Sunday, 22 February 2026

A Prayer of the Day Blood and Water

Blood and Water Prayer
Prayer of the Day


O Blood and Water, 
which gushed forth from the heart of Jesus 
as a Fount of Mercy for us, 
I trust in you.
Amen.
  
Note: Every so often I post a prayer I use as part of my daily prayers. I started praying this one in 2025, it was shared on social media. It is one of the shortest set prayers I try and pray daily.


Saturday, 21 February 2026

Benedict and the Rule - Katie Warner and Leah Ballard

Benedict & the Rule
Katie Warner
Leah Ballard (Illustrator) 
TAN Books
ISBN 
9781505135275
eISBN 9781505137149
eISBN 9781505137132
ASIN 

Benedict and the Rule - Katie Warner and Leah Ballard

This is the eighth volume I have read by Katie Warner, my youngest and I love her books even though they are well below her reading level. And to be honest at some point I will have grandkids to share them with, hopefully.  A number of years ago we read Cloud of Witnesses: A Child's First Book of Saints and loved it. A few years ago we read, Lily Lolek, Future Saint, and really enjoyed it. I really enjoyed this book. I have read a fair bit about Saint Benedict over the years, and a few translations of his Rule. But this little volume is excellent for introducing both to little children. The description of this volume is:

“Uncover the life and remarkable legacy of one of history’s most well-known and loved saints. Benedict & the Rule is a gorgeously illustrated look at Saint Benedict’s miracles and impact, and at his famous “little rule for beginners” (known today as the Rule of Saint Benedict), adhered to by monasteries and convents throughout the world and surprisingly impactful for children and families today. What if you could have your own little Rule of Life, inspired by Saint Benedict? This book will guide young readers in that beautiful spiritual exercise, inspiring children and adults alike to adopt St. Benedict as a spiritual father unlike any other. Benedict & the Rule will especially be enjoyed by children ages 3 and Up.”

Katie in the author’s note states:

“There have been other books which have beautifully treated the life of Saint Benedict, including his many miracles, only a few of which are mentioned in this text. With this project, I wanted to weave his Rule into the context of his life, because the two were indeed inextricably connected.”

And later:

“Saint Benedict’s Rule is not only useful for those in religious life. Its foundational principles are meant to inspire our own spiritual lives, and should encourage us in the pursuit of our own rule of life, a powerful way to personalize and concretize our spiritual progress.”

And also:

“A rule helps us to carry out our true mission. Like Benedict, we were not made for comfort, but for the work of God.”

There is a section at the end on how to make your won rule and a url to some resources to help. There is no about the author section in the book or on the back, but on the Tan site we are informed:  

“Katie Warner is a Catholic homeschooling mom who loves to make and share creative resources to raise faith-filled families. Katie is the author and editor of the FirstFaithTreasury.com series, Catholic picture books, Head & Heart: Becoming Spiritual Leaders for Your Family, and a popular prayer journal series including A Parent Who Prays. She holds a graduate degree in Catholic Theology from the Augustine Institute, where she met Meg and fell in love with Meg's art. In her spare time, Katie writes for the National Catholic Register, manages KatieWarner.com, and helps others home to the Church through Catholics Come Home. Katie lives in Georgia with her husband and fellow book-loving children.”

There is no information about the illustrator, either in the volume or on the TAN Site. That being said the illustrations are bright and vibrant, with rich tones and excellent imagery that capture the life of Benedict. This little volume is written for young readers as a picture book. But it is also a tool that can be used to help them develop patterns and habits that can help carry them through life. But even in my mid 50’s I greatly enjoyed the volume and learned from it.

This is an excellent book that would be a blessing in any home, school, or church library. It is a wonderful book we can easily recommend.

Benedict and the Rule - Katie Warner and Leah Ballard - Sample 1

Benedict and the Rule - Katie Warner and Leah Ballard - Sample 2

Benedict and the Rule - Katie Warner and Leah Ballard - Sample 3

Benedict and the Rule - Katie Warner and Leah Ballard - Sample 4

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

Books by Katie Warner:
Head & Heart: Becoming Spiritual Leaders for Your Family
Gaze Upon Jesus: Experiencing Christ's Childhood through the Eyes of Women
A Grandparent Who Prays: A Journal to Guide You in Praying for Your Grandchildren
A Parent Who Prays: A Journal to Guide You in Praying for Your Children

A Sponsor Who Prays: A Journal to Guide You in Praying for Your Confirmand
A Godparent Who Prays: A Journal to Guide You in Praying for Your Godchild
Illustrated Classic Christmas Carols


For Children:
I Went to Mass: What did I See?
Cloud of Witnesses: A Child's First Book of Saints

Lily Lolek, Future Saint
Let Us Pray: A Child's First Book of Prayers 
The Word of the Lord: A Child's First Scripture Verses 
Kiddie Cat: A Child's First Catechism Lesson 
Father Ben Gets Ready for Mass 
This is the Church







Friday, 20 February 2026

A Serpent's Pursuit - M.P. McBride

A Serpent's Pursuit
M. P. McBride
ISBN 9781987970623
ASIN B0FXH9BGH3

A Serpent's Pursuit - M.P. McBride

This is the debut novel from M.P. ‘Michael’ McBride. I have read numerous volumes from Full Quiver Publishing over the year, I have loved most and liked the others. So I was more than willing to give it a try. It did not disappoint. 

