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| Alphonse Mucha, Summer, 1896 via WikiArt |
Monday, July 31, 2023
Summer
Lagniappe: Faithful in their infidelity
The charming Genovese, Florentine, and Neapolitan countesses had chosen to stick, not with their husbands, but with their lovers, and Albert had come to the painful conclusion that Italian women at least have this over their French sisters — that they are faithful in their infidelity.You expect adventure, swashbuckling, and revenge. You don't expect the humor. Or, at least I don't.Alexandre Dumas, The Count of Monte Cristo
Friday, July 28, 2023
Love Basics for Catholics by John Bergsma
When you begin to see the Bible as a book of love, it will change the way you view love, sex, marriage, family, and your personal relationship with God.
Bergsma focuses on what nine biblical marriages tell us about God’s relationship with us, including:
He also provides insight into Church teachings on marriage and relationships—such as monogamy, the single life, the Sacrament of Matrimony, and Jesus’s words about divorce—to show how these teachings come from the love God shares with his people through the covenants in scripture.
- Adam and Eve—who show us that marriage is the culmination of all creation and that marriage can be an image of the Trinity
- Ruth and Boaz—who display the tenderness and virtue of a marriage;
- Solomon and his bride in the Song of Songs—who illustrate a positive, healthy view of the body and physical beauty
- Jesus as Bridegroom of his people, the Church.
As with John Bergsma's other Bible Basics for Catholics books this is an excellent basic coverage, in this case how the Bible is the story of how marriage in the Bible shows us God's love for his people.
I really enjoyed the gradual development of complexity as we followed the marriages featured in salvation history. I hadn't thought of them in a linear fashion as being an "evolutionary story" of how marriage would be understood, but it's all right there, as John Bergsma shows us. So we get both an in-depth look at marriage and God's love for his people in one handy-dandy, easy to understand book.
As with the Bible Basics book, Bergsma uses the trick of simple stick pictures to help make the main points memorable and I was happy to see them. They really are wonderful memory aids.
Clinique Cheron
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| Clinique Cheron, Theophile-Alexandre Steinlen via J.R.'s Art Place |
This just makes me happy. I love the idea of this vet wanting an ad. I love the profusion of loving animals. And I love the artistic style.
Thursday, July 27, 2023
Story of an Egg (Ondu Motteya Kathe)
Janardhan is a Kannada language teacher who's 28 and eager to marry. But every time his parents arrange a marriage, the bride turns him down because he's an "egghead*" which is to say that he's bald.
He seeks advice from two sources. One is a friend at work who is also balding but has been happily married 4 years and has quiet, wise advice. The other is his favorite actor Rajkumar, who is not only a Kannada legend but an Indian cinema legend. Janardhan channels his hero's words of wisdom through Rajkumar's photo benignly smiling down on him and memories of movies and songs. Between the two, he gains courage to approach women.
As he goes along, we recognize how different relationships will work out. These familiar beats allow for both comedy and empathy. When Janardhan finally meets a woman who would be a good match, he doesn't recognize it and winds up having to work through some of the very issues that he himself was a victim of.
We really enjoyed this this sweet, charming film which felt a lot like an American indie movie. I knew how it would turn out, after a certain point, but felt genuine anxiety toward the end where I wanted to urge Janardhan to go get his woman! This is a real tribute to Raj B. Shetty who wrote, directed, and starred in the film.
Rating — Introduction to Bollywood (come on in, the water's fine!)
*It's funny to think about slang because in America an egghead is a super-intellectual, often impractical, scientist-type.
A Chance of Thunderstorms
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| A Chance of Thunderstorms taken by Brian at the blue hour |
Wednesday, July 26, 2023
6:30 in the Morning
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| 6:30 in the Morning, Edward B. Gordon |
From the painter:
6:30 in the morning at the Spree in Oberschöneweide. The river has almost no current. Smooth as a mirror. Occasionally one sees dogs on the bank, pulling their still tired people on the leash after them. The ducks are sunbathing and the boats are still rocking softly in their sleep. From far away you can hear the wheels of the S-Bahn, clack clack, clack clack, clack clack, always in the same rhythm, short long, short long, short long. The beginning of a beautiful summer day.
