Joan of Arc: The Maid and the Fire
Faith, War, and the Making of a Saint
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Clara de Rémigny
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
Beyond the Myth—The Story Behind the Woman
Joan of Arc: The Maid and the Fire is a sweeping, intimate portrait of one of history’s most extraordinary figures—a teenage girl who defied kings, armies, and centuries of disbelief to carve her name into the conscience of the world.
Clara de Rémigny breathes new life into the story we think we know, stripping away the layers of myth to reveal the human Joan: a farmer’s daughter from Domrémy, born into a fractured France, whose unshakable faith propelled her from the muddy fields of Lorraine to the heart of royal power. When the voices she claimed were divine called her to save France, she obeyed—not with blind zeal, but with an intelligence and courage that startled those who tried to dismiss her.
This is not the tidy legend of a saint, but the ferocious, complicated journey of a girl who became a soldier, commander, prisoner, and martyr. De Rémigny paints Joan not as a symbol, but as a force of will—brave, obstinate, visionary, and devastatingly human. Through her eyes, readers walk the battlefields of Orléans, feel the weight of armor on trembling shoulders, and witness the betrayals that led her to the pyre.
Drawing on contemporary chronicles, trial transcripts, and letters, de Rémigny dismantles the centuries of distortion that followed Joan’s execution. She reveals a young woman both deeply spiritual and politically astute, capable of inspiring soldiers and unnerving scholars for generations. Her voice—insistent, defiant, incandescent—echoes through time as a reminder of what it means to believe when the world refuses to understand.
Combining the rigor of history with the narrative power of literary nonfiction, Joan of Arc: The Maid and the Fire is at once biography, tragedy, and testament. It’s a story of faith at war with doubt, of conviction sharpened by suffering, and of a life that still burns brightly against the darkness of forgetting.
For readers of Hilary Mantel, Stacy Schiff, and Erik Larson, Clara de Rémigny offers an unforgettable exploration of the line between devotion and destiny—between the girl who heard voices and the woman who became a saint.