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<P>There is a brief section in the book in Collis' biography of Kempe describing her pilgrimage (the source, I think, of Sokstad's comments). The Kempe book is still in print, in fact it was fairly recently reprinted by Harper. Sokstad's book is more strongly linked to Santiago and its pilgrimage than is the biography of Kempe, but both are fascinating reading. Most good University libraries and better public libraries are likely to have copies of the Sokstad and the Collis books. If your local library does not have copies, interlibrary loan is a marvelous thing and saves one from having to spend vast sums at Amazon.com or its equally odious competitors like Barnes & Noble. Almost every public library and university/college library will arrange an interlibrary loan for a qualified reader.</P>
<P>Collis, Louise. 1983. Memoirs of a Medieval Woman: The Life and Times of Margery Kempe. New York: Harper & Row.<BR><BR></P></DIV>
<DIV>E. O. Pederson</DIV>
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<DIV>Seattle, WA</DIV>
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