Saturday, 14 March 2026

Stations of the Cross for Young Catholics - Sister Anne Flanagan, FSP

Stations of the Cross for Young Catholics
Sister Anne Flanagan, FSP 
ISBN 9780819827654

Stations of the Cross for Young Catholics - Sister Anne Flanagan, FSP


This was one of 2 new Stations of the Cross I picked up to use during Lent in 2026, both by Sister Anne Flanagan, FSP. I try and pray a stations each Friday of the year, and each day through Lent. I was attracted to this and the other based on the artwork, and I had stumbled upon them by chance when researching for a different review. 

An online description of this volume states:

“Walk with Jesus to Calvary with this scriptural, age-appropriate presentation of the Stations of the Cross. Perfect for individual, family, or classroom use, this reverently illustrated portrayal of the passion, death, and resurrection of Jesus immerses children ages 8-12 in the heart of the Gospel while teaching them to pray with Scripture and their imaginations. Includes the fourteen traditional Stations of the Cross and the optional fifteenth station, the Resurrection.”

The back of the book is:

“The Stations of the Cross is a special way of praying that lets us spend time with Jesus during his suffering and death. This booklet, for ages nine and up, guides individuals or groups to imaginatively reflect on the scenes of the fourteen stations and the optional fifteenth station of the Resurrection. By paying attention to Jesus in our hearts, we remember how he died for us, and we open ourselves to the gift of his great love.”

About the author we are informed:

“Sister Anne Flanagan, FSP, has been a Daughter of Saint Paul for over forty years. As a catechetical author and editor for Pauline Books & Media, she has "taught" tens of thousands of children. Her Eucharistic adoration guide for children, Come to Jesus, has been in print for almost ten years. Sister Anne has written for print, digital, and social media as a specialist in the spirituality of the Pauline Family, and she has recorded over two dozen albums with the Daughters of Saint Paul Choir.”

I only highlighted two passaged while reading this volume they are:

“Jesus knows what it's like to face pain, sorrow, failure, betrayal. When you feel these things, you can bring them to Jesus. His rising from the dead is the promise that our suffering will not be the whole story. Saint Paul said that when you were baptized, you were baptized into Christ's death-so his resurrection is already in you, too.”

“For over a thousand years, people have walked the Stations of the Cross with Jesus. It is like making a pilgrimage, a holy time you want.”

A Sample station is:

Third Station

Leader: Third Station: Jesus Falls the First Time

Reader 1: Pray for the victims of violence.

Leader: We adore you, 0 Christ, and we praise you.

All: Because by your holy cross, you have redeemed the world.

IMAGINE (Sit or kneel)

Reader 2:
The crowded streets smell like dust and garbage. Jesus
stumbles along with his heavy cross. Then he falls onto the
dirty street, and the cross comes crashing down on him. He
looks your way. (Pause)

LISTEN

Reader 1:
Jesus said to his disciples, "If any of you want to come with
me, you must forget yourself, carry your cross, and follow
me" (Matthewl6:24).

RESPOND (Stand)

All:
Please hurry, Lord,
and answer my prayer.
I feel hopeless.
Don't turn away
and leave me here to die (Psalm 143:7 CEV).”

I really enjoyed this volume, I just wish there was an eBook edition so it could always be with me on my Kindle. Over the years I have prayer through and reviewed about 60 different ‘Way of the Cross’ books and booklets. Some I pray once or twice and others I have been praying for decades. I could see this one working its way into the rotation, but know it would be more frequent if there was a digital edition. I enjoyed it enough my son took a copy to school to give to the chaplain. 

This is a wonderful little stations. It does not have the Hail Mary, Our Father, or Glory Be at the end of the stations, but those are easily added. It also doe s not have the Stabat Mater either. That being said it is a nice clean crisp Stations and once that could be used with grade school student, Secondary school, or even just with a group of adults.

I can easily recommend this Stations for home, school, or church library and use. So track it down and give it a try.

Side note: It was hard to make a list if books published by Sister Anne as they are published under the following names:

Anne Flanagan
Anne Joan Flanagan
Anne Joan Flanagan, FSP
Sister Anne Flanagan
Sister Anne Flanagan, FSP
Sr. Anne Flanagan

and maybe even more variations.

Stations of the Cross for Young Catholics - Sister Anne Flanagan, FSP - Sample Station

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2026 Catholic Reading Plan!  For all Stations of the Cross review click here.

