This was a sheer delight, I am much relieved to say.
I've enjoyed this series a lot but really disliked the previous book for a variety of reasons, but mostly for the Elizabeth storyline — as did our whole family (what can I say? we're very Catholic) — I didn't rush out and buy this one as I did with the previous books. It was a long wait for my turn at a library copy but I enjoyed this one much as I did the rest of the series. The group dynamic is strong as ever and Osman's way of turning the expected on it's head in comedic fashion is truly amusing. The way that Connie mentored Tia cracked me up every time it arises. I especially enjoyed adding Joanna to the points of view.
It's clear that Osman is thinking about loneliness among the aged and society in general. We also see the club reassessing their current stage of life and relationships with each other, which has recently shifted for each of them. These were interesting themes to have running alongside the murder investigation.
Part of my relief at enjoying this book so much is that I was afraid the series was becoming stale in the way that happens to so many. Luckily that's not the case and I eagerly anticipate the next Thursday Murder Club book.
Happy Catholic*
Not always happy but always happy to be Catholic.
Tuesday, February 3, 2026
The Impossible Fortune by Richard Osman
Double Trouble - Edward Gorey's letters and illustrated envelopes
When Tom Fitzharris met Edward "Ted" Gorey in 1974, the two quickly struck up a friendship. Over the next year Gorey sent a total of fifty letters to Fitzharris. Every envelope Fitzharris received was illustrated by Gorey, and filled with surprises: typewritten letters with news and opinions from Gorey's life, handwritten note cards with unexpected quotes, sketches, inside jokes, and a host of other joyous miscellany.
Assembled here for the first time, these envelopes and their contents deliver all the humor, imagination, gossip, and wonder that came with being Edward Gorey's pen pal.
This book is delightful. Here's a bit I especially enjoyed as I'm slowly reading through it little by little.
The weather seems to have improved. I have already made a meatloaf, boiled a lot of eggs hard prepatory to devilling them, and there is a loaf of walnut cheese bread hopefully baking in the oven. I say hopefully as the dough was very peculiar indeed.It's funny to think of Edward Gorey cooking up picnic foods before company comes to his family's home for a summer break. But there you have it — he was devilling eggs, as he says.
Monday, February 2, 2026
Natural History Series for Children
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| Prang's Natural History Series for Children, 1878 via Animalarium |
God's not "all business"
I'm sure God would have created the world very differently if he wanted us to be all business. Instead he generously sprinkles opportunities to laugh and play and adore and savor.Shemiah Gonzalez's friend Starlene,Undaunted Joy
We like to be efficient a lot of the time. God's just not that way.
Sunday, February 1, 2026
1st Sunday of Saint Joseph
There's something about St. Joseph ... I turn to him always for intercession with anything to do with family, work, or prayers for my husband. Reflecting on St. Joseph on the seven Sundays leading up to his solemnity is an old tradition.
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| Holy Family by Raphael, 1506. |
Devotion to Saint Joseph has developed spontaneously from the heart of Christian people. For many people the Holy Patriarch is an excellent model of humility, industriousness and fidelity to one's vocation.
One of the most popular devotions to this saint is the Seven Sundays of Saint Joseph. This is an extended opportunity to meditate about the Holy Patriarch and to pray for his intercession...
Saint Bernardine of Siena has taught, following the writings of Saint Thomas, that whenever God chooses someone to do some important work for him, God grants that person the necessary graces. The perfect example of this truth can be seen in the life of Saint Joseph, foster father of Our Lord Jesus Christ and spouse of Mary. Sanctity consists in fulfilling one's vocation. For Saint Joseph, that vocation entailed preserving Mary's commitment to virginity while living in authentic matrimony ... Joseph loved Mary with a love so pure and refined that it is beyond our imagination.Vocation and Sanctity
With respect to Jesus, Joseph watched over him, protected him, taught him a trade, helped in his education. Joseph is called "foster father" but words cannot express the intimate and mysterious relationship which he actually enjoyed with the Son of God. In normal circumstances a man becomes a foster father by accident. In the case of Joseph, however, this is no accidental relationship. Joseph was created so as to live out this transcendent responsibility. This was his predestination, the purpose of all the graces which he received. (R. Garrigou-Lagrange, The Mother of the Saviour)
Saint Joseph is a great saint because he corresponded in a heroic way to the graces given to him. We should contemplate about how well we are corresponding to the grace in our vocation in the middle of the world.
We can never forget the maxim that whenever God chooses someone to do some important work for him, God grants that person the necessary graces. How do we react to difficulties in our life of faith? Do we ever doubt God's support in our struggle to raise a family, to give ourselves generously to God's requests, to live a commitment of apostolic celibacy? Do we firmly believe that because I have a vocation, because I have the grace of God, I can overcome any obstacle? Do I put my trust in God so that difficulties only make me more faithful?
Friday, January 30, 2026
Joy does not nullify suffering.