Tuesday, July 25, 2023
Barbie is a mixed bag of entertainment.
Here's an excellent, insightful review of Barbie from Mrs. Darwin who gives not only her and Darwin's take, but also that of their four daughters, aged 13-21. Here's a bit that made me laugh, talking about how this will be viewed in the future at sleepovers. Then go read it all for yourself at Darwin Catholic.
In the end, the movie's frenetic pace grinds to a halt as Barbie is encouraged to actualize herself into being human by the ghost of her original American promoter, Ruth Handler (whose historical significance in Barbie's propagation consisted of manipulating markets by bypassing parental gatekeeping and selling a German sex doll directly to children through the medium of commercials on the Mickey Mouse Club). This is the lull where, in sleepovers yet to come, the girls (who mainly want to watch fun Barbieland antics and the Kens' farcical yet satisfying dance-off) wander off to have cake or open presents or check memes together. No one wants to watch Barbie being human in a movie which doesn't have a firm grasp on what it means to be human. It succeeds at moments because Gerwig, who is a talented procedural filmmaker, gives Barbie flashes of real insight. (A moment of wonder, where a stunned, luminous Barbie realizes the individuality of each person at a park, touches transcendence.) But she can't extend that humanity to every character. As a result, where the movie is absurd fun (and that's most of it), it works, and where it tries to be deep -- well, what better time to engage in real-world interactions like cake and sharing memes? Not every movie is so considerate as to telegraph where you can stop paying attention to it.
In Praise of Shadows
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| In Praise of Shadows, Calligraphy and View |
There are a number of gorgeous photo of light and shadow and how they are used in Japanese esthetics of everyday living. At the end is a link to the documentary, In Praise of Shadows. I will definitely be watching it. Click through and check it all out.There are shadows to the same extent as light. Humans may only see the light side.Japanese culture and traditions have valued shadows.But it can be hard to feel.Maybe you know little of the shadow side. It can't be helped.
Monday, July 24, 2023
The Angel of Terror
The cover of the book Freddy was reading
The book the Honorable Freddie was reading was a small paper-covered book. Its cover was decorated with a color scheme in red, black and yellow, depicting a tense moment in the lives of a man with a black beard, a man with a yellow beard, a man without any beard at all, and a young woman who, at first sight, appeared to be all eyes and hair. The man with the black beard, to gain some private end, had tied this young woman with ropes to a complicated system of machinery, mostly wheels and pulleys. The man with the yellow beard was in the act of pushing or pulling a lever. The beardless man, protruding through a trapdoor in the floor, was pointing a large revolver at the parties of the second part.Oh, how many books I've enjoyed which were decorated in similar style. Actually, I have it on fairly good authority (from somewhere I now can't recall) that this was talking about Edgar Wallace's novels. Which I love. Really, really love.
Beneath this picture were the words: "Hands up, you scoundrels!"
P.G. Wodehouse, Something Fresh
Friday, July 21, 2023
Mademoiselle Vaughan
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| Paul Helleu, Mademoiselle Vaughan, 1905 via French Painters |
Unless it was my friend June who was an original member of our movie group at Caruth Haven retirement community. She died almost 10 years ago but I still think fondly of her. She often surprised me with her movie suggestions. It is thanks to her that I saw Bernie. She was always turned out to a T and I miss her elegant manners, her sense of humor, her chic (of course) and, most of all, her sparkling self.
What ho!
“What ho!" I said.For pure hedonism and sinking into novelistic inanity — hilarious, but inane — there is none better than Bertie Wooster.
"What ho!" said Motty.
"What ho! What ho!"
"What ho! What ho! What ho!"
After that it seemed rather difficult to go on with the conversation.”
P.G. Wodehouse, My Man Jeeves
Thursday, July 20, 2023
Schönschreibmeister Sample
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| Schönschreibmeister Sample via BibliOdyssey |
Jeeves and Nietzsche
“You would not enjoy Nietzsche, sir. He is fundamentally unsound.”Still sinking as a hedonist into Wodehouse quotes. There is none better than Jeeves.