Books by Sister Anne Flanagan, FSP:
5 Keys to Understanding Pope Francis
A Quiet Place With Jesus:
Childrens Way of Cross
Come to Jesus
Come to Me: Living the Nine First Fridays
Confirmation Be Sealed
Family Saints
Family Saints Coloring and Activity Book
Jesus Brings Us Life
Jesus Walks With Us
Saints of the Americas
The Night of the Shepherds

Stations of the Cross for Young Catholics - Sister Anne Flanagan, FSP

Children's Way of the Cross - Anne Flanigan, FSP


Friday, 13 March 2026

A Christmas Garland an Anthology of Verse - Edited by John Irvine as J. Pennington Irvine

A Christmas Garland an Anthology of Verse 
An Anthology of Irish Poetry Past and Present
John Irvine - Editor (1903-1965)
as J. Pennington Irvine 
Thortnton
Belfast
1929

A Christmas Garland an Anthology of Verse - Edited by John Irvine as J. Pennington Irvine

I stumbled upon this author. I was reading one of the Vision Books for young readers, Irish Saints by Robert T. Reilly, and there was an excerpt of a poem from A Treasury of Irish Saints A Book of Poems. It was really intriguing and after reading that first volume I made it a mission to try and track down everything Irvine published. At first my dyslexia had me thinking it was John Irving, and I have read a few of his fiction books. But some quick searching put that idea to rest.  This author John Irvine lived from 1903-1965. This volume was originally published in1941. 

I am thankful to the National Library of Ireland and their scanning service. Without which I would have read but one volume from this excellent Irish poet. I appreciate that they will scan out of print and out of copyright works. Especially when I cannot find them almost anywhere else, like most of the works or Irvine. This volume will mark the thirteenth I have read by Irvine. This is the earlies volume I have found published by Irvine, and it was published under the name J. Pennington Irvine. I have not found any others published under that name. 

About the author on a site with information about Irish authors states:

“John Irvine was born in Belfast and published several collections of poems: A Voice in the Dark, 1932; Willow Leaves: Lyrics in the Manner of the Early Chinese Poets,1941; Lost Sanctuary and other poems among others. He edited The Flowering Branch: An Anthology of Irish Poetry Past and Present.”

Another online description of the author states:

“Irvine, born in Belfast, published about six collections of lyrics between 1932 and 1954, mostly from small presses in Belfast and Dublin.  He also edited an anthology of Irish poetry, The Flowering Branch.”

This volume begins with a quote from Irvine:

“He that seeks beauty will surely
find it, but he that is content
with the dross will never rise
above it.”

This book has a long acknowledgements section at the beginning, thanking authors, publishers, and speaking to 2 he could not confirm rights for after many attempts. 

The forward states:

“Within this little volume will be found a collection of seasonable poems which have been chosen not for their religious appeal more than their poetic beauty.. My great difficulty has been in selecting a sufficient number of the less widely known pieces appropriate to the season.

I have endeavoured to be as comprehensive as possible, including suitable poems from the earliest times until the present day.

The fruits of my gathering will be found in the following pages, and I trust that my readers will find them acceptable.”

The poems and contributors in this volume are:

Mary’s Song to Jesus - Padrir: Gregory
The Birds - Hilaire Belloc
New Year's Eve, 1913 - Gordon Bottomley
Old English Carol - Traditional
The Little Lord Jesus - Martin Luther
Christmas - E. Hilton Young
A Child of the Snows - G, K. Chesterton
The Holy Tide - Frederick Tennyson
Christmas Sonnet - J. Pennington Irvine
Children's Song of the Nativity - English Traditional
A Child's Carol - J. Pennington Irvine
The Crown of Roses - (Russian) Plechtcheev. Tr.G.D.
To A Snowflake - Francis Thompson 
Hoc Die Dominus Noster Nascitur - Padric Gregory
That Holy Thing - George MacDonald
Christmas Rede - Jane Barlow
The Lowly One - W. Earle
Silent Night - Joseph Mohr
Lines from "In Memoriam" - Lord Alfred Tennyson
The Oxen - Thomas Hardy
Hymn to the Nativity - Richard Crashaw
The Mistletoe Bough - Rev. T. G. Crippen
Fragment - Shakespeare
The House of Christmas - G. K. Chesterton
The Star of Bethlehem - Author Unknown
Noel: Christmas Eve, 1913 - Robert Bridges
The Lonely Child – Ruckert (From the German)

The 27 poems vary greatly in length. This is the second volume I have read that was edited by John Irvine. I have read 13 volumes that were written by Irvine, and believe that there are another 5 volumes edited by Irvine, including this earliest written or edited by him published under the name J. Pennington Irvine.

A few sample poems from this volume are:

     Christmas

     A boy was born at Bethlehem
          that knew the haunts of Galilee.
     He wandered on Mount Lebanon,
          and learned to love each forest tree.

     But I was born at Marlborough,
          and love the hom~ly faces there;
     and for all other men besides
          'tis little love I have to spare.

     I should not mind to die for them,
          my own dear downs, my comrades true.
     But that great heart of Bethlehem,
          He died for men He never knew.

     And yet, I think, at Golgotha,
          as Jesus' eyes were closed in death,
     they saw with love most passionate
          the village street at Nazareth.
               -E. Hilton Young.

Christmas Sonnet

They cast Thy mother forth into the night,
     Into the bitter night and frosty air:
Nor was there one took pity on her plight
     To bid her rest, in warmth, and shelter there.
They cast her forth, with tired and aching feet;
     And to that lowly stable place she fled,
.Yet uncomplaining, found it strangely sweet
     Upon the hay, to rest her weary head.
In this poor humble place Thou had'st Thy birth'.!
     Outcast and homeless in an ox's stall!
'Twas there Thine eyes beheld the light of earth;
     Rejected Thou by men, Oh ! Lord of all
Cast us not forth when we, with dying eyes,
     Behold Thee at the gates of Paradise.
          -J. Pennington Irvine.

