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| Dream During the Dance (Ensueño durante el baile) Rogelio de Egusquiza |
Friday, January 19, 2024
Dream During the Dance
Genesis and cell phones
To read Genesis for its views about evolutionary theories is like reading Genesis for its views about cell phones.That's just so spot on it made me laugh out loud. What a perfect comparison to get the point across.Dr. Chrostopher Kaczor,Word on Fire Bibel: The Pentateuch
Thursday, January 18, 2024
Lectio Divina — Fiction
Notice that the apostles’ first and most important duty was simply to “be with him*”—to “waste time” in the presence of Jesus, loving him and being loved by him, learning his ways, letting their hearts become more and more aligned with his.Mary Healy, The Word Among Us, Oct. 2022
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My job was just to spend twenty minutes with scripture: reading, thinking, and praying as I chose; the fireworks were up to God.Leah Libresco, Arriving at Amen
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| Stained glass of the Holy Spirit as a dove The Holy Spirit helps us pray. |
Wednesday, January 17, 2024
Bookish Diversions: Shhh! Happens
From one of my favorite spots on the internet, Joel Miller at Miller's Book Reviews tells us a lot of things about libraries, including this which made me very happy:
Younger Americans love libraries. Millennials and Gen Zers spend time at their local library more frequently than their elders. “54% of Gen Zers and millennials trekk[ed] to their local library in 2022,” say Portland State University professors Kathi Inman Berens and Rachel Noorda, compared to 45 percent of Gen Xers and 43 percent of boomers.This leads to a lot of interesting things including that libraries all over the world serve as "valued third places." Get it all at the link.
One reason? While the younger generations spend a lot of time on digital devices engaging social media, they prefer print over digital or audio when it comes to books and, according to Berens and Noorda’s data, average about two print books a month. “Gen Zers and millennials still see libraries as a kind of oasis,” they say, “a place where doomscrolling and information overload can be quieted, if temporarily.“
Altar Boy
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| Vincenzo Irolli, Altar Boy via I Am A Child |
Gunpowder and books
Gunpowder destroys itself along with its victim, while a book can keep on exploding for centuries.Amen, amen!Christopher Morley, The Haunted Bookshop
Tuesday, January 16, 2024
Sources for Gospel of Mark Bible Study
I began reading The Memoirs of St. Peter, a new translation of Mark, and remembered these notes. Heavens to Betsy! The last time we looked at the Gospel of Mark together it was 2012!
We're way past time to take a second look at some of the things that bring Mark alive for me. Here are my favorite resources. I may not quote all of these, but I'll have looked through them and over the years they have added to my overall knowledge.![]() |
| Mark the Evangelist by Il Pordenone |
Mark Pakaluk’s goal is to restore the freshness and realism feel of the text as originally written by Mark. He's interested in Mark's Gospel as being a first-hand account told by St. Peter of what it was like to live with Christ for three years. He also has insightful commentary which helps us feel "you are there."
The Navarre Bible: Mark
The Navarre commentaries are consistently excellent and have a lot of thoughts from Church Fathers, Popes, saints, and the Catechism. They add wisdom from the 2,000 years of Church contemplation on scripture since Jesus.
Life Application Study Bible: New International Version
This Protestant Bible is an interesting resource. The footnotes are fresh, interesting, and a good resource for historical questions such as how threshing was done when Ruth met Boaz for example. They also have maps and occasional one page essays about main figures of the Bible. There is a tendency to ask questions at the end of commentary such as, "Do you listen to God like this person, etc.?" which I find rather annoying but they may not strike everyone that way. I would advise the NIV version as I have been told that translation is more accurate than the New Living Translation.
Catholic Commentary on Sacred Scripture: The Gospel of Mark
The structure is such that you are generally covering just a little scripture at a time. Each reading is followed with cross references to the Old Testament, New Testament, Catechism, and Liturgy. These are followed by the commentary, in which words from the scripture reading are bold whenever they are used. Although I saw some people complaining about that practice, I found it useful. Sometimes a bold word would make me suddenly pay attention and go back to the scripture, thinking, "Did it really say that? Why haven't I ever noticed before?"
There are also a few maps, occasional photos when they'd be helpful, and sidebar boxes with Biblical background and living tradition (Catechism, Fathers of the Church, saints) information that enriches understanding.
In Conversation with God by Francis Fernandez
A daily devotional that follows the daily Mass readings. Topics range from the sacraments and virtues to family interaction and friendship. The sensible and down-to-earth writing is enhanced by quotes from saints, Church Fathers, popes, cross-references with other scripture than in the day's readings, Church documents, etc. I've been using this for 20 years off and on. Full review here.
The Word on Fire Bible: The Gospels
From the Word on Fire ministries headed by Bishop Robert Barron, this is a commentary bible loaded with observations from the Church Fathers, newer Catholic writers like Fulton Sheen and G.K. Chesterton, and Bishop Barron himself. The primary purpose is evangelization of those not affiliated with organization or Christianity and poses the question throughout of "Who is God? and "Who is Jesus Christ?"
