• Skip to main content

Reading Catholic

Reading Catholic and catholic

  • Home
  • About
  • A Literary Pilgrimage
  • Book Group

Saints

2013 Reading Catholic Book Survey

December 30, 2013 by Nancy Piccione

At the end of last year,  I shared a self-survey of my favorite review books from 2012, and a look ahead to how I hoped to accomplish more in the new year, reading-wise.

I’ve noticed various people have posts and link-ups for topics along these lines, and I hope to link up with those after the fact, but first I’m going to share.  In a separate post (because this was getting way too long),  I also plan to review my 2013 resolutions and see how I did, and share some 2014 resolutions for Reading Catholic.

So, without further ado, here is my 2013 Book Survey. I’d love to hear your favorite books of 2013, and what you hope to accomplish, reading-wise, in 2014. Happy reading!

What was the most important/best book that you read this year?

Easily, that would be Forming Intentional Disciples: The Path to Knowing and Following Jesus by Sherry Weddell.  I need to re-read this book every year, and share it with more people than I’ve already shared it with.

T1286

What books were most spiritually fruitful for you this year?

Again I want to say Forming Intentional Disciples, but as I look over my 2013 reviewed books here I see that  A Season of Mystery: 10 Spiritual Practices for Embracing a Happier Second Half of Life by Patricia Huston affected me powerfully.  While I reviewed it in May, I read it during Lent and found it so nourishing.

a-season-of-mystery-book

I also found The Miracle of Father Kapaun  to be a powerful, powerful read, and I have been asking his intercession for a  private intention; I invite you to join me.  I also remember as I write this that I resolved to give this book to a neighbor who is also a Korean War veteran, and I have not done that yet.  Oy vey.

images

What were your most enjoyable books to review and/or read this year?

I’m going to limit myself with books I reviewed for The Catholic Post for this question, because it would be too hard otherwise.

I laughed a lot reading Dad Is Fat by Jim Gaffigan, but I found The Ear of the Heart (and contrasting it to Lean In) to be a great read, and fun to write about, especially contrasting it to Lean In.

ear-of-the-heart-mother-dolores-hart-book

I also not only enjoyed reading and reviewing  Robin Davis’ Recipe for Joy, I truly loved getting to meet Robin in person in November.  One of my sisters and I talked her ear off on a long cold walk when our family went to Ohio in November, and we had a great coffee to warm up afterwards.   Here’s a photo of that visit.

IMG_3873

What was the favorite book you read (or re-read) this year?

I’m including all books I read this year.

I read Emma with a book group this year and loved it (again).  Now I’m re-reading Persuasion and loving that.   I’ve decided in the last few years that I pretty much have to pick up a new Jane Austen when I finish re-reading one.   Always have a Jane Austen going, that’s one of my life mottos.

images-3

Reading The Royal Ranger, the last (sniff!) of the Ranger’s Apprentice series by John Flanagan, at roughly the same time as my three  children was bittersweet and wonderful.  Why can’t you write more, Mr. Flanagan, oh why?

images

How did you do with your resolutions for 2013, and what are your resolutions for 2014? 

That’s coming tomorrow in a separate post.

What were your favorite books of 2013?

(Update: I linked up this post to Modern Mrs. Darcy’s  “Your Favorite Books of 2013” link-up.)

your-favorite-books-header

Share this:

  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • More
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...

Meet a Reader: Sister Veronica Morris, OSF

December 9, 2013 by Nancy Piccione

Here is the December featured “Reader” that appears in the most recent print edition of  The Catholic Post. I’ve known Sister Veronica for a long time, and I so appreciate both the chance to hear about the books she loves and her willingness to be featured here.  Thank you, Sister!

image001

How you know me:

 I am a member of The Sisters of the Third Order of Saint Francis in East Peoria. Our Apostolate is healthcare. We sponsor OSF Healthcare. You may have seen me at the hospital, The Cathedral of Saint Mary of the Immaculate Conception, or at one of the local parishes.

Why I love reading:

 For me, reading is both educational and enjoyable. I love to pick up a book and learn something new; whether that be a subject completely unknown to me or something that I know a little about, but want to dig deeper into. I also love to read because it has a way of expanding my worldview, and challenging my thoughts and feelings about a particular subject or person. I inherited my love of reading from my mom. We both have a tendency to have multiple books started at any given time.

