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Back to School…and the School of Grace {my August column, The Catholic Post}

August 18, 2014 by Nancy Piccione

Following is my August column that appears in this weekend’s print edition of The Catholic Post.

Now that back-to-school is in full swing, the focus is on getting children ready for school. It’s admirable to want our kids to have a good start to the school year. At the same time, keeping in mind that families are the first “school of Christian life,” as the Catechism of the Catholic Church tells us, we need to focus.

Parents are meant to take heart the words of the Catechism, “The family home is rightly called “the domestic church,” a community of grace and prayer, a school of human virtues and of Christian charity.” (CCC 1666)

But for those of us who have trouble getting kids to try new vegetables or be diligent in doing their homework, creating a “domestic church” can seem more daunting than inspiring. Fortunately, we don’t have to go it alone. Here’s just a small sample of many new books out to help families in the school of grace.

 


A Little Book About Confession for Children by Kendra Tierney

Tierney writes and shares designs about family & faith at her blog “Catholic All Year,” and her first book also has this accomplished, encouraging voice.

At first glance, A Little Book About Confession for Children looks like it would be ideal for second graders and other small children preparing for their First Holy Communion. And that is true.

But limiting the book to younger ages would be a mistake, because this book has terrific and simple content for kids of any age, and even adults. The Q&A format of the book lends itself to short discussion or reading. It’s an edifying and enriching read for both parents and children.

Two standouts in A Little Book of Confession: mini-biographies of five saints, including St. Josemaria Escriva, and St. John Bosco, who have a special connection with confession; and two examinations of conscience that provide sensible guidance for kids on how to make a good confession.


The Story of Saint John Paul II: A Boy Who Became Pope by Fabiola Garza.

This book, available in both hardcover and e-book with audio, is a charmingly illustrated biography of one of the church’s newest saints. It looks and reads like a picture book, but it covers Karol Wojtyla’s life from his childhood through to his election as Holy Father, with a tenderness and truth that even older readers will find of interest.

Tell Me About the Catholic Faith: From the Bible to the Sacraments an Ignatius Press/Magnificat book, is part catechism, part almanac about Scripture, Church history, and the current life of the Church. It’s a well-illustrated, interesting, and surprising read, for children ages six and up.

For the youngest readers (ages three to six), there’s a version of Tell Me About the Catholic Faith for Small Children, with even simpler words, more illustrations, but still highly readable and endearing for parents and other grown-ups to read with their children.

Finally, a book not for children specifically, for families, especially those with smaller children around.

The Little Oratory: A Beginner’s Guide to Praying In the Home is a superbly designed and right-sized volume on bringing beauty into the home, co-written by David Clayton and Leila Marie Lawler.

Clayton, an artist, Catholic convert, and blogger (The Way of Beauty), and Lawler, co-creator of the popular and gorgeous Catholic lifestyle blog “Like Mother, Like Daughter,”  have teamed up to provide a lovely, gentle introduction to the concept of creating a “little oratory” or prayer space, in the home.

Fans of “Auntie Leila” will  find more of Lawler’s directive and yet never scrupulous advice about creating beauty and a spirit of prayer in the home. There are gracefully simple illustrations by Lawler’s daughter, artist Dierdre Folley, sprinkled throughout the book, as well as eight full-color icons, suitable for framing, by David Clayton at the back of the book. It’s a great mixture.

There’s a lot to explore and absorb in The Little Oratory. What feature do I love best? The repeated caution to not try to do everything suggested, or feel inadequate, because of how you are implementing prayer and a life of beauty your own domestic church, e.g.: “So please take all these suggestions as being offered with the utmost respect for the genius of the household—your family’s own creativity.”

For instance, the members of our family (in varying combinations) often do our “lectio divina” of Mass readings while an adult is driving and kids do the reading. Trust me, there’s no pleasingly designed, soothing prayer corner in my minivan, and don’t tell me if there is one in yours. And yet, we have had some great prayer and insights in our traveling domestic church, and in our sometimes-messy home. The goal is always progress, not perfection.