P.G. Wodehouse, Carry on, Jeeves
How to Defend the Faith Without Raising Your Voice by Austen Ivereigh (UPDATED)
I reviewed the original edition in 2013, but neglected to update it when I read the new edition which is equally fantastic. Both reviews are below, with the update coming first.
How to Defend the Faith Without Raising Your Voice: Civil Responses to Catholic Hot Button Issues by Austen Ivereigh
As I mentioned in my review of the first edition below, this is a book every Catholic should read.
I'll take this space to say why the revised edition is necessary. In three short years, debate in the public square has shifted in a way that has often bewildered me. How to Defend the Faith explains that whereas questioners and critics used to be those outside of Christian faith, they are now often secularized Christians. They hold to basic principles that originated with Christian teachings but are so divorced from those teachings that they can't see the connection any more. That leaves a Catholic on shifting ground if one tries to anchor explanations of hot button issues in a Christian understanding. We're having discussions with people who aren't interpreting things with a common framework.
How to Defend the Faith helps understand the shifted frame from which critiques originate and how to reframe our responses so that we are all on the same page. Your questioner may not agree with you (and winning isn't the point - explanation is), but they will at least have a better understanding of the Church's attitudes toward contentious issues in the public square.
ORIGINAL EDITION REVIEW
This is a book that every Catholic should read.
The reason I say that becomes abundantly apparent in the subhead: Civil Responses to Catholic Hot-Button Issues.
We know how it feels, finding yourself suddenly appointed the spokesman for the Catholic Church while you're standing at a photocopier, swigging a drink at the bar, or when a group of folks suddenly freezes, and all eyes fix on you.Yes, we've all been there.
"You're a Catholic, aren't you?" someone says.
"Um, yes," you confess, looking nervously at what now seems to resemble a lynch mob.
The pope has been reported as saying something totally outrageous. Or the issue of AIDS and condoms has come up. Or the discussion has urned to gay marriage. And here you are, called on to defend the Catholic Church by virtue of your baptism, feeling as equipped for that task as Daniel in the den of lions.
Or perhaps you are a Catholic who does not feel called to defend the faith but is one of the crowd waiting, wanting, a good explanation for whatever issue has been raised.
Either way, this book is here to help.
The introduction lays out the vital need for good, civil communication that sheds light but not heat. This is followed by nine chapters that discuss challenging questions which seem to get on everyone's nerves, such as the Church speaking up about politics, assisted suicide, clerical sex abuse, or defending the unborn. Austen Ivereigh discusses the overall context for each issue, the positive intention behind challenging questions, the Church's historical and current positions, and more. This is all with the goal of helping us be more knowledgable and know how to reframe issues so that there is a chance of being a positive voice for the Church.
Why the Church Opposes EuthanasiaThe above excerpt is not the whole argument or rationale by any means. However, it was so well put for what I knew instinctively but had never had to articulate. It is one of the reasons I may wind up reading and rereading this book ... not only to absorb the points for the sake of discussion but for my own soul's sake.
In common with a long-standing tradition of western civilization, the Church believes that dying naturally is a vital part of life's journey, in many ways the most meaningful part. Dying can be described as a process of healing. Important things happen on that journey, and suffering and pain are often a part of it. As Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo ... said: "Compassion isn't to say, 'Here's a pill.' It's to show people the ways we can assist you, up until the time the Lord calls you."
Dying, then, is a highly meaningful gradual process of renunciation and surrender. Although some die swifty and painlessly, very often the pattern of dying involves great suffering, because (and this is true of old age in general) it involves letting go of those thing which in our lives we believe make us worthwhile and lovable: our looks, intelligence, abilities, and capabilities. This is what the great Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung called "necessary suffering," the suffering endured by the ego, which protests at having to change and surrender. The idea that this kind of suffering is part of growth is not a uniquely "religious" view, although Christianity -- with the Cross and the Resurrection at its heart -- has perhaps a richer theological understanding than most secular outlooks.