What I’m reading now: 

Mother Angelica’s Little Book of Life Lessons and Everyday Spirituality by Raymond Arroyo. I just started reading it but I just love the practical, no-nonsense advice she gives on deepening your spiritual life. I have also read Arroyo’s biography of her, Mother Angelica: The Remarkable Story of a Nun, Her Nerve, and a Network of Miracles. Both books are absolutely worth the read and I highly recommend them.

2.   Pope John Paul Speaks to Religious 1981-1982, Book II by Pope John Paul II
Absolutely beautiful transcripts of Blessed John Paul II’s talks to religious when visiting near and far. He had such a beautiful way of affirming religious, and at the same time calling us to authentic renewal. It is just as relevant and powerful today as when he spoke those words.

My favorite book:

The Way of Divine Love by Sister Josefa Menendez. This book is her spiritual diary; it’s the story of an amazing soul through whom the Lord chose to communicate His love to the world. I really don’t have many words to explain why it is my favorite, but I do know that it is one that I will read over and over.

Share this:

  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • More
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...

The Behold Conference

November 26, 2013 by Nancy Piccione

The Behold Conference is back!

thumb.php

Here is the registration page for the 2014 event.  I plan to sign up myself and my older teen daughter, who enthused about the conference on Facebook and elsewhere.  Will you be attending?  What are you looking forward to most?

I am looking forward to hearing Mother Assumpta, and getting the chance to see Mary Rice Hasson and Marie Miller again.  I’m sure it is going to be great.

But I’m not going to be heavily involved with planning the conference this year. Last time,  I was “social media director.”  I had to make a tough decision several weeks back to step back from helping with the conference in a “big” way.  I’ll help out as needed, but I won’t be organizing the “Meet the Bloggers” and blogger events as I did at Behold 2012.

On the one hand, I’m still grieving about not being hugely involved with Behold.  On the other hand, there has been enormous relief about the decision, and so much in our family’s life in past weeks has confirmed that this was the right thing for me to do.

Strangely enough, Twitter was a source of comfort.  I’m such a Twitter failure (a la Amber Dusick, only with older kids), but I do really enjoy it for so many reasons.

Just a few days ago, I was on Twitter for work reasons (yes! that can actually happen).  I use the TweetDeck app on my laptop, and so as I tweet out, I can see new tweets for the five minutes I’m on here and there.  And just as I was about to close up, I saw this tweet from Kathryn Whitaker.

photo

And since I was already overdue on getting kids out the door to an appointment, I couldn’t take the time to respond.  But I felt so grateful for her tweet, and for putting into words what I had been feeling.  Letting go of something you love is hard.  So, thank you, Kathryn, for that tweet that I needed just at that time.  (And now I’ve gone and favorited her tweet–I wonder if it’s too late to respond since it’s nearly a week?)

Are you planning to attend Behold?  Have you ever had to let go of something you love?

Share this:

  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • More
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...

Musician and Pilgrim: An Interview with Matt Maher

November 21, 2013 by Nancy Piccione

Last week, I was privileged to interview Matt Maher, the best-selling and award-winning Catholic singer/songwriter.  Maher performed at a standing-room only concert, “An Evening of Worship” of more than 1,400 at Harvest Bible Chapel in East Peoria November 14, along with worship singer Meredith Andrews and Vertical Church Band.   Following is a longer version of our Q&A that will appear in The Catholic Post.  Tomorrow I will be sharing the “back story” behind the interview and more  about Matt Maher, including what books he’s reading these days.

IMG_8752

Q. The video of you singing “Lord, I Need You” during the Eucharistic Adoration Vigil at World Youth Day in Rio went viral among Catholics online. What was it like to sing at World Youth Day?

I’ve been to World Youth Day many times. The first was 2000 in Rome, and then 2002 in Toronto and then 2008 in Sydney. I missed Madrid because my wife was having our first baby.

I was actually on the fence about attending World Youth Day in Brazil, but the artistic director e-mailed me several times. The producer of the main stage events had heard “Lord, I Need You” and wanted to have the song sung there.

At first I thought I would be singing in the time before Adoration. I didn’t realize until about an hour and a half before that I was going to sing while the Blessed Sacrament was exposed.

Q. Did you plan to kneel?

Well, that’s interesting, because some people were kneeling and some people were standing in Brazil.

And I did parish ministry for 13 years, and in the work I did with LifeTeen, and leading music during Eucharistic Adoration, was big part of the ministry. I had almost always knelt. At first, there’s a challenge to it—how do I kneel and sing at the same time?