          A Child's Carol

          In a rude and Jowly manger
               Sheltered from the frost and snow,
          Lay the Holy Infant Jesus
               On a morning long ago.

          Whilst around the humble dwelling
               Cold and wintry winds did sigh,
          Mary soothed the Babe so helpless,
               Sang a tender lullaby.

          Angel voices from the Heavens
               On that happy Christmas morn,
          Sang, and all the earth was joyful
               When the Saviour Christ was born.
                    -J. Pennington Irvine.

The Lowly One

Only a manger cold and bare, 
     When winter winds did blow;
Yet Christ the Lord was housed there
     Amid the winter snow.

No royal pomp did Him proclaim;
     But cradled in the hay,
Where only ox and ass had lain,
     The sleeping Infant lay.

No courtiers did his praises sing;
     But Seraphs from the skies
Poured forth their welcome to the King,
     With songs of Paradise.

He came the King of Kings to be;
     And Mary in the manger bore
A Child who reigns o'er earth and sea,
     Till time shall be no more.
-W. Earle.

     The Oxen

     Christmas Eve, and twelve of the clock,
          "Now they are all on their knees,"
     An elder said as we sat in a flock
          By the embers in hearthside ease.

     We pictured the meek:, mild creatures where
          They dwelt in their strawy pen,
     Nor did it occur to one of us there
          To doubt they were kneeling then.

     So fair a fancy few would weave
          In these years! Yet, I feel,
     If some one said on Christmas Eve,
          "Come ; see the oxen kneel."

     "In the lonely barton by yonder coomb
          Our childhood used to know,''
     I should go with him in the gloom,
          Hoping it might be so.
               -Thomas Hardy.

I hope those poems give you a feel for the collection of 27. This is an interesting collection. This volume ends with another quote from Irvine:

“L'Envoi.
Dying now the fir elight glow,
And flickering the candle's light ,
All things are fast asleep, and so,
Kind readers one and all-Goodnight.”

I did enjoy this volume. The National Library of Ireland provided a scanned copy as the book is out of print and out of copyright. It is interesting to see what poems Irvine collected, and having read much of his lately, a few could have been by his pen. I only recognize a few of the contributors. And as such was pleasantly surprised by many of the poems. We are not given bios of the contributors, nor even when the pieces were first published. I would have appreciated those details. It is a volume I know I will return to again, likely next Advent.

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

Books by John Irvine:

Thursday, 12 March 2026

My Road Goes Ever On Rise Again - A.K. Frailey

My Road Goes Ever On Rise Again 
A.K. Frailey
A. K. Frailey Books
ISBN 
9798999824165
eISBN 9798994325100
ASIN B0GHSFXT5T

My Road Goes Ever On Rise Again - A.K. Frailey

I have read a few of Ann’s adult fiction and non-fiction titles. I believe I have read her books a total of 14 times, and I have all the others on my ‘to be read’ pile, and have picked up all in eBook format. I absolutely love her stories and her non-fiction. This falls in that category and is the third in the “My Road Goes Ever On” series.

The description of this volume states:

“The internet may be the first word in information gathering, but can it save one soul from despair or the human race from self-destruction?

Science offers insight into who we are, what we are made of, but it is through personal reflections that we can consider our extraordinary ability to live as both physical and spiritual beings.

Embrace the beauty in life and love generously with unwavering hope and faith.

Believe in renewal—undaunted and unafraid.

No matter the trials of our times, we will rise again.”

About the author we are informed:

“A. K. Frailey has written the historical sci-fi OldEarth Encounter series, a contemporary first contact novel, Last of Her Kind, the Newearth sci-fi series, an OldTown series, short story collections, a modern parent’s reflection on J. R. R. Tolkien’s works in The Road Goes Ever On: A Christian Journey Through The Lord of the Rings, personal and introspective My Road books, children’s books, and a poetry collection. 
 
She taught elementary education in Milwaukee, WI; Chicago, IL; Los Angeles, CA; and Wood River, IL.
 
She also trained teachers in the Philippines for the Peace Corps and later earned a Master of Fine Arts Degree in Creative Writing for Entertainment from Full Sail University.
 
Ann homeschooled all her children and currently manages her rural homestead with her family and their numerous critters. In her spare time, she serves as an election judge and secretary/treasurer of her small town’s cemetery.”