But this book is not just a book about creating a home space for prayer, thought that is primary in the early chapters. It’s also about creating a culture of beauty in the wider world. The appendices, with case studies about applying the principles of beauty in a business setting, to singing Vespers in a Veterans Hospital to bring beauty and prayer to the patients, are intriguing and not to be missed.

Reading a book like The Little Oratory with the right spirit of receptivity (more: “here are some good ideas,” less: “I must do all of this right now!”) can offer a path to making one’s own home, and community, more receptive to beauty. With this foundation, families and individuals have the chance to flourish in grace.

You might also be interested to know:

*If illustrator Deirdre Folley’s name sounds familiar to local women, perhaps it’s because she spoke at this year’s Behold Conference. (She also married a from -Peoria young man).

*For local readers , Leila Lawler will be speaking at St Patrick’s Church in Washington this coming weekend. Here are the details:

Leila Lawler talk announcement

 

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Twitterature, August 2014: The Assumption of Mary Edition

August 15, 2014 by Nancy Piccione

Happy Feast of the Assumption of Mary!

I had planned to make an edit for the Assumption, but ran out of time .  Here is the quote I planned to use.   I asked my theologian husband for some help, and he offered several different passages  from today’s Byzantine liturgy.  I may yet get to it today.  If not, there’s always next year:

“Neither death nor the tomb could hold the Mother of God.  She is always ready to intercede for us, forever our steady hope and protection.”

But, today I’m linking up with Anne at Modern Mrs. Darcy for her  monthly “Twitterature” link up of mini-reviews of favorite recent reads:

Glitter and Glue by Kelly Corrigan.  Highly recommended.

I laughed and cried, sometimes at the same story in this book. Corrigan writes so well of the mother-daughter relationship, how one’s view changes of our parents as we become adults, and again when we have children of our own. It’s called Glitter and Glue because her mother told her how she was the glue in the family, and her more easygoing husband was the glitter. How Corrigan perceives the difference between them changes after she spends part of a year as a post-college grad nannying for an Australian widower and his family, and later when she has a family of her own.

I wrote down many, many quotes from the book.  You can read some of them at my GoodReads review, but since this is meant to be short takes on books, here is just one:

“Raising people is not some lark. It’s serious work with serious repercussions. It’s air traffic control. You can’t step out for a minute; you can barely pause to scratch your ankle.”

Daddy Long Legs by Jean Webster. A laugh-out-loud classic.

I was at a book group earlier this week (coincidentally, we were discussing a book that is reviewed in my August column for The Catholic Post (that column will post here in a few days), and several of us were professing our love for Dear Mr. Knightley. No one else knew that the book was a combination of Emma and Daddy Long  Legs.  And no one else had read it!

So I was happy to talk a little about it–Daddy Long Legs is an epistolary (told in letters) novel between a young woman and her male benefactor.  It’s definitely old-fashioned in a lot of ways, but great good fun.

Books like Daddy Long Legs are like comfort food to me.  I’m really enjoying it again.

Courage Has No Color: The True Story of the Triple Nickles, America’s First Black Paratroopers by Tanya Lee Stone

Extremely well-written longer-form nonfiction for kids (middle grades on up) about the first group of African-American paratroopers.  I learned so much about World War II in this book I didn’t know about–segregation in the armed forces, and efforts to change that, the war effort in the United States.  Such a fascinating read.

What are you reading these days?

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Meet a Reader: Ryan Bustle

July 22, 2014 by Nancy Piccione

Bustle headshot

How you know me: I’ve had the honor of working for the Diocese of Peoria for the past 10 years.  I have just recently completed my 2nd year as the principal at The High School of St. Thomas More in Champaign.  I’ve been truly blessed with the opportunity to work as a teacher and administrator in our Catholic Schools, including Holy Trinity in Bloomington and St. Mary’s in Metamora, and I’ve worked with and met a lot of great families and co-workers. My wife Heather and I are members of Historic St. Patrick’s Parish in Bloomington.

