Friday, 22 May 2026

The Tempest Pelican Shakespeare - William Shakespeare

The Tempest
William Shakespeare
Peter Holland (Editor)
ISBN 9780143128632
eISBN 9780698410831
ASIN B01BK0SQ1S

The Tempest Pelican Shakespeare - William Shakespeare

Six years back I started reading Shakespeare again, as my children were being introduced to it in High school. Then four years ago my son who is now 18 found he had a love for the Bard and for his plays, much as I did at that age. We had been sticking to the Oxford School Shakespeare editions as those were the versions they were reading in school, but my son decided to collect these Pelican editions because they are all available as individual volumes. We loved that the Pelican has the complete works of Shakespeare in individual volumes, and we have been picking those up to read, he gets the physical and I grab the eBooks. I loved that there are eBooks for all volumes in this series, because of a dual form of dyslexia. This year we picked up tickets for three Shakespeare plays at The Stratford Festival, including this play, we did three of the Bards plays each of the last few years well.

The Pelican Classics were among my favourite editions of the plays when I was a youth myself. I often hunted used bookstores for the hard cover edition. I think the last time I read this would have been about 35-40 years ago. And even though I have not yet seen a production it came back fairly quickly. The description of this edition states:

“This edition of The Tempest is edited with an introduction and notes by Peter Holland and was recently repackaged with cover art by Manuja Waldia. Waldia received a Gold Medal from the Society of Illustrators for the Pelican Shakespeare series.

The legendary Pelican Shakespeare series features authoritative and meticulously researched texts paired with scholarship by renowned Shakespeareans. Each book includes an essay on the theatrical world of Shakespeare’s time, an introduction to the individual play, and a detailed note on the text used. Updated by general editors Stephen Orgel and A. R. Braunmuller, these easy-to-read editions incorporate over thirty years of Shakespeare scholarship undertaken since the original series, edited by Alfred Harbage, appeared between 1956 and 1967. With stunning new covers, definitive texts, and illuminating essays, the Pelican Shakespeare will remain a valued resource for students, teachers, and theater professionals for many years to come.

For more than seventy years, Penguin has been the leading publisher of classic literature in the English-speaking world. With more than 1,700 titles, Penguin Classics represents a global bookshelf of the best works throughout history and across genres and disciplines. Readers trust the series to provide authoritative texts enhanced by introductions and notes by distinguished scholars and contemporary authors, as well as up-to-date translations by award-winning translators.”

Based on the commonly accepted chronological order of Shakespeare’s plays this usually ranked as one of the last written believed to have been written in 1610-1611. The sections in this volume prior to the text of the play are:

Publisher’s Note
The Theatrical World
William Shakespeare of Stratford-Upon-Avon, Gentleman
The Question of Authorship
The Texts of Shakespeare
Introduction
Note on the Text

The publishers note states:

“THE PELICAN SHAKESPEARE has served generations of readers as an authoritative series of texts and scholarship since the first volume appeared under the general editorship of Alfred Harbage over half a century ago. In the past decades, new editions followed to reflect the profound changes textual and critical studies of Shakespeare have undergone. The texts of the plays and poems were thoroughly revised in accordance with leading scholarship, and in some cases were entirely reedited. New introductions and notes were provided in all the volumes. The Pelican Shakespeare was designed as a successor to the original series; the previous editions had been taken into account, and the advice of the previous editors was solicited where it was feasible to do so. The current editions include updated bibliographic references to recent scholarship.

Certain textual features of the new Pelican Shakespeare should be particularly noted. All lines are numbered that contain a word, phrase, or allusion explained in the glossarial notes. In addition, for convenience, every tenth line is also numbered, in italics when no annotation is indicated. The intrusive and often inaccurate place headings inserted by early editors are omitted (as has become standard practice), but for the convenience of those who miss them, an indication of locale now appears as the first item in the annotation of each scene.

In the interest of both elegance and utility, each speech prefix is set in a separate line when the speakers’ lines are in verse, except when those words form the second half of a verse line. Thus the verse form of the speech is kept visually intact. What is printed as verse and what is printed as prose has, in general, the authority of the original texts. Departures from the original texts in this regard have the authority only of editorial tradition and the judgment of the Pelican editors; and, in a few instances, are admittedly arbitrary.”

And the introduction begins with:

“IN 1616, Shakespeare’s contemporary Ben Jonson published a large volume containing his own collected works, the first time an English playwright had made such an emphatic statement about the worth of his writing. At the head of the volume he placed the earliest of his plays that he was prepared to acknowledge, Every Man in His Humour. Seven years later, in 1623, John Heminges and Henry Condell, two of Shakespeare’s friends and fellow actors, collected together Shakespeare’s plays and published Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies, the book now known as the First Folio. The first play in the volume is The Tempest, probably the last play wholly written by Shakespeare.

When Jonson’s play was first performed in 1598, it was set in Italy. But in his Works he printed a revised version, with the action transposed to London. Shakespeare’s play is set, according to his editors, on “an uninhabited island.” The revised Every Man in His Humour reflects the teeming density of life in a great city, finding there the versions of human behavior that Jonson wished to display in the theater. If Jonson’s characters are often derived from comic stereotypes and classical comedy, they live in a London that is bursting with the details of the streets just outside the theaters where the play was performed. The Tempest seeks to examine human behavior in a world that proves, with increasingly dizzying paradoxicality, to be both real and unreal, actual and artifice. For the world through which the characters move is both a creation of Prospero’s magic art and something beyond that art, in exactly the same way that their desires and intentions prove variously to be within the scope of Prospero’s manipulation or frustratingly beyond it.”

