The Seer of Bayside
Veronica Lueken and the Struggle to Define Catholicism
Joseph P. Laycock
Reviews and Awards
"The Seer of Bayside is an excellent book, and I recommend it highly. Laycock's study has much to offer beyond its obvious contributions to scholarship on American Catholicism and post-Vatican II devotional cultures, however. Indeed, students and scholars alike will find in The Seer of Bayside an exemplary model for engaging with subjugated discourses" -- Grant Shoffstall, International Journal for the Study of New Religions
"A subtle and clear-as-possible history...Laycock makes a substantial contribution to methodological conversations about how to study the strange and unfamiliar...The Seer of Bayside is a fascinating read and a careful history that contributes much to our understanding of religious experience and Catholic prayer in the U.S."--Religion in American History
"A fascinating study of phenomena at the fringes of organized religion, certain to appeal to academic readers." -- Library Journal
"Joseph Laycock has given us a compelling and very readable account of the drama surrounding one of America's most significant Marian apparition groups." --David G. Bromley, Director, World Religions and Spirituality Project, and Professor of Religious Studies and Sociology, Virginia Commonwealth University
"Joseph Laycock has given us an extraordinarily intimate and insightful picture of one of the most significant contemporary Marian movements, described in a manner that will make it must reading for all students of religion, regardless of discipline." --Michael Barkun, Professor Emeritus of Political Science, Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University
"Laycock's treatment of the apocalyptic movement that grew from Lueken's visions is sensitive, sophisticated, and evocative. As with all excellent studies of marginal religious groups, The Seer of Bayside sheds as much light on the center as it does on the fringes. The book offers powerful leverage into abiding questions about Catholics' relationship with ecstatic religious experience, sacred places, and modern forms of civil and religious authority." --John C. Seitz, author of No Closure: Catholic Practice and Boston's Parish Shutdowns (2011)
"This book brings to life historical figures and events, and is both sympathetic and critical, culminating in a call to historicize and contextualize, rather than merely categorize, movements like that in Bayside."-- Jill Krebs, Nova Religio
"This book is illuminating as it stands." --CHURCH HISTORY