some thoughts on books and writing

the employees at the local bookstore leave their recommendations as bookmarks

This is kind of a book review of a book about…books, and a review about a book about a writer. It’s also a super meta post about me and my love of books and my faltering and wonky identity as a writer, being Catholic, and loving Mary. It’s all kind of mashed together. Isn’t who we are and what we do kind of all mashed together?

A book about books

I first picked up The Readers of Broken Wheel Recommend by Katarina Bivald a couple of years ago, and it got lost in my pile of books to read. I was diligently making my way through the pile, but I would add books to the top and never make it through to the bottom. I finally mixed it up a bit and got down to the business of reading this most delightful book, new to me in 2019 but published in 2016.

What a lovely read. The characters are quirky. Revelations come via letters, and there are endless references to books and authors. Everything about it appealed to my nerdy book sensibilities. Of course, the plot, a rather unconventional love story about a Swedish young woman who falls in love with a whole town in rural Iowa and finds a home there, entertains and offers a lovely lesson about how books have the power to change us.

A book about Mary

An unexpected bonus from this book was my desire to reread some of the books mentioned in the novel. I even embarked on a perusal of my bookshelf, looking for books worth reading again. I’m currently making my way through the shelves, reading some for the first time, and a good many to reread with new eyes. Our Lady of the Lost and Found by Diane Shoemperlen falls into the latter category. I read it some years ago, a gift from friends. This recent reading has spoken to me in a most intimate and endearing way.

The narrator, a novelist, encounters the Blessed Virgin Mary standing in a corner of her living room. It’s not the typical apparition, as Mary is just looking for a quiet place to lay low for a while. Of course, the visit is exactly what the narrator needs at this point in her life.

This Mary is everything I’d want if the Blessed Mother decided to show up in my living room for a visit. While a work of fiction, it gave me a great deal to think about — especially cultivating a friendship with Mary. I really would open up my home, and heart, to a visit from Mary. We’d cook together, chat over tea, maybe have a glass of wine on the porch and watch the sunset. Even go to the mall. Why not? What better way to spend time with a dear friend?

I want to write like that!

Both books have appealed to me as a writer, and I often returned to passages that seemed to speak directly to me. It’s not that I would like to write books like these, though that is true. It’s more a case of finding myself in these books.

It has been decades since I immerse myself in a book in this way. Perhaps it’s an occupational hazard of teaching literature — I haven’t given myself permission to get lost in a book for the shear joy of reading. It has inspired me to return to writing fiction, and the important art — to dare sharing it with others. We’ll see where that goes.

Review: The Red Umbrella

I have a huge stack of books to read on my nightstand, but a recent conversation with one of my nieces prompted me to reread Christina Diaz Gonzalez’s touching story of love and sacrifice, The Red Umbrella. Set in the early 1960’s after the Cuban communist revolution, it follows the journey of teenaged Lucia and her little brother as they flee the oppression and dangers of a cruel regime through Operation Pedro Pan.

Terrified by the imminent danger to their physical well-being, and distraught by the brain-washing and emotional abuse inflicted on the nation’s youth, thousands of Cuban parents sent their children to the United States to protect them from the unknown horrors of totalitarianism. In conjunction with the Catholic Church and hundreds of individuals and families who came together to foster these children, Operation Pedro Pan processed and welcomed over 14,000 unaccompanied children to the U.S. from 1960-1962.

Next year marks the 60th anniversary of the beginning of this exodus. It’s stunning to recognize how many decades have passed, and how fresh this pain still is. I imagine some of these children, now in their 70’s and older, have children, grandchildren, and even great-grandchildren. This is their story — all of them, as many of us carry the stories of our families in our hearts, never to be forgotten.

Gonzalez shares a fictional story that weaves important historical elements into the plot, gives a new generation insight into a tragic situation in Cuba, and provides families an opportunity to expound on the truths shared in the narrative. I first read this book almost a decade ago, and it still holds strong today.

You can read more about Christina Diaz Gonzalez and her books for middle grades and young adults here.

advice from a mother

early review of The Crown with brief episode 4 spoiler

I enjoy movies and television, and never more than when the stories develop compelling characters. I’m usually carrying on about the superheroes, but like so many people, The Crown has captured my heart. I’m not binging season 3, but rather, watching an episode every couple of days in order to savor the subtle changes in the actors, and what has so far been a treatment of some serious themes. Episode 3: Aberfan crushed my heart — Episode 4: Bubbikins stomped on it.

Good storytelling not only entertains us, but can also provide excellent lessons. We live vicariously through adventures and imaginary scenarios, seeing first-hand the consequences for poor choices and the gains for taking risks. Sometimes, we can learn very touching lessons about living good and virtuous lives.

I’m always delighted when the topic of faith receives a beautiful treatment in film and television. Often, the portrayals of faithful people come across as unsympathetic characters, if not targets of scorn and mockery. Nevertheless, when the writers get it right, it is beautiful indeed.

In episode four of this popular series, there is a lovely exchange between Prince Philip and his mother, Princess Alice, that captures the essence of living a faith-filled life. Misunderstandings and revelations lead to a poignant moment between mother and son that provides a powerful lesson for anyone suffering or living with a “dormant faith.”

Prince Philip, contrite, asks his mother how she survived her cruel life, and she responds with a powerful statement of her faith, “I didn’t do it alone. I couldn’t have. I had help every step of the way.” A small crucifix sits on the table behind her, and we understand that she’s speaking about the strength of her faith. Where she might have wallowed in despair, she hoped in the Lord.

Princess Alice then offers her son this advice,”Let this be a mother’s gift to her child….Find yourself a faith. It helps. No, not just helps: it’s everything.”

It’s a truth I know well. Seek the Lord, and he will find you.

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