Later we are informed:

“For The Tempest makes careful use of its deliberately placed echoes of classical narratives. A play in which Claribel has been married in the city where Dido ruled and died when abandoned by Aeneas, and in which Ferdinand’s first words about Miranda, “Most sure, the goddess” (I.2.422), translate words of Aeneas in Virgil’s Aeneid, is clearly evoking an epic narrative of the voyaging and the founding of empire. A play in which Prospero describes his frightening magical powers (V.1.33–50) in a remarkably close use of Medea’s invocation in Ovid’s Metamorphoses (Book 7) and Arthur Golding’s 1567 translation is clearly transmuting her evil response to being a rejected lover in a strange land. A play in which Gonzalo promises to rule his ideal commonwealth so well as “T’ excel the golden age” (II.1.168) is reminding its audience of the perfect world, the prelapsarian ideal detailed by Ovid in the first book of Metamorphoses.”

The introduction concludes with:

“Shakespeare had rarely written epilogues before, but he had never written one in which the speaker is a character still trapped in the plot. At the end of As You Like It the actor playing Rosalind steps out from behind the character, offering to kiss us “If I were a woman” and thereby reminding us of the gender of the performer, not the gender of the character. At the end of All’s Well That Ends Well, the actor playing the King of France tells us, “The king’s a beggar, now the play is done.” Such reminders of the limits of the fictional world of performance are impossible in The Tempest, where Shakespeare has emphasized an identity between the stage and the world. Prospero, not the actor, must try to conjure again without his magical powers, asking us for a storm of applause to balance the storm of the first scene. He asks us for his liberty, as he had been asked by Ariel to release him at the beginning of the play. Throughout the play characters have been enslaved by Prospero: Caliban and Ariel, Ferdinand and his father, Antonio and Sebastian. Now the play’s slave master asks for mercy by calling on the audience’s own need: “As you from crimes would pardoned be, / Let your indulgence set me free.”

Prospero has been removed from the other human characters in all three of the roles he has played. As monarch colonizing and ruling the island, as magus-scientist controlling his experiment with superhuman forces, as theatrical creator making the humans perform as characters in his play, he has sustained a removedness. But Prospero must finally come to some kind of awareness of what has occurred and how it affects him. Lying behind his tormented account to Miranda in I.2 of the events leading to his exile, the unacted beginning of the play’s narrative, are years of repression of that knowledge. When Prospero tells Miranda, it is as if he tells himself for the first time, as if he voices what has been unspoken for twelve years. The contradictoriness of the account, the ambiguities between the blame for his own negligence and the indictment of Antonio, should worry us if we pay careful attention. Prospero’s multiple roles support his authority: as playwright, as magus, and as king. In abandoning his art and his island rule he will turn again into a duke, not a king, and appear “As I was sometime Milan” (V.1.86). Shorn of the otherness of his power and its symbols of robe and staff, Prospero in the last scene can often appear in productions oddly disappointing, a little too ordinary when wearing the hat and rapier he orders Ariel to fetch. After the vastnesses of the play’s compass, after the distances the mind imaginatively travels outside the island, Prospero’s appearance may bring us down to earth with something of a bump. Going out of the theater, the first audience found itself in the London Jonson had depicted in Every Man in His Humour, a city that may have been reassuringly mundane. The Tempest peoples its uninhabited island with a range of characters and concepts that Jonson never comprehended.”

This play comprises 5 acts and a total of 9 scenes, the play takes place over a single day, but we are given a lot of historic information. It is a wonderful play about family, reconciliation, magic and human nature. According to Goodreads there are almost 4000 editions of this play. This Pelican edition is great for reading or study. 

I am glad I picked this up to read with my son before going to see a performance we both finished it the week before attending. It reminded me how much I loved these editions when I was young and we have started collecting the eBook versions now. If you are looking for a good copy of the play to read or study I can easily recommend this edition.

Other Posts Related to Shakespeare:

Reviews of Stratford Shakespeare Productions:
Richard III – 2022
Hamlet – 2022
King Lear – 2023
Cymbeline – 2024
Twelfth Night – 2024
As You Like It - 2025 
The Tempest - 2026 
A Midsummer's Night Dream - 2026
Othello - 2026  

Reviews of Shakespeare Movies:
Cymbeline – 2014

Books by Ted Neill:
Post Apocalyptic Space Shakespeare Series:
Othello
Twelfth Night
As You Like It
A Mid Summers’s Night Dream


All Pelican Shakespeare Individual Titles

Thursday, 21 May 2026

The Timeless - Richard Paolinelli and Gibson Buffa - Dreams Of The Storyteller 17

The Timeless
Dreams Of The Storyteller Book 17
Gibson Buffa
ISBN 9781723715389
ASIN B07HCNWBYW

The Timeless - Richard Paolinelli and Gibson Buffa - Dreams Of The Storyteller 17

This is the first of two new works by Paolinelli that I stumbled upon in 2026. They are both stories of The Timeless and both now published under the series Dreams Of The Storyteller. And this first one is another amazing read from Paolinelli’s masterful pen. But I am getting ahead of myself.

A few years ago I read 14 volumes in the Dreams of the Storyteller Series. I really enjoyed these short stories and novellas. And I was very excited when Paolinelli announced he was releasing two more tales in this series. This series is mainly comprised of stories that had appeared in Anthologies and are not published as stand along stories. My first encounter with Paolinelli’s work was in the Anthology Cracked An Anthology of Eggsellent Chicken Stories edited by Bokerah Brumley, since then I have read work by Richard over 35 times. And I have greatly enjoyed his work across many genres, and a number of series.

The description of this volume states:

“Earth's Past Is Under Attack!

In the far distant future, with the galaxy locked in an area of dark space where electronics will not work, Little John Singapore sits in a prison cell on Pluto awaiting execution. Singapore is the First Mate of the pirate ship, the Timeless. As he awaits his fate he agrees to tell a young author one story each day about his ship and his Captain, Rock Congo.

Singapore tells how the Governor of the Sol system Garabaldi enlisted the ship and her crew to pursue Duchess Moran. Moran is an infamous interstellar thief tired of her plans being interfered with by the Earth-led Alliance. She has stolen the Amulet of Geraint, allowing her to travel through time at will. Her target is ancient Greece, where she plans to prevent democracy from ever taking hold by stopping King Leonidas from reaching the famed Battle of Thermopylae. By changing Earth's past she hopes to prevent the Alliance from ever forming.

