"[Raw], honest, beautifully written, and at times searing . . . We live in a world that is always clouded by ungrace, by strife and anger and division, according to Yancey, and Christians should be on the other side . . . The pain of [Yanceys] early life gives his words and his witness an authority and authenticity that he would otherwise not have. He has become, over time, a person to whom the wounded and the brokenhearted are drawn, compelled by his message of grace."The Atlantic
"Where the Light Fell is in many ways a classic spiritual autobiography tracing one mans conversion from cynic to believer. But its more. Its a searing family story as revelatory as gothic Southern fiction. Its an exposé. Its a social critique. Its a tragedy. Its a tale of redemption. . . . The memoir itself is an answer to the question that looms throughout: What do we do with the burdens, sins, and pain of our past?"Christianity Today
"Searing. Heartrending . . . This stunning tale reminds us that the only way to keep living is to ask God for the impossible: love, forgiveness, and hope."Kate Bowler, New York Times bestselling author of Everything Happens for a Reason
"Philip Yancey is not just one of my favorite Christian writers, but one of my favorite writers, period. He is fearless in addressing the toughest questions and hardest times, the crucifixions we will all know during this life, the hope and shapes and colors of resurrection."Anne Lamott, New York Times bestselling author of Dusk Night Dawn
"An illuminating autobiography that could very well have been titled The Philip Yancey Philip Never Knew. Delicate, tender, humorous, and brutally honest, Where the Light Fell accomplishes quite significantly as the authors biography, but also as a biography of our nation grappling with her faith. At once pain-filled and healing, through this book we come to know a trickster who falls into the mysterious power of words, revealing the cracks and fragments of our culture at large, but reminding us afresh how grace can ultimately prevail over us."Makoto Fujimura, founder of the International Arts Movement, artist, and author of Silence and Beauty and Art and Faith: A Theology of Making
"[A] graceful, illuminating memoir, a gift to [Yanceys] readers."Booklist
"[A] gripping memoir . . . Yanceys eloquent descriptions of coming to faith and his exacting self-examination make this a standout. Exploring the corrosive role of fear in faith, Yanceys piercing and painful account invites comparison to Hillbilly Elegy."Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Where the Light Fell could be a Faulkner novel, with racist preachers, off-kilter parenting, tormented siblings, and religious hypocrisy right and left. Its not an overstatement to say that this stunning memoir might be the miracle weve all waited for. I believed every word."Carolyn S. Briggs, author of Higher Ground