival than are the others.
Over the course of the book, we learn a few things about the narrator, but the cause(s) of her despair and desire to drop out of her former life are never fully revealed. Instead, we hear about her slow acclimation to life at the convent as a non-religious but apparently accepted resident. The writing enables the reader to slow down and consider this life as well. It’s not surprising that this book is making a lot of “best of” lists. This reader will continue to read Wood’s work.