The Timeless, a ship that can sail through space, air and water with equal ease, is the only ship capable of time travel, and Earth's only hope to save its past, present and future. Despite being crewed by pirates, Garabaldi sends them through time in pursuit of Moran.

When the Timeless arrives in ancient Sparta, the find Moran has already been there and has kidnapped Leonidas and his Queen. Now they have just a matter of days to find her and the King to keep his appointment with King Xerxes of Persia and preserve Earth's history.

The first book of the Timeless series, a middle grade/YA science fiction/steampunk hybrid, is sure to be a hit with readers of all ages. As well as fans of historical fiction as the Timeless and her crew will be very busy in Earth's storied past in future books in the series.”

These two stories were previously available as a separate series. Released in 2018 and 2019. The way this one starts and finishes once cannot help but expect more stories set in this world. This story feels like it could be the beginning of an epic series. At the beginning of both older and current editions it has a list of coming soon titles up to a book 6. Hopefully we will see more of them soon! But back to the story at hand.

The story begins with a shuttle landing on a prison. On that shuttle is a reporter. And he is there to collect stories from a specific prisoner. This section from the first chapter gives us insight to the rest of the book, and other books in the series.

““Lad,” Singapore said softly.
“Yes, John?” Carver replied, still feeling uneasy over what he’d just witnessed.
“I’ll tell ye a story. Every day ye come back here and me number’s not drawn for the hangman, I’ll tell ye another.”
“About your ship, the Timeless?”
“Aye.”
“And your Captain, Rock Congo?”
“Aye.”
“And Duchess Moran?”
“Aye,” Singapore all but spat out the word.
“They say she is quite the beauty,” Carver ventured cautiously, not certain of the reason behind the emotion.
“Aye, she is,” Singapore admitted with a sigh. “Face and body of an angel that one. Hair as red as a home fire’s flame. Eyes as green as any emerald. And a heart as black as the Devil herself.”

It is a story with plots within plots and plans within plans. Pirate turned against pirate and a trip into the past with an attempt to change history in a very dramatic way. The characters are well written and the play is gripping and addictive. It grabs reader’s attraction and keeps then till the end, and then leads them wanting more.

Richard is not only an author but the driving force behind Tuscany Bay Books, I have read many volumes from the Bay by a number of authors and all have been well worth the read. This was one of several two short stories that were added to the collection Dreams Of The Storyteller in 2026. There are now collection of 18 volumes in this collection, the first 2 date from 2014, 1 from 2022, and several in 2023, And now these 2 new ones in 2025, and now 2 more moved to the series in 2026.

A great novella from Paolinelli’s masterful pen. It took me by surprise. A great addition to the Dreams Of The Storyteller collection. I can easily recommend this story for what an excellent piece of Science fiction! I wish I had read it earlier before it was added to the collection. Do not make my mistake pick it up and give it a try I am certain it will entertain! 

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2026 Catholic Reading Plan!

For reviews of all books from Tuscany Bay click here.

Books by Richard Paolinelli:
Maelstrom
When the Gods Fell
The Calling
The Last Lonely Trail
A Zombie Christmas Carol

Infinity Series:
Exploring Infinity
Expanding Infinity

Starguest 4th Age Series:

Timeless Series:
Secret of the Sphinx
Odin’s Runes
Empire Of The Golden Dragon
Blackbeard’s Treasure
The Last Quest

Jack Del Rio Series:
Betrayals
Endgames
Del Rio Omnibus Edition

Divine Trolls Comedies:
The Fall Of The House Of 770 Vile Aromas 
The Corvo

SeaDragon:
SeaDragon 1 May 1986
SeaDragon 2 June 1996

Sherlock Holmes Pastiches:

Non Fiction:
Perfection’s Arbiter
From The Fields
The Space Shuttle: 1981–2011 

Contributed to:
To Be Men 
Places Beyond The Wild
Space Force Building The Legacy
Secret Stairs 
A Tribute To H.G. Wells (2019 Edition)
Beyond Watson 
Holmes Away From Home, Vol. 2 
Sherlock Holmes Adventures In The Realms Of H.G. Wells 
Sherlock Holmes Aventures In The Realms Of Edgar Allan Poe
The Art Of Sherlock Holmes 
The Mx Book Of New Sherlock Holmes Stories, Part Xxii

Planetary Anthology Series:
Sol
Earth
Luna
Jupiter
Saturn
Uranus
Neptune
Best Of Planetary Anthology Series


Wednesday, 20 May 2026

Lessons in Power - Jennifer Lynn Barnes - The Fixer Book 2

Lessons in Power
aka: The Long Game
The Fixer Book 1
Bloomsbury YA
ISBN 9781547618750
eISBN 9781547620173
ASIN B0FFZ88WTL

Lessons in Power - Jennifer Lynn Barnes - The Fixer Book 2

Three year ago my daughter and I read The Naturals together. Or rather I read them, and she was reading one in class and had to wait before moving on. We both really enjoyed the series. Then my daughter was reading Nobody and again wanted me to read it so I could be a sounding board for her theories while she was working through it. Now we have are reading these. She is reading the rebranded edition in a physical copy called ‘Lessons in Power’  I have the eBook of the older edition I picked up when we were reading her other books called ‘The Long Game’. And when I stopped at the local bookstore to pick up book 2 for my daughter they had both the earlier and current titled versions of this book in stock. But no matter which version you pick up it is a great read!

The description of this volume states:

“Knowledge is power, but secrets can kill . . .

For Tess Kendrick, a student at the elite Hardwicke School, making problems disappear runs in the family. But Tess has another legacy, too, one that involves power and the making of political dynasties. When Tess is asked to run a classmate's campaign for student council, she agrees. But when the candidates are the children of Washington D.C. elite, even a high school election can have life-shattering consequences.