At World Youth Day, I was waiting to walk up the stairs to go on. I said a prayer and then I said a Hail Mary, and all of sudden I felt the Holy Spirit say, “You should kneel,” and I said, “Okay.” And I knelt.

There were two million people at the Vigil. The two thoughts I had during adoration were the Lord saying, “I am the same. There’s really nothing different.” There’s no way for eye to the comprehend two million people, and they were behind me, so I couldn’t see them. And so it was the Lord saying to me, “You’ve done this before.” And the miracle of it was rooted back in the fact that the Lord chooses to come to His people in this way.

The other human thought was, “Man, I really hope I’m not bothering the Holy Father, because that would be a real drag.”

Q. Did you get a chance to meet Pope Francis?

No, I didn’t, but someone sent me the freeze frame photo of us very close together, and I’ve thought of maybe sending it to him along with a note saying, “Hey, we were really close, but we didn’t get to meet. Let me know if you’d ever like to have lunch.” Some of my friends have joked that he might call me, since he likes to do that.

Q. Do you have thoughts on or a favorite quote from Pope Francis?

He’s so prolific. I’m like everyone else in that I’m constantly digesting it. Every morning I read the Vatican News Service and he is saying something really profound.

My favorite theme from Pope Francis, what I’m hearing, is how he wants a church that is poor.

God is using him; He is casting a different vision for how Catholics are how to engage in the world.

There are some areas of tension in the United States. While we’re part of such a wealthy country, we forget that we’re really a very small part of the global Catholic Church. When you are the vicar of Christ, you are thinking about the entire world—Europe, Africa, Asia. Sometimes in the West, we can fall into the temptation to be self-obsessed, and we need to change that.

Pope Francis talks about how we’re hospital workers on a battlefield, and if you’re treating the wounded, some of it gets on you. It’s always a challenge for us in Western culture (which itself is narcissistic) to wonder, “Is the Church being narcissistic?”

I think that’s what he is talking about when he is talking about getting away from being self-referential. It’s considering what do you think about first, are you thinking about yourself, or are you thinking about the people you are called to serve? It’s going to take time (to fully understand all that Pope Francis is teaching). [John Paul II] preached the Theology of the Body, and we’re still unpacking it, and we will be for a couple of hundred years.

Q. You’re open about your Catholic faith, but in a way that is accessible to all Christians—your music & ministry strike me as realistic and healthy ecumenism. What makes you successful at that, and what can the average person learn from you?

There’s a couple of things to remember. Our understanding of Christians from other denominations has changed so much since Vatican II, and needs to change further. Jeffrey Gros was one of the leading Catholic experts on ecumenism—he died recently. Last April I met him at Mundelein Seminary, and he said something there that was very profound. He said that when it comes to ecumenism, we have to realize that we are a pilgrim church and we are on a journey to the New Jerusalem. So when we meet other Christians on the way, it’s not about coming back home, as much as it is the destination.

Before ecumenism used to be an academic endeavor, done mostly by debating and writing papers.

What God is doing now— and maybe I get to be a small part of it— is missional ecumenism. It’s ecumenism ordered around developing understanding in the middle of a common work together.

Ecumenism is Emmaus. To me, Emmaus is the model for evangelization, but it’s also a model for ecumenism. Emmaus was when two people were walking together on “The Way” and Jesus encounters them. And as early Christians, we were known as “the people of the Way”. So as Christians together, we’re really about The Way.

I’ve been reflecting on the charism of World Youth Day as pilgrimage. Prior to the Reformation, pilgrimage was a way that people to developed deeper in their faith and their relationships with each other, and learn about and connected to the history of the Church, literally through the ground by going to holy sites, and to the Holy Land.

And so missional ecumenism carries this whole pilgrimage spirituality of the “now” and the “not yet.” We’re building the kingdom of God, but it’s not finished. Because (all Christians) have a common goal of reaching culture, of helping bring restoration, you can start to dialogue about the differences.

Q. Some of the interviews with Pope Francis share how he felt a deep sense of peace, and absence of fear, when he was elected Holy Father. You seem to me similar in that you have no fear about sharing your faith or being open about it.

Sometimes I’ve gotten flack that I haven’t been “Catholic “enough, but I’m approaching from the part of the prayer of St. Francis, “not be understood, but to understand.” I’m not concerned primarily with trying to be right, as much as trying to understand the people I serve.

