Leo Bebb is a fictional clergyman who is featured in The Book of Bebb, a tetralogy by Frederick Buechner. Cynthia Ozick calls him a "lustily flawed hero".[1]
Background
editLeo Bebb is the head of a religious diploma mill in Florida who had once served five years in a prison on a charge of exposing himself before a group of children. Buechner says of Bebb that "he came, unexpected and unbidden, from a part of myself no less mysterious and inaccessible than the part where dreams come from."[2]
Physical appearance
editWhen Bebb is first introduced, in Lion Country, he is described as follows:
A workable, Tweedledum mouth with the lines at the corners, the hinge marks, making an almost perfect H with the tight lips. A face plump but firm, pale but not sick pale. He was high-polish bald and had hardly a trace of facial hair, beard or eyebrows even. The eyes were jazzy and wide open and expectant, as if he'd just pulled a rabbit out of a hat or was waiting for me to.[3]
Evaluation
editW. Dale Brown asks the question,
"Is it possible that the unlikeliest of vessels, the obvious shyster, that round ball of contradictions and failings, could function as an instrument of grace?"[4]
Brown goes on to suggest that "Buechner's repeated use of ambiguous protagonists as channels of grace suggests Graham Greene, J. F. Powers and Robertson Davies."[5]
References
edit- ^ Cited in New & Noteworthy, New York Times, September 30, 1984.
- ^ Buechner, Frederick (1983). Now and Then: A Memoir of Vocation. p. 97.
- ^ The Book of Bebb, p. 4.
- ^ Brown, W. Dale (2006). The Book of Buechner: A Journey Through His Writings. Presbyterian Publishing Corp. p. 180. ISBN 9780664231132.
- ^ Brown, The Book of Buechner, p. 220.