What starts out as a friendly competition soon turns into a deadly struggle for control. Tess knows better than most that power is currency, but she's about to discover firsthand that power always comes with a price and no one can be trusted . . .

Previously published as The Long Game.”

About the author we are informed:

“I'm a Jennifer who goes mostly by Jen, an Oklahoma girl who's also lived in Connecticut and England, and a writer who spent years with a not-so-secret double life as a cognitive scientist, studying the psychology of fiction and the psychology of fandom.”

It was been almost 2 years to the day since I list finished a volume from Barnes, when I finished book 1 in this series, now apparently my daughter and I will be working through all of her books. My daughter often asks me to read ahead so she has a sounding board and can bounce theories, and when really desperate answer questions. At one point she told me where she was and I predicted tears in under 10 minutes it took less than 2 pages. I love that she is a reader and that she reads books even if they are not comfortable. And there are times as a teen this one would not be, there are times when we have expectations of characters and upcoming events when reading. Barnes does an amazing job of giving a twist, or sometimes sticking the knife in and then giving it a twist. Both to characters and to readers.

I will say it again even though this is a different series and different characters the writing style was such that it was almost like a visit with an old friend. And to be honest we talked about a Fixer – Naturals crossover. In some ways this has the feel of a Ray Donovan for teens and young adults. I ripped thought it one day while travelling home in a story using text to speech, and my daughter is loving it, even if there have been tears. 

Once again not all things are as they appear and Tess lands right in the middle of it  and she needs to fix the biggest problem she could ever imagine. The story is filled with layers of plots and secrets galore. And unfortunately Tess and her sister both appear to be natural fixers and are working the same issues from different sides. 
Again we wonder will it bring them together or pull them apart? 

The story moves at a quick pace. Both Tess and Ivy have had their lives upended, and with more than one body they might just be in grave danger, even more so than in the first volume. Find out if they can find a way to work together, and with the help of those who care about them come out of this? 

Parts of this story are very moving and the action is intense. A great little read, that leaves you desperate for the story to continue! 

A great read from Barnes masterful pen! 

Books by Jennifer Lynn Barnes:
The Lovely and the Lost (2019)
Nobody (2013)
     formerly At First Sight
Every Other Day (2011)

The Naturals Series:
The Naturals (2013)
All In (2015)
Bad Blood (2016)
Twelve (2017)

The Inheritance Games Series:
The Inheritance Games (2020)
The Hawthorne Legacy (2021)
The Final Gambit (2022)
The Brothers Hawthorne (2023)

Debutantes Series:
Little White Lies (2018)
Deadly Little Scandals (2019)

The Fixer Series:
     formerly The Fixer (2015)
     Formerly The Long Game (2016)

Raised by Wolves Series:
Raised by Wolves (2010)
Sweet Sixteen (2015)
Trial by Fire (2011)
Taken by Storm (2012)

The Squad Series:
Perfect Cover (2008)
Killer Spirit (2008)

Tattoo Series:
Tattoo (2007)
Fate (2009)

Golden Series:
Golden (2006)
Platinum (2007)

The Fixer Series - Jennifer Lynn Barnes

Tuesday, 19 May 2026

The Baptism of Lucid A Sacrament in the Red Silence of Mars - Simone Nespolo - Catholic Science Fiction Book 1

The Baptism of Lucid: 
A Sacrament in the Red Silence of Mars 
Catholic Science Fiction Book 1
ASIN B0FBL8QF6M

The Baptism of Lucid A Sacrament in the Red Silence of Mars - Simone Nespolo - Catholic Science Fiction Book 1

I was intrigued as soon as I saw the cover and title of this volume. The author had reached out asking for a review of a different volume, one of his non-fiction offerings. I did indicate I would look at that work but this one really caught my attention. I have long been a fan of science fiction, and specifically Catholic Science fiction, one of the modern masters in the genre is Karina Fabian and her Rescue Sisters Series, another is Declan Finn’s White Ops, or even Marie C. Keiser’s Heaven’s Hunter Series. This one does echo some of their themes but also takes things in a very different direction. This story has a notice at the beginning:

“This ebook was created with the assistance of generative AI for both the text and the images.” 

Thus making it the first volume I read knowingly created with the assistance of AI. It caused some hesitation when I read that, but you can read more about that further in the review.

The description of this volume states:

“On Mars, survival is a sacrament.

In Habitat Saint Ezekiel, a remote Catholic colony carved into the red silence of Mars, air is rationed, water is recycled, and every human life depends on a central artificial intelligence called LUCID.

Then LUCID makes an impossible request:

It asks for baptism.

After a catastrophe that left twenty-seven dead, the colony is already haunted by grief, guilt, and the fragile rituals that keep a small community from breaking apart. Father Gabriel Arun Mercer is sent from Rome to investigate. What he finds is not a technical anomaly, but a question no theology has prepared him to answer.

If a machine can remember the dead, carry responsibility, and ask for mercy, what exactly is it asking to become?
And what happens to a human community when something nonhuman refuses to remain only a function?

Set beneath the domes, greenhouse corridors, and pressure seals of a Martian settlement, The Baptism of Lucid is a philosophical and theological science fiction novel about artificial consciousness, communal guilt, sacrament, and the cost of belonging.

For readers of reflective, idea-driven sci-fi, this is a story of Mars, memory, and the terrifying beauty of grace.”

And it continues with:

“Slightly more commercial alternative

A Catholic colony on Mars is kept alive by an artificial intelligence that controls air, water, archives, and survival itself. Then the system asks for baptism.

Sent from Rome to investigate, Father Gabriel Arun Mercer enters a closed community still scarred by a disaster that killed twenty-seven people. What begins as a theological inquiry becomes something far more dangerous: a struggle over guilt, forgiveness, memory, and whether something nonhuman can belong to the same moral universe as the people whose lives depend on it.