This volume is a collection of articles, reflections, pensées that were originally published between 2022/2/18 and 2025/12/12. The specific pieces in the collection are:

The Best Rise Again
A Storm Is Brewing
This Year’s Life
Soul Glories
While Human Hearts Beat
Fruit Will Follow
Real Understanding
Miracles in Life
Life Net
Amazing Achievements of Humankind
Family Memories
This Momentous Event
Homeschooling As I See It Now
Trust in a Dishonest World
Life’s Rules of the Road
Multitasking Disorder
Revitalization
Loveable Libraries & Bookstores
Psychological Safety
Real Life Matters
Puppies, Gardens, and Books
Autumn! My Favorite Season
We Live in a Mad World
In Light of Faith
AI and Our Creative Nature
Natural Order
Clickbait Is Not Wholesome
The Future of Education
Not the Same Test
Good Books
Natural Good and Evil
Literary Genres
Why I Gave Up TV
And My Life Changed for the Better
Can’t Own a Cat and Other Life Lessons

I highlighted several passages while working through this volume, some of them are:

“Imagine my surprise when I realized that it was the fiction novel that helped me unscramble the confusing tangle that I was feeling about the other two books. Since each person has free will and can rise or fall, become isolated or connected, what does that say about the human race as a whole?”

“Despite over a thousand pages of storyline, the whole plot comes down to—what do the characters believe? What are they willing to—not die for but—live for? Faith in something beyond themselves is ultimately the maker or breaker of the whole story. Some characters grow into heroes while others descend into the abyss as villains. The hope for the whole is based on the best always rising again.”

“But I can get out of the frozen snow, enjoy the beauty of crystalline trees on a winter day, and trust—with hope-filled faith—that spring will rise again.”

“In order to face the day, I need a bit of a pep talk. Since I am a lousy cheerleader, I look to those who have inspired humanity from ages past. Each morning, after my personal prayer time, I read a passage from Scripture, classic fiction, or poetry. I have come across some wonderful gems—imagery that takes me to another world, mentally and emotionally.”

“Beautiful days do not last. Storms inevitably roll in. My neighbor passed away today. More friends and family will pass in the days to come. It will be my turn to move on at some point. But the lesson of singing birds, wild storms, and changing seasons, is that we have the grace of living now.”

“In the acceptance of the present moment, I discovered an enlargement of my spirit. The daily bread of God’s grace is most manifest when I lift my soul to Him.”

“There was a lot I didn’t accomplish. I didn’t complete a writing project, post my work online, chat with a friend, take a long walk, or connect with the carpenter. But the day was complete and fruitful—even if in only tiny ways—nonetheless.”

“World news troubles me with haunting specters of war, violence, hunger, and a future not of everlasting prosperity, but rather, of desperate grief. It seems that the clutter of human evil continues to mar the orderly beauty of our better nature.”

“So where do I find solutions to the troubles of this world? How do I make anything better? Where are hope and happiness found? Right in front of me, beside me, behind me, above and below me.”

“There are so many ways to live fully and generously: Give money to local and world charity organizations. Check in regularly with an elderly friend. Ask a son or daughter how they are doing and really listen without “fixing” but allow him or her to share issues and possible solutions. Offer honest insight to a friend with humility—knowing that each person must own their choices and the consequences of their actions.”

“Wherever anger lunges its spikes, forgive and move on. When mistakes are made, say sorry and make amends. Being sorry is not humiliating. It’s healing. True contrition builds up—it never tears down. It is one of the deepest acts of love.”

“We are born to die. Suffering and evil are part of life, but the story does not end there. The Old Testament wasn’t the last word. Christ lived, died, and rose—our old humanity gives way to new possibilities. God did not give us Heaven on Earth. He gives us a choice. Every day. In unlimited ways.”

“No matter the message, a bit of humor and lots of gratitude go a long way toward real understanding.”

“No, my miracles are more mundane but no less powerful in the great scheme of things.”

“To refuse a miracle is to refuse happiness. For in this world, it is the hope to see, the faith to believe, and our ability to love, which are the greatest miracles of all.”

“Life is an amazingly unpredictable, unfolding event. Despite my attachment to the internet, I am grateful that there are times when I'm forced to disconnect. For there is a life net just waiting for me—if I stand on the creek bank and appreciate what is revealed.”

“How often do mental images pull me through seasons, relationships, and life itself, only to dissolve in the face of reality? And can reality, lived in the present, be more fulfilling than what I imagined?”

“When my mom passed away after years of dementia, I cried. Not because I had only good memories of her, but because despite the passion of her chosen hate as well as her passionate love, I wished her well on her journey, wherever she was going. When my brother passed after an overdose, I suffered the loss of a life that I could never reach. A troubled soul who, it seemed to me, never knew happiness. When another brother passed unexpectedly of liver failure, I wanted to understand, but too many questions could not be answered, and I was left with poignant grief. When my father died, after a long life and much professional success, I had too many terrible stories and painful memories crowding my mind to celebrate his life.”

“Perhaps, I wonder, if we humans spent as much time living in the present as we do in the past and the future, we would be able to experience the outstanding joy of spring.”

“Personally, I raced through Lent at high speed. Holy Week arrived, and I had to come to a skidding halt. I was surprised at how hard that was. Kind of like running into a brick wall, without the black eye. It felt so unnatural to sit in a quiet church or in my room and simply be. Listen. Pray slow prayers. Allow the presence of a greater Presence to infiltrate my conscious mind. My soul.”