Opening the Scripture series: Bringing the Gospel of Matthew to Life
This is the one that I used for my first Gospel of Matthew series of posts, way back in 2008. It's still good. Read my full review here.
Ignatius Mark Study Bible
This has since been gathered into the Ignatius Study New Testament by Scott Hahn and Curtis Mitch. I already had it in this individual little book. The commentary is excellent, as one would expect.
Practical and easy to use. From Word Among Us but also with a Kindle version.
The Daily Study Bible Series — The Gospel of Mark, Revised Edition
I'm a real fan of William Barclay's commentaries on the New Testament books. Barclay's strengths are his phenomenal knowledge of the Greek language, the Jewish culture and religion, and the Roman occupation during the New Testament era. He is wonderful at conveying this knowledge in a way that simple and easily understandable. He puts it in context so that you can understand what events meant to the people to whom Jesus spoke to 2,000 years ago.
However, I have to always include this caveat when mentioning William Barclay ... his theology can be very wonky if you are Catholic. For example, his commentary on the gospels with nativity stories include a number of reasons Jesus' virgin birth didn't necessarily have to be virgin. Sorry. That's really nonnegotiable. He also often includes pointed commentary about why Roman Catholic teachings are wrong. So there's that ...
But if one reads with a knowledgeable eye, Barclay's work is really wonderful.
NOTE: the recently revised versions (1990s and beyond) have been heavily edited to be more politically correct. I'm not sure what that has done to Barclay's original work so I just go with the second revision, done under Barclay's eye. I'm not so thin skinned that I can't stand a little old fashionedness.
Snow balls
Monday, January 15, 2024
Road Tripping in Turkey
EatingAsia has a fascinating piece called Road Tripping in Turkey, or How to Self-Drive and Survive. It also has some gorgeous photography, as anyone who hangs out there much would expect. In fact, I couldn't resist sharing an extra photo. The blog hasn't been active for a while but I still like to swing by and refresh myself with the beautiful images.
When we're arguing with the past ...
When we're arguing with the past, we're really arguing with the present.That is so true it hardly seems worth saying, but when you look at our cultural state with it in mind I don't think it is being said enough.Joel Miller, Miller's Book Review
Friday, January 12, 2024
A Duel of Storytelling
You ever think about how wild it is that you humans just tell each other stories about your day? Like you'll be on the phone for forty-five minutes with a customer service rep, and then later someone will ask you about your day and you'll be like "I was on the phone forever with customer service," and they'll just be waiting to tell you about a time they were on the phone with customer service. It's like a duel of storytelling, and y'all do it all the time!Alexander Kane, Dragon Heist
Storytelling animals, that's us! I love that we're so hardwired for it.
Thursday, January 11, 2024
Tuna Risotto
Arsène Lupin, a gentleman thief and master of disguise
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| André Brulé as Arsène Lupin, a gentleman thief and master of disguise |
Is Burglary a Sport, a Trade or an Art
I don't think of H.G. Wells as being funny so this was a delightful surprise.It is a moot point whether burglary is to be considered as a sport, a trade, or an art.
For trade, technique is scarcely rigid enough, and its claims to be considered an art are vitiated by the mercenary element that qualifies its triumphs. On the whole it seems to be most justly ranked as a sport, a sport for which no rules are at present formulated, and of which the prizes are distributed in an extremely informal manner.
H.G. Wells, The Hammerpond Park Burglary
Tuesday, January 9, 2024
2023 — Best of Re-Viewing
How long's it been since you rewatched these? Pardner, that's too long.
My top picks from last year. In no particular order.
Monday, January 8, 2024
2023 — Best of Rereading
How long's it been since you reread these? Pardner, that's too long.
My top picks from last year. In no particular order.
(My review here.)
(My review here.)
(My review here.)
This is the story of Corlath, golden-eyed king of the Free Hillfolk. And this is the story of Harry Crewe, the Homelander orphan girl who became King's Rider, and heir to the Blue Sword. And this is the song of the kelar of the Hillfolk, the magic of the blood, the weaver of destinies...A near-perfect fantasy. Just reading the description makes me want to pick it up again.
(My review here.)
(My review here.)
Friday, January 5, 2024
Best of 2023 — Podcasts
My top picks from podcasts I discovered last year. As always, they may be old, but my listening was brand new in 2023. In no particular order. Links are in the podcast name.
Fr. Mike Schmitz guides you through the entire Catechism of the Catholic Church in 365 episodes, providing explanation, insight, and encouragement along the way.
How to Eat an Elephant
A Little Book Club for Large Books
Anupama Chopra, founder & editor of Film Companion, is a film critic, television anchor and book author. She has been writing about Bollywood since 1993. Here you can find all of her reviews for movies from across the globe.I discovered this when browsing through Evergreen Podcasts listings. Anupama Chopra gives just the succinct yet personal reviews of new Indian films that help me know whether or not to put movies on my list. So far, her tastes and ours match up very well.