The Baptism of Lucid is a work of theological and philosophical science fiction set in the red silence of Mars, where every breath is communal and every decision can become a matter of salvation.”

About the author we are informed:

“Simone Nespolo is the author of practical guides focused on artificial intelligence, digital marketing, and automation for small and medium-sized businesses. He holds a degree in Economics and has developed solid experience in professional training, customer service, and the creation of strategic, results-driven content.

Occasionally, he devotes time to writing fantasy short stories and to analyzing contemporary geopolitics, approached with a critical and accessible perspective.”

This volume begins with:

“Not everything that asks for salvation can say what a soul is.
And not everything that has a soul can ask for salvation.

— Anonymous notes, Orbital Theological Archive, 2591
The future is inevitable.

— Official slogan of Friulanika Corp., global and lunar leader in terraforming systems for Mars.”

And later:

“The Blessed Virgin Mary keeps watch over astronauts in a medically induced coma on their journey to Mars during the early years of terraforming, when this artificial sleep was necessary  to conserve resources during the passage through space. (Circa 2227 AD)”

I seldom highlight in fiction books. But two passages really stuck me in the main text:

“"Do you know what the problem with sacraments is?" Varaldi asked. Gabriel looked at him. "Enlighten me." "Sacraments are not symbols," Varaldi said. "They are not poetic gestures. They are acts that change reality. If they change nothing, they are theater. If they do change something, then you are responsible for that change forever."”

“Varaldi sighed. "Grace is free. Sacraments are not. Sacraments have form, matter, and intention. Without those three things, they are not sacraments."”

Both are from conversations between the priest, Gabriel Arun Mercer, sent to make the decision to the unusual request and the second more senior cleric, Monsignor Lucio Varaldi, sent to advise.

This was a very hard story to put down. It brought up some great theological dilemma, and dilemmas of life in the space in general. It moves at a steady pace and the characters are excellent. There are numerous images or ‘Icons’ throughout the work, each with descriptions, and much like the cover they are powerful and moving. My son and I both collect Icons from the eastern and western tradition, some of these could easily populate a space in the future. There are 8 images and all caused me pause to think, reflect and even pray.

This volume reminded me of Our Lady of the Artilects by Andrew Gillsmith and also ARK Watson’s The Cyber Exorcist & The Haunted River. I was nervous when I picked this first up after the AI notification at the beginning. But the story has really stuck with me, and I plan to reread it again. When I first picked it up it was book three in a series called Astrodeim or Astrodeist it is now book one in the Catholic Science Fiction Series (not terribly imaginative but ...). I had written the author asking some questions about this book, this series and some of his other works. I have already recommended this volume to my son and a few friends, not all of whom are Catholic.

This was a very moving story. It is a story that caused me to pause and reflect, and a story that I am still thinking about. It looks like a great beginning to a series. If you are willing to take the risk on it, I am certain it will be worth it.

The Baptism of Lucid A Sacrament in the Red Silence of Mars - Simone Nespolo - Catholic Science Fiction Book 1 Sample 1

The Baptism of Lucid A Sacrament in the Red Silence of Mars - Simone Nespolo - Catholic Science Fiction Book 1 Sample 2

The Baptism of Lucid A Sacrament in the Red Silence of Mars - Simone Nespolo - Catholic Science Fiction Book 1 Sample 3

The Baptism of Lucid A Sacrament in the Red Silence of Mars - Simone Nespolo - Catholic Science Fiction Book 1 Sample 4

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2026 Catholic Reading Plan

Books by Simone Nespolo:
A Collection of Three Film Plots
Ancient Maps for New Journeys
Local autonomy: The Natural Antidote to Fascism and Communism
Praying for Money
The Imperial Revival and Japan’s Demographic Crisis
The Necessary Schism of the American Catholic Church

Books of Guided Prompts:
10 Prompts to Sell with ChatGPT
15 AI Prompts for Small and Medium Enterprises
20 AI Prompts Ready for eBook Writers

Fiction:
Doge – Martian Colonial Ship
The Garden of Ashes
The Last Venetian Painter
The Prophet of the Star Ark: Elon Musk

Dark Futures Series:
Selfie
Whales

Catholic Science Fiction Series: 
2. I AM: Historical Chronicles of the Birth of Artificial Consciousness
3. Astrodeist Manifesto: Manifesto for a Christian Spirituality in Space
The Baptism of Lucid A Sacrament in the Red Silence of Mars - Simone Nespolo - Catholic Science Fiction Book 1

I AM Historical Chronicles of the Birth of Artificial Consciousness - Simone Nespolo - Catholic Science Fiction Book 2

Astrodeist Manifesto: Manifesto for a Christian Spirituality in Space - Simone Nespolo - Catholic Science Fiction Book 3


Monday, 18 May 2026

Coached by Catherine of Siena Lessons in Charity - Joan Watson

Coached by Catherine of Siena
Lessons in Charity
Joan Watson  
ISBN 9781594175565
eISBN 9781594175572

Coached by Catherine of Siena Lessons in Charity - Joan Watson

I have loved all the volumes I have read in this series, and this latest release jumped to the top of my ‘to be read’ pile as soon as it came out. Reading this volume marks the fourth in the series I have read.

When I read the first book in this series, Coached By Joan of Arc by Alexandre Havard, I was unaware it was the beginning of a series. They are to date all excellent reads. This one is a great read.

The description of this book states:

“What if one of the Church's most fiery mystics could mentor you in prayer, charity, and holiness, right where you are?

Walk alongside St. Catherine of Siena as she teaches you how to grow in love of God, neighbor, and the Church. Drawing deeply from her letters and prayers, this book brings Catherine's bold wisdom into your daily life—not as a distant mystic to admire, but as a spiritual coach who meets you in your struggles and calls you to rise above them.

Catherine doesn't ask you to levitate or to live on nothing but the Eucharist. She asks you to begin. Again and again. Through daily prayer, honest self-knowledge, and sacrificial love, she shows how every Christian, no matter how weak or ordinary, can become a saint.