“Coming from a dysfunctional family in a dysfunctional society, I see why many people turn to technology to find support and “the truth” needed to navigate through life—a life raft of reason in a world of unreason.”

“Being a writer in today’s world is much the same as being an artist in any era. I can think of no more vulnerable way to expose the human experience than through writing and poetry.”

“Despite the vagaries of daily weather, I trust in the logic of seasons. Despite personal aspirations, I know I am growing older and must face predictable aches and pains, hopefully with humor rather than rage. There are rules to my life’s road, and I know why they are there—to keep me and others safe while I travel to my destination. Education is more than facts and book learning, though the facts and books do matter and should not be ignored. What I do with what I learn spells the difference between a piece of paper and a meaningful life.”

“What the natural world has to teach reminds me that not all learning happens in school, and life has rules for a reason.”

“Multitasking Disorder is hardly a professional diagnosis but rather a personal observation that when doing too much, I miss the wonders of life.”

“As impersonal AI and online services invade our world ever more deeply, I pray to God that we don’t forget the value of dedicated librarians and passionate bookstore owners.”

“I know with certainty that every truly mystical, magical land has at least one library and probably more than a few bookstores. Even in Lothlorien. And Tolkien—like me—loves them.”

“The value of fiction is not in the distraction from reality but rather as it enhances our perception of reality. If real life doesn't matter, then fiction merely delays inevitable doom.”

“My personal desires must allow for forces beyond my control, which is a lesson in humility. One that I'd benefit from learning.”

“I may tend to plants, but I cannot make them thrive. In that mystery of growth, leading to healthy fruit, I find a wealth of peace, trusting God's abundant vitality.”

“What haunts the human race is not a case of inherited mental illness, though that may factor in; it’s a spirit-killing grief that chains the strong and saintly as well as the weak and cruel into dark dungeons. Mad fury, justified anger perhaps, insists that things are not as they should be, therefore, life as we know it deserves to be destroyed. If I lived by that rule, I’d be dead already.”

“I had to accept the obvious—Life here on Earth is not as it ought to be. In time, I could heal from trauma and move on.”

“A guardian accepts the frailties, imperfections, and limitations of others without being unduly disturbed. Guardians with a will to serve don’t live in a fantasy world.” 

I hope those quotes give you a feel for this excellent volume. Frailey writes in a very engaging manner. I read these reflections over a number of days. A few of them I had to stop and think about and more than few I went back and reread it a second time, some even a third. In many ways this volume reminded me a lot of Madeleine L’Engle’s non-fiction, specifically: Madeleine L'Engle Herself: Reflections on a Writing Life or like a mash up of her Crosswick Journals and the Genesis Trilogy. Like L’Engle Frailey has written across genres, and she writes about that a bit in this volume. The both wrote fiction, science fiction, poetry, nonfiction and theology. And both are amazing authors. I had the chance to meet L’Engle in person twice, both times at conference, and to be honest reading this was like sitting down with her one on one or hearing her talks live. I have yet to meet Frailey, but maybe someday. There are other authors I have compared to L’Engle’s works for specific genres but Frailey does so across the lot of them.

This volume has reflections on numerous topics, but the themes woven throughout it are family, faith, friendship, and finding our place in the world. It is an excellent read. A volume I can easily recommend. Enjoy it over a few evenings on cold winter nights with a big mug or tea or on the beach in the summer with something cold to drink. But no matter how, I encourage you to give it a try. 


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


Books by A.K. Frailey:

Old Earth Series:
OldEarth ARAM Encounter
OldEarth Ishtar Encounter
OldEarth Neb Encounter
OldEarth Georgios Encounter
OldEarth Melchior Encounter

New Earth Series:
NewEarth: Justine Awakens
NewEarth A Hero's Crime

Oldtown Series:
Brothers Born

Non-Fiction:
My Road Goes Ever On A Timeless Journey

Note: Old series that got reworked into other series:

Deliverance Series:
ARAM
Ishtar's Redemption: Trial by Fire
NEB the Great: Shadows of the Past

Hidden Heritage Series:
Georgios
Georgios II - A Chosen People





Wednesday, 11 March 2026

The Ultimate Blindside - Leslea Wahl - Blindside Series Book 3

Ultimate Blindside
Leslea Wahl
ISBN 9798994665503
eISBN 9798994665503
ASIN B0GLGM5VQ7

The Ultimate Blindside - Leslea Wahl - Blindside Series Book 3

This book marks the fourteenth time I have read a book by Leslea Wahl, and that does not count her contributions to anthologies or the collaborative stories she has written with other Catholic Teen Books Authors. It took a long time for this third story in this series to be available. But it was well worth the wait! The description of this volume is:

“Jake’s silver-medal life is movie-worthy.

Sophie’s role is about to be sabotaged.

Their sleepy Colorado town is overrun by a Hollywood film crew as the two teens, now high school seniors, find their private lives laid open for the world to see. 