Above all Ivereigh reminds us that where there is no trust, there can be no understanding or true conversation. To that end, he ends with ten points which should frame our mindset. These are the points that have stuck with me the most. I can't tell you the number of times in simply dealing with difficult situations daily that I have remembered to "shed light, not heat" and to "look for the positive intention behind the criticism." This doesn't mean not speaking up for the truth, but it does remind us that the goal is not always "to win."
I mentioned above that I thought every Catholic should read this book. I would go farther and venture to say that if you are curious about how the Church can justify a position you don't agree with, then this book is for you. That is how impressed I was by Ivereigh's even-handed, civil discussion of the positive motives of both sides of conversations on contentious issues. You may not wind up agreeing with the Church, but you will definitely see that there is a reasonable, logical context for her position.
Wednesday, July 19, 2023
How to Be Blind
I began to appreciate the novel experiences that blindness gave me. The notion that blind people have better hearing than the sighted is a myth, but relying on my ears did change my relationship with sound. Neuroscientists have found that the visual cortices of blind people are activated by such activities as reading Braille, listening to speech, and hearing auditory cues, such as the echo of a cane’s taps. At lunch, one day, Cragar’s wife, Meredith, who was visiting from Houston, came into the room carrying their fifteen-month-old daughter, Poppy. The sounds that she made—cooing, laughing—cut through the room like washes of color. I didn’t quite hallucinate these colors, but I came close. In the coming weeks, I had several mildly psychedelic experiences like this, a kind of blind synesthesia. The same thing happened with touch. I played blackjack with a Braille deck, and, after a few days, began to intuitively read the cards as if I were seeing them. In the art room, a teacher taught me to pull a wire through a mound of wet clay. Later, as I described the experience to Lily and our son, Oscar, on a video call, I had to remind myself that I’d never actually seen this tool or the clay. It was so clear in my mind’s eye.
My sense of space gradually transformed. Walking the carpeted halls of the center’s lower level, I could see a faint black-and-blue virtual-reality environment lit by some unseen light source. Sometimes my cane penetrated one of the velvety walls, and I had to redraw my mental map. When I was out in the city, Charles sometimes informed me that what I thought was Alamo Avenue was actually Prince Street, or that east was actually north, and I had to lift the landscape in my mind, rotate it ninety degrees, and set it back down. I could almost feel my brain trembling under the strain. But it was also kind of fun.Andrew Leland, How to Be Blind, The New Yorker
From a Trip to St. Augustine, Florida
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| From a Trip to St. Augustine, Florida; via J.R.'s Art Place |
Gorgeous! I loved visiting St. Augustine several years ago. The architecture is really beautiful in a lot of places.
Lagniappe: Egbert and the Civil Service
As from boyhood up [Egbert] had shown no signs of possessing any intelligence whatsoever, he had gravitated naturally to England’s civil service... But though he could drink tea as well as the next man and had a gift for crossword puzzles, he did not really like being in his country’s service, however civil.Still reading novels in a hedonistic way.
P.G. Wodehouse, Another Christmas Carol
Tuesday, July 18, 2023
The Waking Bog
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| Taken by Remo Savisaar, click through the link to see it better |
A Movie You Might Have Missed #86: Tokyo Godfathers
Here's a Christmas movie that I reviewed way back in 2004 and can practically guarantee you have missed.
This Japanese tribute to John Ford's western "3 Godfathers" is fresh and original in a way that Western animation does not even consider. It centers on three homeless people: a middle aged drag queen, an alcoholic former bicycle racer, and a teenage runaway girl. Their discovery of a baby in a trash dump sends them off to find the baby's parents. They make unlikely guardians, of course, and along the way they grow, chiefly by confronting each other and themselves about the lies they've told each other about the past. Hana, the drag queen, names the abandoned infant Grace and insists that she has been sent by God. Coincidences and miracles happen increasingly throughout and seem surprisingly Christian for a Japanese film.
The juxtaposition of humor and drama are deft and play off each other in unexpected ways. At one point Hana is dramatically describing how he will commit suicide by jumping off a bridge. We have been primed by this time to find Hana's pronouncements quietly comic. Then the viewer realizes that someone in the background is taking the exact measures that Hana describes. Both humor and drama are in play as they also realize it a beat later and rush to stop the person from jumping. We never were disappointed. Although one expects an overall happy ending the plot twists on the way were original and unexpected.