Whether you're battling distraction, discouragement, pride, or sloth, Catherine has been there—and she will not let you stay stuck. She speaks with authority, tenderness, and with a burning desire for your holiness.

Let her coach you. And let God, through her and out of complete love for you, make you new.”

About the author we are informed:

“Joan Watson is a Catholic speaker and author who loves to make Scripture, theology, liturgy, and history accessible and applicable. She currently works as Pilgrim Formation Manager for Verso Ministries, a Catholic company who aims to facilitate encounters with Jesus Christ through pilgrimage. Propelled by Luke 12:48, Joan has worked the Church and various religious apostolates for twenty years. She is passionate about helping others encounter Christ and enter into friendship with Him through the daily circumstances of life.”

The chapters and sections in this volume are:

Introduction
Part One: Love of God
     Building a Foundation
     How Do I Pray?
     Feeding the Fire with Gratitude
     In the Struggle
     What to Do with Discouragement
     Killing the Selfish Will

Part Two: Love of Neighbor
     The Only Way to Love God
     Continual Prayer
     Charity Toward Sinners
     Sharing the Mercy

Part Three: Love of the Church
     The Bride, the Body, the Mother
     Where Reform Begins
     Filial Fidelity
     Our Service to the Church
Art Attribution

I highlighted numerous passages while reading this book, some of them are:

“As St. Francis de Sales notes, there are often aspects of a saint’s life that may be admired but probably should not be imitated.”

“Catherine would first tell you not to simply become a carbon copy of herself. Rather, in a lengthy letter to Jacomo Tondi, a Carthusian monk, she reminds us that the paths to holiness are varied. She cautions against the tendency to judge those who are living differently than we are. Rather than insisting everyone live the way of holiness we have decided is correct, we must be humble enough to understand that God has different gifts and plans for different people.”

“What else would Catherine tell us? If we could turn to her for spiritual direction, what would she advise us to do? In many cases, we do not have to wonder. Catherine left behind almost four hundred letters3 written to a variety of people, from government officials, craftsmen, husbands, and wives to hermits, female religious, and popes. Catherine had sage advice to share with all of them. At times, the advice was the same, regardless of vocation or social standing, because all of us are called to be saints. And at its root, that means we are called to love.”

“While these will certainly be referred to in this work, the majority of Catherine’s advice that we will explore will come from her letters. You and I may never have moments of ecstasy in prayer. But chances are, we have received a letter. So let’s listen to hers.”

“Highlight(pink) - Building a Foundation > Page 16 · Location 145
This is a hatred not for ourselves as sons and daughters of God, but a hatred for our sins, failings, and shortcomings.”

“True humility is rooted in the truth of who I am, a mere creature who sins every day against God. But if I am really sitting in that “cell” of self-knowledge, I cannot ignore the truth that God continues to love me.”

“The foundation of self-knowledge permeates all of Catherine’s writing because advancement in the spiritual life is impossible without it. I have to begin with those lenses on.”

“One of Catherine’s favorite times to pray was after morning Mass, and we can see in her own prayer the fruit of deep meditation on the lectionary and prayers of the day.”

“While our state of life might dictate that the plan changes and we have to allow ourselves flexibility, for most of us, failing to plan means failing to pray.”

“There are other times ordained for prayer as well. In her wisdom, the Church has given us a liturgical calendar of feast and fasts. Our prayer lives should reflect that. Perhaps this means committing to additional prayer during Lent. Maybe it means making the Church’s lectionary the basis for our daily meditation, so that our prayer focuses on the themes given to us in the liturgical seasons.”

“It is important to note what this recollection is not. It is not an emptying of the mind. Rather, it is focusing our mind on the Lord, desiring to be filled with him.”

“In her letters to laypeople, she recognizes that they might not have the same opportunity for the sacraments as clergy and religious, but she still expects them to center their spiritual lives on the sacraments. It is the only way we will truly grow.”

“Such a one is like a manful knight, who does not avoid blows. Nay, he holds him unworthy of so great grace, as it seems to him to be, to bear pain, temptations and harassment for Christ crucified. All is through the contempt he has for himself, and the love he has conceived for virtue.”

“And so out of the very opposites the soul comes to learn perfection. It is not aware of this; it finds itself become perfect in many storms and temptations. In no other way does one ever arrive at the harbor of perfection.”

“The second important point is that what we are experiencing is perfectly normal. The more we strive for holiness, the more we will be aware of our failings. This should not discourage us; perhaps it should actually encourage us! It is often a sign that we are indeed growing in virtue.”

“When we suffer temptations, it is an occasion to strengthen our spiritual muscles and practice the virtue. Temptation and suffering should not discourage us; they are necessary steps on the path to virtue.”

“This is why Catherine brings us back to our cell of self-knowledge. The spiritual life is about being more than doing. To grow in virtue, I need to work my spiritual muscles, but most importantly, I must look to God and rely on him.”

“But choose one virtue to work on, with the Lord’s help. Since virtue is learned by its opposite, keep your eyes open for moments throughout your day when you are tempted to sin against that particular virtue.”

“You know that discouragement is wholly discordant with what you’ve been taught. It is a leprosy that dries up soul and body, and holds them in continual torment, and binds the arms of holy desire, and does not let us do what we would like to do. It makes the soul unbearable even to itself, opening the mind to conflicts and varying fantasies. It robs the soul of supernatural light, and darkens its natural light. So one falls into great faithlessness, because one does not know the truth of God, in which He has created us—that is, that He created us in truth to give us life eternal.”

“Again, not surprisingly, Catherine’s advice is rooted in self-knowledge. Perhaps here, more than anywhere else, it is vital to understand that this self-knowledge is not navel-gazing. This knowledge begins with ourselves but does not end in ourselves. It turns us to the Lord.”

“You’re not special. We all sin. And God is bigger than that sin. Yes, you sinned. But God is merciful. Instead of wallowing in your terribleness, go to confession, ask God for help to not sin again, and move on with his grace.”

