Review: Virgin, Mother, Queen

I read Virgin, Mother, Queen: Encountering Mary in Time and Tradition by Robert L. Fastiggi and Michael O’Neill over the course of many weeks. I could probably read it in a weekend, but I took this book with me to Adoration and read about a chapter a week.

What a beautiful book! I enjoyed reading about approved apparitions of the Blessed Mother, some well-known and several unknown to me. The histories of the apparitions were edifying, but I found real depth in the scriptural and doctrinal analysis that accompanied each of the titles explored.

I looked forward to each new chapter, and found the prayers a perfect end cap to the sections.

I would look forward to a sequel to cover more apparitions!

Review: The Alchemist

I admit that this book has been sitting on my bookshelf, unopened, for more than a decade. It might have belonged to one of my children — an unread high school assignment no doubt.

One of my daughters and I are on a quest to read all these unread books lying around. I just finished one I found so annoying that I’m not even going to review it. It’s not so much that I don’t want to leave a negative review as it is just being over it altogether.

So. The Alchemist. I wanted to love everything about this book by Paulo Coelho.

  • The theme of pursuing dreams is lovely and inspiring
  • Taking risks — feeling courageous and persevering in pursuit of a dream is admirable
  • Fulfillment, and appreciating what you already have, as a way to happiness is a powerful and true lesson

These themes are beautifully developed by Coelho in the shepherd boy’s journey to find his treasure. The adventure moves at a good clip, leaving the reader not only engaged but invested in the boy’s journey. At the end, I am happy for him and the growth he experiences.

Throughout the story, the boy encounters signs, omens that he is moving in concert with a greater power, but to be honest, I was a little put off by the approach. Christianity, Islam, and New Age platitudes indiscriminately entered the narrative. I wished Coelho had just picked one approach to spirituality and stuck with it.

I enjoy reading all kinds of things — they don’t have to be Catholic (though I admit perhaps recent reviews belie my statement). I feel comfortable and confident in my own faith to read about other world views and religions and neither be offended nor threatened. On the contrary, I find it to be enriching.

This uplifting and delightful story of the shepherd boy’s search for his treasure was interrupted by distracting cliches. It didn’t ruin the story — i very much enjoyed it — but it was an unintended lesson for me in the practice of nuance.

I recommend the book and welcome a discussion if you’re so inclined.

Review: The Dew Breaker

In the summer of 1996, I took a course through the Zelda Glazer Writing Institute at the University of Miami. I took away two powerful experiences that inform my writing and teaching to this day.

First, I experienced the powerful truth that we all have a unique story to tell. My writing, whether here on my blog or in my books, is mostly memoir-driven. I write as a way to make sense of my world.

Next, I learned that responding to others’ stories creates a powerful connection. We shared our writing with each other in this institute. One of those pieces remained in my heart. A young woman, younger than my mid-30s at the time, recounted the day she and other Haitian refugees who had paid thousands of dollars for passage to the Bahamas were thrown overboard into the shark-infested waters between Haiti and the Bahamas. She described the ordeal in few words — an effect that left us gasping as our imaginations filled-in the silence that followed.

Reading Edwidge Danticat’s The Dew Breaker brought back that memory. This collection of short stories is woven together with a common thread that runs through the characters whose lives have been touched by a dew breaker , a man responsible for heinous acts performed during Jean-Claude Duvalier’s (Baby Doc) rule of Haiti in the 70s and early 80s.

While each story can stand alone, the reader discovers the connections as the drama unfolds. The book explores the human capacity for cruelty, and how grace can change lives. Danticat creates snapshots of the horrors of the regime, and a glimpse into the heart of a man capable of carrying out these acts against humanity.

In the end I’m left wondering if redemption is possible for such a hardened heart. Yet, looking at him through the lens of faith, I see that everyone has the opportunity for salvation. I grieve, however, for those who suffered at his hands. Surprisingly, I am most sorry for the Dew Breaker who nevers finds peace.

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