It is rated PG-13 and some of the material is not suitable for children.
Brains enough for two
And she's got brains enough for two, which is the exact quantity the girl who marries you will need.”In the spirit of reading as a hedonist, let's look at a little P.G. Wodehouse, shall we?
P.G. Wodehouse, Mostly Sally
Monday, July 17, 2023
Friday, July 14, 2023
Reading Scripture and entering into a conversation with God
One must not read Sacred Scripture as one reads any kind of historical book, such as, for example, Homer, Ovid or Horace; it is necessary truly to read it as the Word of God, that is, entering into a conversation with God. …This is something I have to keep relearning. It's a conversation and to listen to the Lord and to look for him through his Word.
One must start by praying and talking to the Lord: "Open the door to me". And what St. Augustine often says in his homilies: "I knocked at the door of the Word to find out at last what the Lord wants to say to me", seems to me to be a very important point. One should not read Scripture in an academic way, but with prayer, saying to the Lord: "Help me to understand your Word, what it is that you want to tell me in this passage".Pope Benedict XVI, Meeting with the Youth of Rome, 2006
Thursday, July 13, 2023
Heresies and How to Avoid Them, edited by Ben Quash and Michael Ward
Ten top theologians, all practising Christians, tackle ten ancient heresies and show why the contemporary Church still needs to know about them. Christians need to remember what these great early heresies were and why they were ruled out, or else risk falling prey to their modern day manifestations. The book contains key scriptural passages relevant to each heresy, a glossary of terms, and summaries of historical Church documents in which these heresies were defined and outlawed.
This really is just like the book blurb describes it — reacquainting Christians with ancient heresies and how one might encounter them today. I was surprised to see that a tendency I really hate — to talk about the God of the Old Testament as a hateful deity and Jesus of the New Testament as correcting that OT god with his love and sweetness — is the ancient heresy of Marcionism. Aha! (The Trinity is three persons, ONE essence. As Jesus said, "Whoever has seen me has seen the Father.")
Anyway, some of the chapters are easier to understand than the others but all are good. Each begins with a quick summary of the heresy, followed by key scriptures which refute the errors. Each of the authors also took pains to point out that the heretics and their teachings were often well intentioned in desiring to clarify a misunderstanding about the faith. Often the heretics simply didn't go far enough in thinking things through and then dug their heels in when their theories were questioned and shown to be inadequate.
The generous attitude of the authors does not mean that they condone heresy. It does mean that they look upon it as "provocative stimuli, catalysts for energetic thought." Otherwise how can one counter it? That is how I have felt when encountering it, as I did very shortly after converting and innocently sashaying out to a bookstore to pick up books about Catholicism. I was quite surprised to see that there were a lot of divergent schools of thought about various topics in the Church. I quickly learned to educate myself in the why's and how's of the Church's dogma and doctrine so I could evaluate what I came across. Many such opportunities to dig deeper into our own faith are presented to us today and that "generous attitude" of one that I think is valuable to remember when we find ourselves confronted with heresy today.
The final chapter and the epilogue point out how dangerous heresy is and why orthodoxy is important. Both are excellent reminders of the importance that real truth makes to our relationship with God.
Wednesday, July 12, 2023
Just Plain Fun: Confess, Fletch; Honor Among Thieves; and Game Night
Sometimes you just want to watch a fun movie that doesn't give you more than a good time. We recently saw three of them that were just plain fun and, as my mother said, silly in just the right way. They also strike me as highly rewatchable. I look forward to doing so.
Confess, Fletch
The roguishly charming and endlessly troublesome Fletch becomes the prime suspect in a murder case while searching for a stolen art collection. The only way to prove his innocence? Find out which of the long list of suspects is the culprit - from the eccentric art dealer and a missing playboy to a crazy neighbor and Fletch’s Italian girlfriend. Crime, in fact, has never been this disorganized.
This is a solid murder mystery like they don't make any more. Extremely entertaining, quick witted, funny, and keeps you guessing. Also, we need more Jon Hamm in humorous roles.
Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Among Thieves
A charming thief and a band of unlikely adventurers undertake an epic heist to retrieve a lost relic, but things go dangerously awry when they run afoul of the wrong people. Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves brings the rich world and playful spirit of the legendary roleplaying game to the big screen in a hilarious and action-packed adventure. It's an infectiously good-spirited comedy with a solid emotional core.
This captured the sense of the gameplaying while also being a good fantasy adventure movie for any viewer. As a Baldur's Gate game player it was distinctly weird to recognize town names and city buildings and spells and suchlike.
You know the basic beats of who will grow in what way and what sorts of personal challenges they must face. But that frees you up to sit back and enjoy the show, letting the humor and quests take you on a very entertaining ride.
Game Night
Max and Annie's weekly game night gets kicked up a notch when Max's brother Brooks arranges a murder mystery party -- complete with fake thugs and federal agents. So when Brooks gets kidnapped, it's all supposed to be part of the game. As the competitors set out to solve the case, they start to learn that neither the game nor Brooks are what they seem to be. The friends soon find themselves in over their heads as each twist leads to another unexpected turn over the course of one chaotic night.
After watching Honor Among Thieves we discovered that the same team wrote and directed Game Night, which somehow I'd missed when it came out. This is another movie where the only goal is to entertain, which it does spectacularly.
The type of movie is familiar so we could relax and go along for the ride, enjoying the twists on the familiar beats. There were so many familiar, favorite actors that it was the icing on the cake to have both Jason Bateman and Kyle Chandler in the film together. And it was really fun to see Chandler playing against type.
Tuesday, July 11, 2023
The Demands of Despair ... and of Hope
Despair demands less of us, it's more predictable, and in a sad way safer. Authentic hope requires clarity — seeing the troubles in this world — and imagination, seeing what might lie beyond these situations that are perhaps not inevitable and immutable.I never would have thought to label despair and hope in this way but, of course, this cuts to the heart of the two emotions.Rebecca Solnit, Hope in the Dark
Monday, July 10, 2023
The Invisible Man by H.G. Wells
We all know the basics of this story. On a cold and snowy night, a mysterious traveller shows up at the Coach and Horses inn. His face is swaddled in bandages, he never removes his dark glasses, and he always wears gloves. The curious villagers have various theories for these oddities but it is generally assumed he is an accident victim. When the truth is revealed it is almost incomprehensible — he is an invisible man. As he struggles to survive and discover the antidote, we follow his progress in a story that is funny, exciting, and alarming.
I have liked this book as a scary tale ever since I first read it many years ago. As I've grown older and wiser I increasingly appreciated H.G. Wells's skill, both as a writer and as an observer of human nature. This book does a lot in relatively few pages. It tells a story that we don't expect to be truly scary because it is so old and well known. However, by the time that Kemp was fleeing from the invisible man, seeking asylum in a bar, and everyone was worried about which doors they forgot to lock, I felt real chills of terror.
H.G. Wells asks the question, "What would you try to get away with if you were invisible?" We've seen a lot of super hero movies look at this sort of issue but this early piece of science fiction is one of the most effective. It also serves as a nice corrective of the modern tendency to give every villain a sympathetic back story. The invisible man actually has a story that you can feel sympathetic about at the beginning. Very quickly, however, the reader is disabused of any tendencies to think him misunderstood, put upon, or simply different.
I thoroughly enjoyed reading this again.
Scott Danielson and I discuss the book in episode 311 of A Good Story is Hard to Find podcast.
Friday, July 7, 2023
30 Days with Married Saints by Kent and Caitlin Lasnoski
30 Days with the Married Saints will help you to pray with a variety of holy married men and women of the Church from well-known couples like Mary and Joseph to lesser-known couples like Luigi and Maria Beltrame Quattrocchi (the first couple to be beatified together). Each day contains vivid portraits of heroically virtuous married saints as well as prayers, moving reflections, questions, and practical suggestions to enrich your marriage and inspire you and your spouse on your journey of sanctity.
I picked this up because my husband and I are the Spiritual Directors for an upcoming marriage enrichment retreat. I'm so glad I did because otherwise I would have missed this wonderful devotional.