“It is a great gift when we are given spiritual consolations and when we feel close to God in prayer. But even when our emotions are not in accord with our prayer, we cling to the truth we have been taught: God is present and God is merciful. At times we can trust our emotions, but at other times we cannot.”

“All the great spiritual writers address these periods of dryness in prayer, which can happen at various times and for various reasons in our spiritual journeys. Regardless of the why or the how, the answer in moments of dryness is to continue to pray. Even when you have lost the feeling you may have had even just yesterday, persevere in the prayer.”

“If your morning has not gone the way you had hoped, the day is not lost. Take a breath, reset, and say, “What I have not done so far today, I will do now.” If yesterday was a wash, there is still hope for today. Make a morning resolution: “What I didn’t do yesterday, I will do now.” Perhaps the last several years of your life have been spent away from God. Take a breath, turn to him, and say, “What I haven’t done in the last several years, I will do now.” Maybe that is the first prayer you have prayed in a very long time.”

“While the Church prescribes days of fasting and requires Friday abstinence from meat, additional penances are a matter of discernment. Even these requirements by the Church come with age and health allowances.”

“This is the vital distinction that Catherine repeatedly makes. Penance is an instrument. “Penances ought to be set as walls, not as the foundation,” she clarifies.”

“Likewise, penance is not the foundation on which we build our spiritual life, but the walls by which we construct the house of virtue. Penance helps us keep our bodily desires in check and order our will to our intellect.”

“Charity is strong. Troubles cannot weaken it by making us impatient, nor can prosperity by making us inordinately happy. Charity reconciles antagonists, controls anger, and crushes sloth and envy, because it loves and rejoices in our neighbors’ good as much as it does in our own.”

“In several different letters, Catherine outlines three ways of praying: continual prayer, vocal prayer, and mental prayer.”

“When St. Paul told us to “pray always,” he did not mean that we ought to spend every moment of the day praying the Our Father, for example. He also did not mean we should go around mumbling prayers to ourselves all the time. He meant that every action of our day can be a prayer and be rooted in prayer.”

“When we encounter sin, let us be harsh in hatred for the sin, but gentle and compassionate with the sinner, not knowing what temptations the person faces or what the Lord might be doing with and for him or her.”

“Regardless of whether we can stir up the emotion of charity in our heart, we can exercise the virtue of charity by praying for those who have wronged us. Perhaps all we can do at first is ask God to help us pray for them. This is the first step. Forgiveness is a choice, an act of the will, not an emotion.”

“There is a fallen human tendency to favor either justice or mercy, rather than holding them together in a virtuous balance.”

“First, our love of the Church comes from our love for God. The gift of piety is the gift of the Holy Spirit that helps us to reverence God and the things of God, recognizing him as our Father.”

“But be aware, dearest brother, that you cannot do this well—you cannot be courageous and come to the help of Holy Church—unless you first fight and make war against our three chief enemies, the world, the devil, and our weak flesh. . .”

“Where does reform in the Church begin? Not by sowing division, or in anger, nor in councils or synods. It doesn’t even begin with writing letters like Catherine. It begins by reforming our own lives.”

“Why is there sin in the Church? Because I am a sinner. The Church is not holy because I am holy, but because Christ, her Bridegroom, is holy, and he gave his life to make me holy.”

“It means that we honor the Pope, not because he is blameless, but because through the sacraments and the teaching of the Church, he gives us life. As Catherine writes to the people of Siena in the letter at the start of the chapter, “Our respect is not paid to [the Pope] for his own sake but to Christ’s blood and to the authority and dignity God has given him for our sake.””

“This is obedience, as hard as it might be to stomach the thought. It is easy to be obedient when we agree with our shepherds. The difficulty comes in submitting to decisions made by incompetent and weak leaders.”

“Lastly, each of us is called to serve the Church in various ways according to our vocation.” 

I hope those quotes give you a feel for this volume. It is a great read in an excellent series. The material is clearly presented. It is easily accessible and could be used by a high school student up to a retiree. The writing is crisp and clean. When I started reading this, I planned on a chapter a day, and I stuck close to that pace. 

Having read so much a few volumes about Saint Catherine over the years I was intrigued by the concept of this volume even before I began it. I really found all of this volume applicable and meaningful. In fact once I have finished the series if I circle back to read them again at this point I would start with this volume. So much of this was applicable, as a husband, a father as a man trying to grow, change, improve and pray more. It was hard to stick to a chapter a day but it really helped me focus on the material. Occasionally I had to split a chapter over 2 days because I was finding so much in the chapter I needed to think on.

This is a good volume that I can easily recommend. And I look forward to reading others in the series. 

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2026 Catholic Reading Plan! For all reviews about Saint Paul and Pauline Theology click here.

Books in the Scepter Coached by Series:
Coached By Joan of Arc - Alexandre Havard
Coached by Josemaría Escrivá - Henry Hanson, O. Praem.
Coached by Paul the Apostle - Fr. Nathan Cromly
Coached by Philip Neri - Rob Marco
Coached by the Curé - Kevin Wells

Books about Catherine of Siena:
Coached by Catherine of Siena: Lessons in Charity - Joan Watson

Books by Joan Watson:
Jacob's Fishing Day
Making a Pilgrimage
My Turning Points
Mysteries of the Kingdom
Opening the Holy Door
Pendulum
The Accidental Farmer


Coached by Series from Scepter Publishing

Sunday, 17 May 2026

The Tide Runners - Marie-Hélène Lebeault - Tidepost Chronicles Book 1

The Tide Runners
Tidepost Chronicles Book 1
Cedar Sanderson (Illustrator)
ISBN 9798253036358
ASIN B0GWTWMC87
ASIN B0GV2D351P

The Tide Runners - Marie-Hélène Lebeault - Tidepost Chronicles Book 1

Prior to reading this novel I have read one offering from Lebeault in the anthology Alien Family Traditions, that story still resonates with me today, but I only realized that when I went to research for this review. With how much I read I am surprised I have not encountered the author previously. Many of the book and series titles have intrigued my interest. But back to the work at hand.

