Alexander Larman 

Augustine: Conversions and Confessions review – an in-depth study of faith’s foundations

Robin Lane Fox’s biography of the 4th-century saint deserves to become the standard work on his religious teaching
  
  

An oil painting of St Augustine of Hippo
St Augustine of Hippo: Lane Fox’s biography is ‘unashamedly highbrow’. Photograph: Alamy

Robin Lane Fox’s dense and satisfying biography does not attempt to provide an exhaustive account of St Augustine of Hippo’s life, but focuses on the period in which he wrote his Christian masterpiece, Confessions, and the impact that his conversion to faith had on his philosophy.

Lane Fox assumes that his reader will have a sound grounding in Augustine’s work – it seems unlikely that anyone buying this book would not – and so his methodology is an unashamedly highbrow one, seeking to illuminate both the man’s thoughts and life. He does not offer a hagiography of Augustine, discussing his sexual exploits in great detail – both heterosexual and, Lane Fox implies strongly, homosexual – and seeking to explore how a life of casual sin might usefully cede into an anguished state of divine contemplation. Lane Fox, himself no believer, has produced a comprehensive book likely to become the standard work on Augustine’s Confessions in the future.

Augustine: Conversions and Confessions is published by Allen Lane (£30). Click here to order a copy for £24

 

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