'... a balanced and thoughtful study that will interest a wide range of early-modern historians.' Catholic Historical Review 'In this significant work in the history of early modern Catholicism, Elizabeth Tingle argues for the continued importance of the doctrine of purgatory beyond the medieval period and through the end of the seventeenth century... The book makes several important contributions to the historiography of Catholic belief and practice, and demonstrates the way that the laity responded to changing ideas about the doctrines surrounding the community of the dead.' Renaissance Quarterly 'Solidly grounded in extensive archival research and carefully reasoned argument, Tingle makes an important, nuanced contribution to the history of early modern religious culture that offers important revisionary challenges to the current historiography from which scholars and advanced students will certainly profit.' Sixteenth Century Journal 'Tingle shows that death was a growing business in seventeenth-century Brittany, and more than that, it remained an astonishingly creative force within the devotional culture of the Church.' H-France ’...this well-researched and lucidly written book is wide-ranging and of interest not just to historians: the material discussed is crucial for our understanding of medieval piety and also of the ways in which tomb monuments functioned in this period and beyond.’ Church Monument