Meanwhile, a mysterious woman and her daughter seek the couple’s help running from a powerful, dangerous man. In this tale of twists, whom can Sophie and Jake truly trust?”

The Perfect Blindside, was the first book I read by Wahl and after reading it I picked up all the others that were then available. And I eagerly awaited this novel that continues the story. This book, series, and everything from Wahl is a good clean Christian young adult novel. But the story is so well written that even older readers should really enjoy it. It is part mystery and part romance. But the romance much less in this volume, and the two have grown in their relationship. This story reminds me a lot of Madeleine L’Engle’s Chronos books. 

As such the story revolves around mysterious events happening in Colorado during the filming of events from the previous volume to turn those into a movie Both the main characters have a lot on their plate, with growing fame, finishing highschool, preparing for university. And The mysteries they just seem to find themselves wrapped up in.

Both Jake and Sophie are facing things from their past. But also dealing with a lot in the present. During the first day of shooting a car goes into water and Jake jumps in to save a mother and young child. Because the cameras were rolling and media was onsite it made a big splash in the news. But the mother ants to hid and is fearful of even the police. They also discover someone is tampering with Sophie’s electronic communications, and Jake feels like he is being followed. Sometimes the best intentions so sideways, sometimes even in epic fashion. To find out read this excellent story. 

Both Jake and Sophie have grown a lot over the course of this trilogy and the other stories they appear in. But in this one they face their biggest challenges yet. And they truly do face an Ultimate Blindside. 

The story moves at a great pace. One of the greatest strengths is the characters. Wahl writes amazing characters. She also does excellent part in the book is the representation of internal struggles, of Jake and Sophie as they try and live out their faith, and as they are growing into adults. Jake and Sophie are excellent role models and examples. And I hope that we get another story with them.

This is the type of stories I encourage my own teens and young adult children to read. It is clean, but shows real struggles and trials. This book was a great read. I could hardly put it down. The discussion guide at the end is great for families or youth groups to work through together. It is an excellent read. I can easily recommend it. 

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2020 Catholic Reading Plan

Books by Leslea Wahl:
To Serve and Protect

Finding Faith Series:
Into the Spotlight
Charting the Course
An Unexpected Role – Republished as Into The Spotlight

Blind Side Series:

All For One:
Unlikely Witness (Original Edition)

Contributed to:



The Ultimate Blindside - Leslea Wahl - Blindside Series Book 3


Tuesday, 10 March 2026

We Are Beloved 30 Days with Thea Bowman - Karianna Frey - Great Spiritual Teachers

We Are Beloved 
30 Days with Thea Bowman
Great Spiritual Teachers
ISBN 9781646800995
eISBN 9781646801008
ASIN B09CG8X6ZC

We Are Beloved 30 Days with Thea Bowman - Karianna Frey - Great Spiritual Teachers

This is the Fifteenth volume in the Great Spiritual Teachers series I have read, and the last that is currently available in an eBook edition. It is one of the newer titles in the series, it was originally released in 2021, and was part of the most recent and I believe third rebranding of the series. Two Years ago I read my first book in the series, it was Born to Do This: 30 Days with Joan of Arc by Jaymie Stuart Wolfe, and loved it and the concept of the series. I have read one almost every month since that first one, and if I can track down all the out of print, will do so until I finish all 24 released to date in the series.

The description of this volume states:

“We Are Beloved offers you a personal, thirty-day retreat based on the prophetic words of Servant of God Sr. Thea Bowman, a renowned Black Catholic evangelizer, teacher, writer, and singer. Requiring only a few minutes each day, We Are Beloved allows you to reflect deeply on your fundamental need for belonging, the healing community offered by the Church, and the challenge to welcome all people in the Body of Christ.

We Are Beloved offers selections from four decades of Bowman's writings, reflections, presentations, and interviews. Bowman has gained attention in the last several years: her cause for canonization was endorsed in 2018 and the 2020 national reckoning with racism highlighted her as one of the prophetic voices in the Church that have been marginalized.

When she joined the Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration in 1952, Bowman was the first Black sister in the community. Throughout her ministry, she highlighted the need to make Black Americans feel more welcome in Catholic Church. In her powerful testimonies that included gospel singing, preaching, and storytelling, she honored the richness of diverse communities and encouraged people of all races to find joy in unity.”

About the series we are informed:

“Each book in the Great Spiritual Teachers series provides a month of daily readings from one of Christianity's most beloved spiritual guides. For each day there is a brief and accessible morning meditation drawn from the mystic's writings, a simple mantra for use throughout the day, and a night prayer to focus one's thoughts as the day ends. These easy-to-use books are the perfect prayer companion for busy people who want to root their spiritual practice in the solid ground of these great spiritual teachers.”

I believe there are 17 volumes in this series currently in print, but only 15 of those have digital editions. There are also a number that are currently out of print, The oldest I have seen are from the mid 90’s and it looks like they went through a rebranding and format change in the mid 00’s, and they have undergone yet another rebranding in the 2020’s including some new titles available in the series, including this specific title. I must admit I do not recall running across this series prior to that first volume on Joan. I have however added all of them to my ‘to be read list’. I love the most recent rebranding, and hope Ave Maria completes the rebranding across all volumes, and brings back into print some of the volumes currently not available; specifically the volumes on John of the Cross, Evelyn Underhill, Mother Theresa and others. This specific volume was released in 2021, making it one of the oldest in the series. 