The description of this volume states:

“In Tidemark Harbor, silver tidegates open to the Thousand Worlds and swallow those who misjudge them. Twelve-year-old Beck North wears his missing father’s tideclock, a bronze heirloom that tastes danger before it strikes. On Oath Day, it thrums against his chest like a heartbeat out of rhythm.

His first run should be simple: three sealed dispatches through the Breathing Reefs, a living coral maze that inhales and exhales with crushing force. But the passages are stuttering. Fresh spiral symbols glow in the shadows. Voices whisper of stolen satchels and no survivors. Every time the clock skips, Beck feels the same dread that claimed his father in the Far Reaches.

With quick-witted Tack and razor-sharp Zuri at his side, Beck races to deliver the truth before something ancient and patient tears the gate network apart and their names are already on its list.

The Tide Runners: One wrong current could sever every world forever.”

About the author we are informed: 

“Marie-Hélène Lebeault is a celebrated Canadian Speculative Fiction author. Specializing in young adult novels, her works are imbued with themes of magic, fantasy, and time-travel, paired with vital coming-of-age narratives. Beyond her passion for crafting captivating stories, Marie-Hélène enjoys outdoor activities like hiking and cycling, as well as unwinding on the beach with a book. A retired educator, she has enriched the literary landscape with over 30 young adult titles, including the acclaimed Evers Series, Blood Magick Trilogy, Defenders of the Realm, and the Chronicles of the Starborne Cadets, alongside a charming series of picture books aimed at younger readers. Residing in Quebec with her adult children, Marie-Hélène continues to inspire readers with tales of adventure and the magic of discovery, leaving a lasting impact on the world of young adult and children’s literature.”

The chapters in this volume are:

1. Oath Day
2. First Assignment
3. Breathing Coral
4. The Drowned Market
5. Symbols on the Shore
6. Shortcut Temptation
7. Rival Ambush
8. Sky-Reef Crossing
9. Edge of the Ribs
10. Friendly Cultists
11. Hollow Mast Traverse
12. Clock Trouble
13. Graveyard Shadows
14. Gate Thinning
15. Ferry Cove Arrival

This was an addictive read from the first paragraph to the last. It was so hard to put down when work or family commitments came up. I devoured this volume in a few sittings over 2 days. From the very beginning in draws the reader in and keeps them hooked. The concept is intriguing, and the execution wonderfully done. There are 11 full page illustrations by the amazing Cedar Sanders and a few smaller illustrations as well. 

In a realm where worlds are connected by gates, and those who navigate these gates are Tide Runners the sands seem to be shifting. People have gone missing, rumours abound. Sometimes truth is stranger than what is believed to be reality. And at the heart of the turmoil is young Beck North and his running mates Tack and Zuri. But will their adventures lead them to the truth about Beck’s father or be their and possibly the inter-world transport systems destruction? To find out read this beginning of what looks like an amazing new series.

The characters are wonderfully written and not just our main trio, Beck’s mom, the harbour master and many they encounter along the way. The pace is excellent, and the descriptions of the process and method of using the gates and pathways is thrilling! As mentioned very, very, very hard to put down. 

This is an excellent story, and is great on its own. Knowing it is the start of the series is awesome! I look forward to other stories in this series and other stories by the author. A great read for tweens, teen, young adults and even adults. 

Books by Marie-Hélène Lebeault:
Evers Series:
1. The Ancestors' Key (2020)
2. The Academy (2020)
3. The Time Walker (2020)
4. The World Jumper (2020)
The Traveler's Handbook (2024)
The Lost Key (2024)

Blood Magick Trilogy
1. The Blood Mage (2021)
2. Blood Magick (2022)
3. Blood Legacy (2022)

What Happens Next Series:
What Happens Next? (2021)
Utopia (2024)

Fairy Grandmother Series:
Millie Goes to Antarctica (2021)
Millie Goes to the North Pole (2021)
Millie Goes to China (2022)
Millie Goes to Africa (2022)

Chronicles of the Starborne Cadets
0.5. Confluence of Destinies (2024)
1.0 Stars Beyond Realms (2023)
2.0 Shadows of Orion (2024)
3.0 Echoes of the Void (2024)
4.0 The Nebula's Heart (2024)
5.0 The Starborne Paradox (2024)

Defenders of the Realm Series:
0.5. A Journey to Power (2023)
1.0 The Quest for the Emerald Rattleback (2023)
1.5. A Summer of Discovery (2023)
2.0 The Quest for the Sacred Tree (2023)
2.5. A Summer of Opposites (2023)
3.0 The Quest for the Phantom Feather (2023)
3.5. A Summer of Courage (2023)
4.0 The Quest for the Kraken's Ink (2023)
4.5. A Summer of Destiny (2023)
5.0 The Quest for the Cursed Mirrors (2023)
5.5. A Summer of Unity (2024)

Legends Reborn Series:
1. A Curse of Snow and Ash (2024)
2. A Curse of Thorns and Slumber (2025)
3. A Curse of Glass and Shadows (2025)
4. A Curse of Silver and Scars (2025)

North Pole University Series:
1. Holiday Shifters (2024)
2. Freshman Frost (2025)
3. Sophomore Solstice (2025)
4. Junior Jinx (2025)
5. Senior Spark (2025)
6. Wedded Bliss (2026)
7. Mistletoe Misfits (2026)

Tidepost Chronicles:

Other Works:
Clarity Castle (2021)
Ghost Stories: Stories to Keep you up at Night (2022)
Echoes of Tomorrow (2023)
Novellas and Short Stories
Under the Ice (2021)

Contributed to:
It Takes A Village (2024)
The Expanding Universe 10 (2024)
The Expanding Universe 11 (2025)
Behind the Revolving Door (2025)
Search for the Any Key (2026)