Why I love reading: I love reading because it provides the opportunity to take your mind off of the things that might be bothering you.  Since the birth of my first child last February I’ve definitely had a renewed passion for reading because I love to see how intrigued our daughter is by books and how she lights up when we get to sit down and open up some of her favorites.  It is my favorite part of the day—there’s nothing more relaxing than that.

What I’m reading now: Right now my life is consumed with children’s books and I’m loving every minute of it.  I’m amazed how well done children’s books are now.  We are reading a lot of Dr. Seuss books
and Eric Carle books, but anything with bright, colorful illustrations is a favorite at our house.

Personally, I just started Ordinary Lives, Extraordinary Mission by John R. Wood, a book given to me by our former Chaplain here at St. Thomas More, Fr. Robert Lampitt (now Pastor at St. Thomas in Philo).

My favorite book: My favorite book is called The Sixteenth Round: From Number 1 Contender to Number 45472 by Rubin “Hurricane” Carter.  It is a great read, and based on the true story of a man falsely accused of murder.


The book also inspired the movie “Hurricane.” But the real reason it’s my favorite is that one of my best high school teachers found a way to get a stubborn high school kid (me) to pick up a book that would interest him and learn a little bit about what took place in our nation’s history.  I’m grateful to that teacher, and I’m grateful God has me working in high school education today.

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Fiction for “Slow” Summer Days {my July column, The Catholic Post}

July 21, 2014 by Nancy Piccione

Following is my book review column which appears in this week’s edition of The Catholic Post.

Summertime…and the living is easy.

If you read that statement and laughed as you said, “that is not true at ALL,” I’m with you. Even though summer schedules are supposed to be “relaxed”, summer can often seem more hectic, not less, for both kids out of school and the grown-ups who transport them.

At the same time, there is a vibe during summer—whether during a time of actual vacation, or perhaps waiting for that baseball game to begin—that makes it seem a little more possible to sneak in some pleasure reading.

Can I suggest some Catholic authors?

Jay Hooks, S.J., one of the contributors to “The Jesuit Post” blog, recently wrote an intriguing article about the lack of contemporary Catholic fiction writers.

There was a lively discussion after the post, with commenters naming recently published authors “Catholic” ranging from Michael O’Brien to Toni Morrison to Dean Koontz.

It’s such an interesting topic. What does make a “Catholic” writer? Born Catholic? Practicing Catholic? Informed by Catholic themes? And do only seriously literary authors like Flannery O’Connor count?

Count me firmly in the “Catholic fiction is alive and well” category.

Because what people enjoy, especially in fiction, is so varied, I hesitate to recommend fiction, and I’m no longer shocked when others don’t love my favorites. But I still have an opinion (and a column), so I’m going to share some with you.

Consider my suggestions as a starting-point, and an invitation to find your own favorite summer reads for entertainment and uplift. I’ll recommend four authors of what I’d call “Catholic classics” (written in the last century) of varying genres, and I’ll also take a look at three brand-new Catholic novels.

*Sigrid Unset. Kristin Lavransdatter is the classic trilogy—historically, spiritually and emotionally rich—about a headstrong and complicated young woman, the mistakes she makes, and the life she lives, in 14th century Norway. If I were to make an exception, I would say it should be read by “everyone”! but you’ll know if it’s for you if you give it a try. There is a lovely newer translation of Kristin Lavransdatter
that is well worth the investment.

*A.J. Cronin, The Keys of the Kingdom. Yes, it was made into a justly acclaimed 1944 movie with Gregory Peck as the holy Fr. Francis Chisholm, but the book is far superior to it and well worth reading before watching the movie. Cronin writes beautifully and sensitively about relations of Catholics with other faiths, whether in interfaith couples or priests and pastor friendships, and The Keys of the Kingdom is his finest novel.