I was impressed by the range and variety of the married couples presented for our contemplation. In some cases, both spouses were saints. In many more, as one might expect, one was a saint and the other was along for the ride, with varying degrees of enthusiasm. For example, we're all familiar with Saint Monica whose husband was violent, faithless, and unfaithful to her. However, after twenty years of marriage he was baptized shortly before his death.
On the other hand, Blessed Frederic Ozanam who founded the Saint Vincent de Paul Society had a loving, supportive wife. They both worked to keep their marriage full of small, daily reminders of affection. This is despite the fact that he was incredibly busy as a professor, journalist, and helping poor households as a member of the Saint Vincent de Paul society.
Many of the couples merit several chapters. The chapters in this small book are never longer than three or four pages which have been a good amount for my husband and I to read together every day. Each chapter has an opening prayer, modern illustrations of living the examples found in the saints' lives, points for reflection and a closing prayer. I tend not to like reflection prompts but the ones in this book are thoughtful and often highlight angles I might not have considered.
Highly recommended.
The Complete Home
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| The Complete Home: An Encyclopedia of Domestic Life and Affairs. 1879. via Books and Art |
Thursday, July 6, 2023
The Wolf-Leader by Alexandre Dumas
Often cited as the first werewolf novel ever written! From the author of adventure classics like The Three Musketeers and The Count Of Monte Cristo, a lost tale of revenge, wishes fulfilled, and a ravenous nature that will take a bite out of you!
Drawing from his own youthful experiences of folklore, Alexandre Dumas tells the story of Thibault, a young man who makes a pact with a talking wolf who promises to grant his wishes. Though he is promised revenge against those who wronged him, Thibault's life only gets worse. His vengeance lays itself bare, but the villagers suspect him to be a werewolf as well!
This is pushed as a werewolf story but it is really a Faustian tale. I know of Faust only by reputation but my impression was always that he was a bit of a clever fellow. Thibault is not. It's fun watching this unfold, especially with the unusual nature of the devil's request for each wish granted. As Thibault progresses in his desires, he encounters different situations that gradually move up through the social strata. This leads to a lot of amusing situations strewn amongst the Faustian choices that are made.
Overall this was rather like infusing the hijinks of The Three Musketeers into a supernatural story with a moral center. It simultaneously was entertaining and thought-provoking as the story proceeded. Recommended if your taste runs in that direction.
A Portrait Of a Christian De Falb
Wednesday, July 5, 2023
Élisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun, Self-Portrait with Daughter Julie
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| Élisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun, Self-Portrait with Daughter Julie |
A Movie You Might Have Missed #85: U Turn (2016)
Rachana, a young reporter, is dismayed at the number of illegal u-turns and resulting traffic accidents, and she wants to write a story about it. In pursuing a lead, she finds herself in the middle of a police case dealing with a series of murders. While freeing herself of false accusations, she becomes part of the investigation process. What is behind the mysterious deaths and how are they are all connected to the flyover road?
This thriller is perfect for the wind up to Halloween. One of the most shocking things about it is something that Western audiences will find inexplicable — to have the divider between opposite sides of a highway made simply of large bricks which anyone can move so they can do a U-turn anywhere they feel like it. This blew our minds.
It is the number of U-turns which the young reporter, Rachana, is investigating. Her theory is that this leads to a lot of accidents and deaths. She's right, but not in the way that she originally thinks. Strangely tied to a number of deaths, the unfolding mystery was really intriguing and well told. Keep your eyes open for the number of "U"s showing up, including the beginning where we are upside down and do a u-turn to see the road right side up.
I can see why this movie is on so many "must see" lists. It is a great thriller and since it is Indian, it is also not too gory.
Note: a "flyover" is what we would call an overpass. That took us a little while to figure out.
Streaming on Netflix now. This is the original which is in the Kannada language. It has since been remade in three other Indian languages.
Monday, July 3, 2023
July
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| July, Les Très Riches Heures du duc de Berry |
More of the harvest; the sheep are being shorn and the hay is being reaped. The chateau behind them is that which formerly stood on the Clain at Poitiers. University of Chicago






















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