 
While still a teenager, Patrick Leigh Fermor made his way across Europe, as recounted in his classic memoirs, A Time of Gifts and Between the Woods and the Water. During World War II, he fought with local partisans against the Nazi occupiers of Crete. But in A Time to Keep Silence,   Leigh Fermor writes about a more inward journey, describing his  several  sojourns in some of Europe’s oldest and most venerable  monasteries. He  stays at the Abbey of St. Wandrille, a great repository  of art and  learning; at Solesmes, famous for its revival of Gregorian  chant; and at  the deeply ascetic Trappist monastery of La Grande  Trappe, where monks  take a vow of silence. Finally, he visits the rock  monasteries of  Cappadocia, hewn from the stony spires of a moonlike  landscape, where he  seeks some trace of the life of the earliest  Christian anchorites.
More  than a history or travel journal,  however, this beautiful short book is  a meditation on the meaning of  silence and solitude for modern life.  Leigh Fermor writes, “In the  seclusion of a cell—an existence whose  quietness is only varied by the  silent meals, the solemnity of ritual,  and long solitary walks in the  woods—the troubled waters of the mind  grow still and clear, and much  that is hidden away and all that clouds  it floats to the surface and  can be skimmed away; and after a time one  reaches a state of peace that  is unthought of in the ordinary world.”