Thursday, January 4, 2024
Best of 2023 — TV
Here are my top picks from our year of TV viewing. Our television viewing was not extensive but we discovered some that were pure gold. In no particular order.
I began my "Best of" lists way back in 2008. To see them, check the label cloud in the sidebar under "Best of ..."
The Romantics documentary series
The legacy of Yash Chopra and Yash Raj Films
A really excellent documentary. Well edited, conceived and executed. This series is one that Indians will enjoy and that true film fans will appreciate. Other than that, only people like us — a true minority of Indian film lovers who are not ourselves Indian — will appreciate.
Tale of the Nine Tailed
Lee Yeon is a mythical nine tailed fox in this fun and exciting roller coaster of a K-drama. He works on earth for the the gods' Department of Immigration of Life After Death — hunting down mythical beings who kill humans. A lovely television producer, Nam Ji-Ah, whose show investigates the supernatural, suspects that he is involved in a murder case. She investigates him and he investigates her. Ji-Ah's looking for her long lost parents and Yeong's on the lookout for the reincarnation of his lost love. Naturally they will work together. Just as naturally, nothing is as it appears on the surface.
If you like this then go watch Tale of the Nine Tailed 1938 which is the sequel (prequel). Although not quite as good as this, it is a lot of fun and still quite good.
Law School
Yang Jong-hoon, a prosecutor-turned-professor, teaches criminal law at a prestigious law school. He and his first-year law students get involved in an unprecedented case during a mock trial. During a mock trial class, the supervising professor is found murdered and Professor Yang is arrested as the main suspect. Showing on Netflix.
There was a refreshing lack of romance, aside from the occasional glance sent from one student to another while they weren't looking. This was a straight up drama that's wildly intricate and inventive in the plot's twists and turns. Somehow it had plenty of drama without being emotionally over-the-top, which we appreciated too.
Only Murders in the Building
Season 3
Wellington Paranormal
Sergeant Ruawai Maaka of the Wellington Police enlists the aid of Officers Minogue and O'Leary to tackle paranormal events in New Zealand's capital city. The mockumentary follows these kiwi cops as they investigate cases such as the demon possession of a teenager, a noise complaint at a haunted house and a blood bank robbery.Just plain fun.
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds
Follows Captain Christopher Pike and the crew of the starship Enterprise in the 23rd century as they explore new worlds and carry out missions throughout the galaxy during the decade before Star Trek: The Original Series.
We enjoyed this quite a lot. It was an intriguing blend of faithfulness to the Star Trek sensibilities while containing character development and modern ideas.
Wednesday, January 3, 2024
Best of 2023 — Movies
Here are my top picks from our year of viewing. We watched around 125 movies last year.
As always, the movies may be old, but my viewing was brand new in 2023. In no particular order.
I began my "Best of" lists way back in 2008. To see them, check the label cloud in the sidebar under "Best of ..."
Grand Hotel
Bholaa
Confess, Fletch
Honor Among Thieves
Game Night
Kantara
Father Stu
Rocky Aur Rani Kii Prem Kahaani
(Rocky and Rani's Love Story)
Rocky is a loud, showy Punjabi from a family who made their fortune making laddoos (sweets). Rani is a sophisticated, stylish television personality from a Bengali family. Brought together by a fluke because each loves their grandparents, they fall in love. This romantic comedy is a three-hour long, dance loaded, romance loaded movie that leaves you smiling. It's been described as "delicious eye candy with a rebellious core" and nothing could be truer. (My review here.)
Kathal — A Jackfruit Mystery
We all really loved this movie which follows Inspector Mahima Basor and her team as they pursue the ridiculous case of two stolen jackfruits. Everyone realizes it is a waste of resources but no one will say no to the politician. As you might expect there is a fair amount of humor but it is usually gentle and understated, which can be a rarity in Indian movies.
Brochevarevarura
(Who Shall Save the Day?)
This story has the framework of an aspiring scriptwriter who is telling the story to an actress who he hopes to interest in starring in the film he's writing. The film pops in and out of this framework and it is interesting to see how the story can subtly change going forward based on the actress's questions or comments. Halfway through the film a plot twist popped up that left us astounded and intrigued. This made all the difference.
Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning, part 1
We closed out the year with the latest Mission Impossible movie. These are always fun because they are so reliable. You know you are getting real entertainment along with a dose of uncompromising view of good versus evil, right versus wrong. Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) is on the right side, albeit having to overcome flaws along the way. I especially enjoyed the many flashes of humor throughout. We thoroughly enjoyed this movie and can't wait for part 2.
Tuesday, January 2, 2024
Best of 2023 — Reading
My top picks from the over 120 books I read last year.
You may find old books here but if they're on this list, then they were new to me! In no particular order.
Note: I've been doing this since 2008 — check the label cloud in the sidebar for "Best of" to see other lists.

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