*Rumer Godden, In This House of Brede. I love Rumer Godden most for her lovely, melancholy tinged children’s novels. I’ve read most of her grown-up novels, too, but In This House of Brede is easily her best for its portrait of life in a Benedictine abbey and the rich lives and communal life of the nuns who live there. (The movie version is not worth watching, in my opinion, in case you were wondering). (Cronin’s
and Godden’s
books are both available in the Loyola Press “classics” series.)

*Louis de Wohl,  The Quiet Light: A Novel about St. Thomas Aquinas.  de Wohl wrote in the 1940s and 1950s a series of historical novels about saints. There’s a good reason they are still in-print and popular today. His books are great stories that effortlessly mix fictional and real characters. Each of these novels comprise just plain good stories that feel “real” and capture the spirit of the time and the saint in an enjoyable, edifying read.

For those looking for some of the newer fiction (all these are published, incidentally, by Catholic publisher Ignatius Press):


*The Leaves are Falling by Lucy Beckett. This historical fiction novel set in World War II Eastern Europe and England, tells the harrowing and ultimately healing story of Josef Halperin, who escaped World War II after unspeakable wartime experiences and how he makes his way in postwar England. It reminds me of a Kate Morton novel—carefully researched historical fiction peopled by characters with a rich inner life. Slow-paced, but rich.

*The Rising by Robert Ovies. I am conflicted about this contemporary tale of a boy who can bring people back from the dead, but I know others may enjoy it, so I’m including it here. One the one hand, it is fast-paced; I had no trouble racing through it and wanting to find out what happens next. But supernatural fiction is not my favorite, and this book was overly graphic and strained credulity in certain elements. At the same time, reading this kind of book often involves suspending disbelief. A good “beach read” for fans of this genre.


*Do No Harm by Fiorella de Maria. Though I’ve been involved in pro-life work for decades, I wasn’t sure I’d be interested in a novel based on these themes. I was so very wrong. Do No Harm is a fantastic, sharply written thriller about a London doctor being prosecuted for saving a patient’s life after a suicide attempt. The writing is top-notch, the characters are believable, sympathetic and wholly realistic in their foibles and their heroism. The many plot twists are both emotional and unexpected. Highly recommended.

What are your reads this summer? Any Catholic authors who are your favorites?

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Meet a Reader: Mary Edgerley

June 24, 2014 by Nancy Piccione

Sharing the “Meet a Reader” feature that appears on the book page of the print edition of this week’sThe Catholic Post.

Mary Edgerley

How you know me: If you attend 11:00 am Mass at Sacred Heart Parish in Granville on a Sunday morning, you will hear me playing the piano for the church choir. My husband Phil and I farm near Granville, and we are the parents of two daughters, Emily and Rachel, as well as two sons (Philip and Kenneth, already in Heaven). I volunteer as accompanist for the Putnam County School District music department, in addition to serving as accompanist at Sacred Heart Parish.

Why I love reading:  A few weeks ago, I came upon a quote that beautifully explains why reading is so vital to each of us:

“Books change lives, because what we read today, walks and talks with us tomorrow. One of the most powerful influences on thought is the material we choose to read.” (—Matthew Kelly, Rediscover Catholicism.)

The reasons for my love of reading are many; I read to pray, to learn, to grow, to laugh, to cry, to understand, to remember.

What I’m reading now:  I normally have several books in my reading stack at any given moment. Currently I have bookmarks in:

Henri Nouwen’s Life of the Beloved.

 

in Amy Welborn’s Here. Now.


in Thirsting for Prayer by Jacques Philippe.


in Rediscover Catholicism, by Matthew Kelly


and in Steve Martini’s Trader of Secrets.

My favorite book:  Choosing a single book as my favorite would be impossible for me. I have enjoyed and benefited from so many books and authors through the years. The book that began my serious interest in reading as a young girl was surely one from the Little House series by Laura Ingalls Wilder.
The book that has impacted me very much in the last few months is The 7 Secrets of Confession by Vinny Flynn.

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There’s Nothing Like a Convert {my June column, The Catholic Post}

June 23, 2014 by Nancy Piccione

Following is my book page that appears in this week’s print edition of The Catholic Post.