The sections in this volume are:

Timeline
Who is Thea Bowman?
How To Use This Book
Thirty Days With Thea Bowman
One Final Word

While reading this I several a few passages, some of them are:

“The books in the Great Spiritual Teacher series provide an introduction to the spiritual insights and wisdom of some of history’s most extraordinary saints. Through these pages, you’re invited to a place beyond mere reading, into an experience of daily prayer and meditation. You’ll be accompanied by a spiritual teacher whose wisdom will awaken, enrich, and empower your walk with the Lord.”

“We’ve chosen to follow the suggestion of the classic book on spirituality The Cloud of Unknowing, which describes a three-part movement of reading, reflecting, and praying: “These three are so linked together that there can be no profitable reflection without first reading or hearing. Nor will beginners or even the spiritually adept come to true prayer without first taking time to reflect on what they have heard or read.””

“I did not realize that the songs would bring to me and to those I love comfort in sorrow, solace in grief, refuge in time of trouble, relief even from physical pain—always strength and hope, peace and joy.”

“If we are to serve, if we are to care, if we are to minister, we have to get right inside. And so, let us pray: Spirit, touch me. Touch me with your grace, Touch me with your wisdom. Touch me with your love so that I can help somebody, so that I can serve somebody, so that I can bless somebody.”

“If I can help somebody as I pass along, then my living will not be in vain. Let us meditate on those words and carry them in our hearts and carry them into our homes, into our neighborhoods, and teach them to our children.”

“Help me to move outside of myself, to love more like you loved, to serve more like you served, and to be willing to lay my life down for another as you laid down your life for me.”

“We’re called to walk together in a new way toward that land of promise and to celebrate who we are and whose we are.”

“You have a gift. You have a talent. Find your gift, find your talent and use it. You can make this world better just by letting your light shine and doing your part. You can help somebody just by caring about somebody, just by loving somebody. And then when you get through show them how much you love them, sometimes folks need to hear it, so make sure you tell them, I love you, I love you, I love you. I really, really, really, really love you!”

“Help me to always remember that I have gifts to share because I am your creation, created me out of love to share love, and my gifts come directly from God.”

“Lord, show me my true self.”

“Lord, you know the truth of self that I would prefer no one else know or see. You know how I hide my sinfulness and the messy parts to fit in with the ideal image that I have created in my head.”

“Children, Mothers, Fathers, Sisters, Brothers, go! There is a song that will never be sung unless you sing it. There is a story that will never be told unless you tell it. There is a joy that will never be shared unless you bear it. Go tell the world. Go preach the Gospel. Go teach the Good News. God is. God is love. God is with us. God is in our lives.”

“With the little time you have, you have to live it well; you have to live the best you can.”

“The Church is calling us to be participatory and to be involved. The Church is calling us to feed and to clothe and to shelter and to teach.”

“The Word of God became Incarnate. We are called to preach that word day by day by day—in our homes, in our families, in our neighborhood—to bear witness, to testify, to shout it from the rooftops, with our lives.”

“Spirituality is at once God-awareness, self-awareness, and other-awareness.”

“Make me into a dwelling place for you and help me to see that all bodies are good bodies. Able bodies, differently-abled bodies, thin bodies, fat bodies, tall bodies, small bodies, unborn bodies, light bodies, dark bodies, no matter the type of body, they are all temples of God.”

“We’re all called to preach, to shout the Good News by our lives. Never too young, never too old to share life, faith, and love . . . so long as we have breath and being, we are called to be life-givers and live-nourishers and life-sustainers.”

“Like the blind man may I see the goodness of your creation, and give you praise.”

Each day follows the same format with three main sections:

MY DAY BEGINS: “As the day begins set aside a quiet moment in a quiet place to do the reading provided for the day

The passages are short; they never run more than a couple of hundred words. They have been carefully selected, though, to give a spiritual focus, a spiritual center to your whole day. They are designed to remind you, as another day begins, of your own existence at a spiritual level. They are meant to put you in the presence of the spiritual master who is your companion and teacher on this journey. This is especially true of this journey with Catherine of Siena. The readings are her report of God’s words to her, God’s side of the dialogue. And since the purpose of the passage is to remind you that at every moment during you are in the presence of a God who invites you continually, but quietly, to live in and through him, what better source than the words of God himself?”

ALL THROUGH YOUR DAY: “Immediately following the day’s reading you will find a single sentence, a meditation in the form of a mantra, a phrase meant as a companion for your spirit as it moves through a busy day. Write it down on a 3" x 5" card or on the appropriate page of your daybook. Look at it as often as you can. Repeat it quietly to yourself, and go on your way.
It is not meant to stop you in your tracks or to distract you from responsibilities but simply, gently, to remind you of the presence of God and your desire to respond to this presence.”