Q. I loved what you said on a radio interview before the concert (on a morning WCIC interview with Jill and Jeremy Tracey) in which you quoted St. Faustina and her vision of “the ocean of mercy.” Can you share that with readers of The Catholic Post?

Well, it comes from St. Faustina’s diary. Jesus talks about sinners, and he says, “bring them to my ocean of mercy.” I sort of elaborated on it by saying that God gives us an ocean of mercy and we tend to act like it’s a cup.

When we first encounter Jesus, we experience the ocean, and then we walk away from it. When we walk away from it, and then think, I can’t carry the ocean with me, so I guess I’ll carry a cup. But that size mercy would be exhausted rather quickly, on yourself and on others. Mercy is so needed.

I think there is a huge emphasis now in ministries in proclaiming the truth, standing for the truth. Some people amend this to say that you need to share the truth in love.

But before it all, in Scripture it says, “God’s kindness leads us to repentance.” The kindness that is talked about is God’s mercy, the mercy that he has shown us. And when you are walking in humility—which is a big aspect of this papacy— the reason you are humble is because you are aware of the mercy of God. There’s less time to cast judgment.

Q. You’re a new dad. How does parenthood affect your music, your faith, and your life?

My wife and I have a two-year-old son and a month-old daughter.

Marriage exposes all the things in you that are selfish, but you’re dealing with another adult so you don’t necessarily have to change.

Being a parent makes you realize that if you don’t, it will drastically affect the life of another human being, and they are counting on you.

So, first of all, marriage has changed my DNA, and then parenthood as well. Marriage is a sacrament and it changes you. It’s like the first time you go to confession or the first time you receive the Eucharist. Marriage is the same way. We need to help people understand that. And also, that the priesthood and marriage are mystically linked. You can’t have good marriages without the priesthood and vice versa.

For me, I think the parenthood thing is only settling in now, because my kids are so young.

Q. What’s next for you?

I’m working on something ambitious; it should come out in 2015. I’m just writing and reading and praying right now. The two things that I’m thinking about and praying about is World Youth Day in Krakow in 2016 and the fact that several years from now is 500 years from the Reformation.

I am so grateful to Matt Maher for being willing to do this interview.  He was very articulate and had much more to say than this Q&A.  I’ll share a few behind-the-scenes facts and more from our interview tomorrow, so be sure to check back.  Or you can just sign up to receive e-mail updates from Reading Catholic by using the box on the upper right of this page, and you’ll get updates when they appear here.

Share this:

  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • More
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...

Worth a Listen: John Paul II AutoTuned

November 20, 2013 by Nancy Piccione

Sharing great songs that are inspiring, uplifting and/or are otherwise “worth a listen”).   Read here for a short explanation of this feature.

Many local readers will know about the relic of Blessed John Paul II that was in the Peoria diocese the last few days.  Here is an article here about Monday night’s Mass and veneration of the relic.  The article is well worth reading:

“Bishop Jenky used the historic occasion — the Diocese of Peoria was one of only three dioceses to host the relic during its U.S. pilgrimage — to remind Catholics that ‘like John Paul, we too are all called to be saints.'”

This event made me recall this favorite video that came out last year of Blessed John Paul II AutoTuned to sing “Dynamite.”  It’s really fun to watch.

I have so many favorite parts of this video, but the crowd singing, “We love you” and JPII singing back, “Perhaps I love you more” is just about perfect. The video creator has made several other Catholic-themed AutoTunes that are also great, but this one is my favorite.

Were you at the Mass Monday night? Are you excited for the canonization of JPII and John XXIII in April on Divine Mercy Sunday?

Share this:

  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • More
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...

Gift Book Ideas for Children & Families

November 8, 2013 by Nancy Piccione

Following is my November column that appears in this weekend’s print edition of The Catholic Post.  I invite your feedback here as well as any book suggestions you have.  A few more great books have arrived since I wrote this column, so that I may need to do an update.  December’s column will feature books for adults.

Recommending books for gifts at Christmas—or any season—can be tricky. And yet books can be a great source of enjoyment and encouragement, and, at the right time and the right place, evangelization.

In the must-read Forming Intentional Disciples (my review of that book is here), Sherry Weddell writes of the thresholds that people cross on the journey towards Christ. Before any other step, a person must have a “bridge of trust” in either someone in, or some part of, the Catholic faith, before curiosity, openness, or truly seeking a relationship with Jesus can take place.