Joy does not nullify suffering. On the contrary it transforms suffering. Joy shines bright, takes the power away from evil, and laughs in the face of deception and turmoil. "You will not take me!" joy says, shaking its fist. Because joy comes from outside oneself. It does not come from ourselves but from an act of surrender. Joy comes from surrendering oneself to God.Shemaiah Gonzalez, Undaunted Joy
This was my second favorite book of last year. This quote shows you why. Truth in joyfulness.
Thursday, January 29, 2026
Julie and Scott have this locked room mystery solved, but it turns out that was just a distraction.
We talk about the good priest, the bad priest, and the unbeliever in Rian Johnson's new mystery — Episode 371: Wake Up Dead Man
And the Winner Is — 1943
Our family is working our way through Oscar winners and whichever nominees take our fancy. Also as they are available, since these early films continued to be hard to find.
Nominated films that we didn't watch either because we'd scouldn't find them were The Pied Piper and Wake Island.
WINNER
it shows how the life of an unassuming British housewife in rural England is affected by World War II.Simply stunning in the way that it takes you into this family's life and then shows the effects of war on the British as WWII breaks out. Definitely deserved to win.
NOMINEES
The spoiled young heir to the decaying Amberson fortune comes between his widowed mother and the man she has always loved.Wonderfully made but with a story I really hated.
A film of the life of the renowned musical composer, playwright, actor, dancer and singer George M. Cohan.I didn't care for having encapsulated versions of Cohan shows dropped in everywhere but that is how this form of musical genre works. The Ziegfeld Follies did it best. Alexander's Rag Time Band did it worst. This falls just between the two.
The story of the life and career of the baseball hall of famer, Lou Gehrig.An affectionate, straight-forward telling of Lou Gerig's life. Not especially Oscar worthy except, perhaps, as a sentimental favorite because of the subject.
Five young adults in a small American town face the revelations of secrets that threaten to ruin their hopes and dreams.I liked it much more than I thought I would, certainly more than The Magnificent Ambersons which had Orson Welles' wonderful style but a drag of a story. And Ronald Reagan did a great job.
A German U-boat is sunk in Canada’s Hudson Bay. Hoping to evade capture, a small band of German soldiers led by commanding officer Lieutenant Hirth attempts to cross the border into the United States, which has not yet entered the war and is officially neutral.
Hilarity ensues when a falsely accused fugitive from justice hides at the house of his childhood friend, which she has recently rented to a high-principled law teacher.
Wandered away from his asylum, an amnesiac World War I veteran falls in love with a music hall star but his amnesia makes it difficult to last.
Wednesday, January 28, 2026
Help becomes honorable, because it may become mutual.
Help is humiliating when it appeals to men from below, taking heed only of their material wants. It humiliates when there is no reciprocity. When you give the poor man nothing but bread or clothes, there is no likelihood of his ever giving you in return.
But help honors when it appeals to him from above. It respects him when it deals with his soul, with his religious, moral and political education, and with all that emancipates him from his passions. Help honors when, to the bread that nourishes, it adds the visit that consoles, advice that enlightens, the friendly handshake that lifts up flagging courage. It esteems the poor man when it treats him with respect, not only as an equal but a superior, since he is capable of suffering what we perhaps are incapable of suffering. After all, he is the messenger of God to us, sent to prove our justice and our charity and to save us by our works.
Help then becomes honorable, because it may become mutual. Every man who gives a kind word, good advice, a consolation today, may tomorrow need a kind word, advice or consolation The hand that you clasp, clasps yours in return That indigent family whom you love, loves you in return and will have largely acquitted themselves toward you when they shall have prayed for you.Frederic Ozanam, 1848, "De l'Aumône" (On Almsgiving)published in the newspaper L’Ère Nouvelle.Quoted in Voices of the Saints by Bert Ghezzi
This is the heart of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul. It can't be better expressed how we are benefitted by our neighbors while they are being helped by us. Truly, this is something of the Lord. It is also the heart of our founder, Frederic Ozanam. The more I read about him, the more I admire him.
Book of Durrow
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| The beginning of the Gospel of Mark from the Book of Durrow. Source: Wikipedia |
There is a sense of space in the design of all the pages of the Book of Durrow. Open vellum balances intensely decorated areas.I'm a sucker for illuminated manuscripts, especially Bibles. I'd love so much to have an illustrated Bible, old school.
I'm also a sucker for good use of space and not feeling one has to fill every bit of the page up. And for stylized animals as parts of capital letters.
So this scores on several fronts.
Tuesday, January 27, 2026
Why was John the Baptist killed?
Why was John the Baptist eventually killed?
It wasn't because he preached about God.
It wasn't because he said a Messiah was coming.
It was because he told people to reform their lives.
It was because he told Herod he shouldn't have married his half-brother's wife.
John was preaching a touch message of personal and moral reform.
No one will kill me or get angry with me because I say, "I believe in God." But if I start talking about how the teachings of Jesus should change the world, or how the teachings of Jesus should change the way we live—for this people could get mad at me.Little Blue Book, Advent 2025
X
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| X by Karin Jurick |
A glass ceiling projecting patterns and shadows on the floor while a young woman sketches in the Sculpture Gallery of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City.





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