Are you a spiritual trust-fund baby? Bear with me—it really is a “thing.”

If you’ve heard the expression, “there’s nothing like a convert,” you’ll begin to know what I mean. There really is something special in converts and how they look at the faith with fresh eyes and fresh faith. It really is different being a convert, and we longtime Catholics can learn a lot from that energy and passion. That’s why shows like Marcus Grodi’s EWTN’s The Journey Home  can be so compelling to watch.

It’s like Richard Cole writes in Catholic by Choice, his expressive memoir about converting to Catholicism, that cradle Catholics are like “spiritual trust-fund babies unbelievably rich with a two-thousand-year-old religious culture stacked on another three thousand years of Hebraic culture.”

And, like a stereotype of trust-fund babies, longtime Catholics can be tempted to take for granted our great wealth. Why is that?

Reading one of three recent new memoirs about the conversion process might help us look at our Catholic faith with a fresh perspective.

It wouldn’t be fair to compare these very different memoirs, so here’s a short review of each story:

Catholic by Choice: Why I Embraced the Faith, Joined the Church, and Embarked on the Adventure of a Lifetime by Richard Cole, a writer and poet.

Cole offers a wandering, luminous and complex story. The memoir is especially rich since he was older (49 at the time of his conversion) and so his conversion, and how it intersects with his life and the life of his family, is fascinating, gritty and real. Because he’s a poet, there are a lot of memorable and “quotable” quotes.


Girl at the End of the World: My Escape from Fundamentalism In Search of Faith with a Future” by Elizabeth Esther. Esther’s book is a harrowing story of growing up in a fundamentalist cult, and gradually, as a young adult, escaping it.

Even though you know these are all conversion stories, I feel like I should write “spoiler alert!”— when I tell you she that she became, however improbably, Catholic. That’s because it is jaw-dropping how Jesus (and His Mother) drew her to the Church. It’s also amazing to read about what being Catholic means to her and her recovery from her abusive childhood.

Something Other than God: How I Passionately Sought Happiness and Accidentally Found It by Jen Fulwiler.

Fulwiler’s memoir tells the story of how she grew up an atheist and lived a happy materialistic existence until she gradually reasoned her way into the Catholic Church, through the writing of her popular blog, Conversion Diary, and various life circumstances.

Fulwiler is a great story-teller—many local Catholic women will remember her talk at the second Behold Conference in 2011. Her funny and clever voice, as she shares the events that drew her to Catholicism, shines through in this narrative.

As I’ve said, it’s not fair to compare the memoirs, as each person’s conversion is unique as a fingerprint. But several common themes, in addition to how well they are written, emerge:

*There are innumerable ways to be Catholic—and thank God for that. How beautiful that our Catholic —universal—faith has so many ways to be a faithful Catholic. Just as the wide variety of saints, different kinds of holiness, there are many paths to and within the Church. Three cheers for holy diversity.

*Jesus really does pursue each one of us intently, mysteriously, and with whatever people, places, and circumstances are at hand. Each of these three memoirs describes the way a diverse cast of characters and situations led them to being Catholic: blog readers, random priests in confession, quiet spiritual directors, fallen-away Catholics, Mary, severe health issues, breakdowns, and so much more. How can those lead one to communion with him and with his Church? Jesus finds a way, and it’s plain astonishing to behold in these memoirs.

*We are all, convert or cradle Catholics, “spiritual trust-fund babies.” As a result, we need to recognize that fact and always fight against complacency. There is so much richness and depth in our faith, we need to spend it and share it with each other and others, instead of leaving it in a vault.

One particular strength of Cole’s Catholic by Choice is that it was published 10 years after Cole first wrote it, allowing him to look back and share how his conversion has played out in his life. Reading his update on how his life looks as a no-longer new convert makes me wonder and wish that both Esther and Fulwiler would update their memoirs 10 or so years down the road, sharing their experiences and what is different, and the same, about being Catholic.

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