Well-designed and well-written books can foster or strengthen that “bridge of trust” that can lead to curiosity and beyond, planting seeds for future spiritual growth.

With that in mind, I’ve tried to select books that would appeal to a wide range of readers, especially those at a beginning level of trust or curiosity.

This month, the books column features books for children, and also more general “coffee table” type of books suitable for all ages. Next month’s column will feature books for adults.

women-of-the-bible-2*I was drawn to Women of the Bible by Margaret McAllister because of Alida Massari’s expressive and lovely watercolor illustrations. But after reading several of these enchanting stories, in which McAllister beautifully imagines vignettes based on women described in the Bible, I can confidently say the writing is even better. This is a delightful read-aloud for children of all ages. Highly, highly recommended.

bambinelli-sunday-a-christmas-blessing_6363_500

*Bambinelli Sunday: A Christmas Blessing by Amy Welborn, illustrated by Ann Kissane Engelhart. This is the latest of three picture books by Welborn and Engelhart, and their best collaboration so far. (Here’s hoping the two do many more in future years.)

It’s a story of a boy learning from his grandfather that “Love brings all the pieces together,” even when those pieces are broken. The book is also a charming introduction to the real-life newer tradition of Bambinelli Sunday, when Italian children gather on Gaudate Sunday (the third Sunday of Advent) to have the baby Jesus figures from the family creche set blessed by the Holy Father.

822438The “Saints & Me!” series of books from Liguori Press, with clever illustrations and approachable text for younger readers, is authored by Barbare Yoffie, and illustrated by Katherine A. Borgatti.. Added this year were four new saints–Damien of Molokai, Rose Philippine Duchesne, Andre Bessette, and St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, as well as a Saints of North America Activity Book (pictured above), with coloring pages, word puzzles and other goodies to keep little hands busy.

91d609_b164ad51c1fba59ea03b4ea3b716549f.jpg_srz_471_726_75_22_0.50_1.20_0.00_jpg_srzFor more mature young readers, Nancy Carabio Belanger’s newest novel, The Gate, is beautifully written story of a teen boy’s struggle through the death of his father and accidental friendship with a nursing home resident. I’ve loved and highly recommend Belanger’s other award-winning novels—Olivia and the Little Way for middle-grade readers, and Olivia’s Gift for slightly older readers (review here and author interview (with a twist) here).

Because the narrative is told by an adult looking back, there’s a certain melancholy and maturity that would be most appealing for readers further along in their faith journey; I would say a slightly older audience than Olivia’s Gift. But’s its a great read for older children and adults.

Here are some “coffee table” style books suitable for all ages:

HOLY-LAND-BOOK-full*If you’ve ever had a desire to do a Holy Land pilgrimage (raising my hand here), Fr. Mitch Pacwa’s The Holy Land: An Armchair Pilgrimage offers a lush virtual tour in a handsome, well-designed book with tons of photos and many old illustrations and maps of Holy Land sites.

The book is substantial but not oversized, so it’s perfect for couch perusal, meditation, prayer and perhaps a little dreaming about your own Holy Land excursion.

item3834_250_x_250*Three new gorgeous books offer introduction to paintings well-known and obscure, all with religious themes: Sister Wendy on the Art of Mary; Sister Wendy on the Art of Christmas (pictured above), and Sister Wendy on the Art of Saints.

Sister Wendy Beckett, who became justifiably well-known in the 1990s for her BBC art history documentaries, is the author of these slim but powerful volumes. Each section offers a reproduction of artwork, plus Sister Wendy’s prayerful and educated—but never stuffy—commentary about the work and its religious meaning.

“When you look at the pictures in this book, really look, opening your heart to take in what is there before you, you are not only responding to a particular work of art, you are practicing the habit of openness to the beauty of God as he illuminates every moment of your every day…. it changes us.”

Looking at even one picture a day, and reading the short but rich narration, is a beautiful way to introduce yourself or anyone in your family to the delight of reflecting on beauty. Gorgeous artwork made richer by Sister Wendy’s commentary makes these books well worth having and cherishing.

Share this:

  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • More
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...
  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 13
  • Page 14
  • Page 15
  • Page 16
  • Page 17
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 19
  • Go to Next Page »

Copyright © 2025 · Atmosphere Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

  • Home
  • About
  • A Literary Pilgrimage
  • Book Group
%d