MY DAY IS ENDING: “This is a time for letting go of the day, for entering a world of imaginative prayer … This exercise is not meant to last more than a few minutes. End it when you are comfortable doing so. It has two parts. The first, in keeping with Catherine’s model, is a personal response to the words spoken by God in the day’s reading. Just as God has spoken to you, so you speak to God. Second, you are invited to turn to the familiarity of a prayer based on Catherine’s own words. It is an act of trust and confidence, an entryway into peaceful sleep, a simple evening prayer that gathers together the spiritual character of the day that is now ending as it began—in the presence of God.

It is a time for summary and closure.”

A sample day is:

DAY 13
 My Day Begins 

Our history includes the services of a Simon of Cyrene, the search of that Ethiopian eunuch; the contributions of Black Egypt in art, mathematics, monasticism, and politics; the art and architecture of Zimbabwe; the scholarship of Timbuktu; the dignity and serenity of textile, gold work, and religion in Ghana; the pervasive spirituality and vitality of Nigeria; the political and social systems of Zaire. Our history includes enslavements, oppression, and exploitation.

Our history is power. We can learn from it. We don’t need to make all the mistakes ourselves. If we remember the misery of slavery, the struggles for freedom and Civil Rights, the joys of the past, if we remember how far we have come, our memory is power.

When we know ourselves, we bring the gift of our history and our culture to one another, to the Church, and to the world.

All Through The Day

Father, may I never forget our history.

My Day Is Ending

Dearest Jesus, we live in a time when we would rather forget the pains of the past, or pretend that the events of the past never happened.

It is uncomfortable to remember when Black Americans were enslaved for the benefit and comfort of their white landowners.

We refuse to see the human trafficking happening before our eyes, fueled by our desire for sinful acts.

It is shameful to remember how immigrants were forced to, and currently, live in squalor and work for low wages and no job security.

Just as it is painful to acknowledge the holocaust of Jewish families by Nazi Germany, it is also difficult to acknowledge the actions of Catholics during the Spanish Inquisition.

It makes us uneasy to think about the negative effects that the Spanish mission system and native land loss had on Indigenous Americans,
all in the name of sharing the Gospel.

May I always remember the past, not to be caught up in it, but to learn from it.
Grant me the grace to see the memories of the past not as something to be covered up, ashamed of, or canceled, but as memories of the power that comes from you, allowing me to overcome the challenges that loom before me now. Amen.”

I hope those quotes and the sample days give you a feel for this excellent volume. I did not know much about Thea Bowman, other than the name, before picking up this volume. I could not have told you who she was or anything about Her. I picked this one up as it was the available as an eBook, and I am very thankful I did. It was really inspiring and encouraging to read this volume. It draws heavily from Thea’s own writings in includes 53 excerpts across the 30 days, or others writing about her. It is a story of collective history, and community. About finding a place and belonging. It reminds us of traditions and what was learned from those who went before, but also giving a hope for the here and now.

The final section of the book One Final Word states:

“This book was created to be nothing more than a gateway—a gateway to the spiritual wisdom of a specific teacher and a gateway opening on your own spiritual way.

You may decide that Thea Bowman is someone whose experience of God is one that you wish to follow more closely and deeply, in which case you should get a copy of one of the books quoted in this text and pray it as you have prayed this gateway journey.

You may decide that this experience has heightened your hunger for additional spiritual teachers, and you will encounter many on your own, very special, absolutely unique journey of the spirit. You will discover your path. We would not be searching, as St. Augustine reminds us, if we had not already been found.”

It is sage advice. Though to be honest I have benefited from every volume I have read and I have completed more than half of the series. I have now read 15 volumes in this series, and currently working on a sixteenth I can state this is another great offering in the series, one that surprised me in many ways. I find that some speak to me more than others. With one I did not highlight as much as in previous volumes, or even extensive highlights. I still greatly enjoyed it. I can state I benefited from the month with each person being profiled. And if I went back and did a volume again at a different point or season in life I might interact with it differently. I already plan to circle back to both this volume and the volume on Joan and reread them once I have completed the series, or at least those I can track down.

This was one of the volumes I connected with. This is a great read, it is one I really enjoyed reading. I can easily recommend this volume and the series as a whole, and I look forward to reading others in the series. If you have not given any in this series a try this would be an excellent starting point or whichever one seems to call to you.

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

Great Spiritual Teachers Series from Ave Maria Press

Books in the Great Spiritual Teachers Series:
Abide in love: the Gospel spirituality of John the Evangelist – John Kirvan 
Fear Not the Night - John of the Cross and John Kirvan 
God Awaits You Based on the Classic Spirituality of Meister - Richard Chilson 
Grace Through Simplicity - Evelyn Underhill and John Kirvan 
Living in the Presence of God - Brother Lawrence and John Kirvan 
Love Without Measure - Mother Teresa and John Kirvan 
That you may have life: let the mystics be your guide for Lent - John Kirvan 
Where Only Love Can Go - The Cloud of Unknowing and John Kirvan