The description of this volume states:

“George Abiola, a Nigerian boy, is nicknamed Blos (blessed little old soul) due to his wise, positive, Christian approach to life. His chosen life's path brings unwanted attention from a dangerous antagonist, an evil presence who mysteriously appears throughout George's life.

At a young age, he joins his grandmother in America, setting him on a trajectory destined for both humble service... and fame. After George has unwillingly gained international notoriety, the manifestation of his antagonist is further motivated to destroy the innocent target of its hate.

George must gain the courage to confront evil face to face. Who will prevail?”

About the author we are informed:

“M. P. McBride was raised in the small Southern California desert town of Blythe, California. After receiving his Bachelor of Science degree in Marketing at Cal Poly University, he attended the same institution as a graduate student, earning his teaching credential. After teaching elementary school for three years, he joined the California Department of Fish and Game as a game warden. Thirty years later, he retired as a Law Enforcement Division deputy chief. Mike was also a member of the Arizona Army National Guard and then the United States Army Reserve before being honorably discharged at the rank of major.

He is married to Marian, his wife of forty-three years, and they have two sons, a daughter-in-law, and three granddaughters.

This is his first novel.”

Chapters in this volume are:

Terror
A Boy Called Blos
Terror
Followed To America
Blessings
Growing Up
Terror
Meeting Death
Walter
Leaving A Mark
Terror
New Challenges
Terror
Path To Vocation
Terror
First Assignment
Terror
Mission Adventure
Terror
Mission Accomplished
Terror
Orphan Of War
Santos And Saw
Unwelcome Fame
Back To America
The Confrontation
See Of Color
Life’s Path

This is a story that follows a youth, George Abiola, from a young age until his death much later. His nickname is BLOS, blessed, little, old soul. Throughout this life he has encounters with a serpent and a strange man with the reddest of hair. The story spans many decades, and follows George from losing his parents, going to the United States to be raised by his grandmother, schooling, study, ministry, ordination, and rising through the ranks in the church.  

It follows him as he struggles to find his place in the world. As her learns to love, to give and to serve; and ultimately to follow the Holy Spirit’s leadings and guidance.  It is filled with wonderful characters, great adventures, and challenges both without and from within. 

As a debut novel it is impressive. It is a story of family, friendships, hope and learning to live for God. It is well written. I would not hesitate to pick up the next offering from McBrien’s pen. I can easily recommend this story. 

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

Thursday, 19 February 2026

Fountain Of Hellas Poems From The Greek Anthology - John Irvine

Fountain Of Hellas: 
Poems From The Greek Anthology Attempted in English Verse
John Irvine (1903-1965)
Leslie Owen Bacter (Illustrator)
Derrick MacCord 
Belfast
1943

Fountain Of Hellas Poems From The Greek Anthology - John Irvine

When I first encountered the title of this volume I assumed it was an anthology edited by Irvine. It was only after I received a copy from the National Library of Ireland that I realized it was a collection of poems written in the Greek style. Therefor it is much like Willow Leaves: Lyrics in the Manner of the Early Chinese Poets, where John wrote a collection in a specific style. 

This volume will mark the twelfth I have read by Irvine. I stumbled upon this author. I was reading one of the Vision Books for young readers, specifically 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. 

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 book begins with a dedication which states:

"TO RICHARD ROWLEY who found Helicon in the goodly lands of Mourne : With affectionate regard, and enduring friendship I inscribe these verses.”

There is also an acknowledgements that states:

“I wish to thank sincerely the following whose scholarly advice and guidance has been of the greatest value to me in the creation of this little book: Sir Richard Livingstone, Mr. Seumas O'Sullivan , Professor T. A. Sinclair, Mr. 0. E. Rudnitsky, and Mr. Dermot O'Neill. My thanks are also due to Mr. L. 0. Baxter for the illustrations, and to the editor of "The Irish Times," for permission to reprint "A Dead Child" which first appeared in the columns of that paper.”

The preface states states:

“It is with true humility that I publish these verses. To my sorrow I have no Greek, but have ever been imbued with admiration for that noble and heroic people, and their imperishable literature. Many poets with scholarship equal to the task have given us translations from the classic language, and often things of exquisite beauty . . . Be mine then a small voice without the portals. One who makes a humble attempt to render into English verse a few jewels from the treasury of Hellenic song.”

The preface was written in 1943 in the spring. The poems in this volume are:

The Garland
The Poet's Ascent
A Millionaire
CONTENTS
On An Inn at Cibyra
The Simple Life
Enduring Wealth
The Beautiful Aster
The End of Beauty
Heliodora's Wreath
A Bower
Plato The Harpist
A Dead Child
A Dead Wife
Love the Brigand
An Illiterate
The Unfairness of Wine
A Gourmand
A Bumper
On a Dead Slave
A Dead Virgin
A Dead Christian
Erinna
Anacreon
A Dead Herdsman
A Poet
To A Virgin
Astronomy
On Gossip
The Pastoral Pipe
Heraclitus

I enjoyed this twelfth volume of poems that I have read from the pen of Irvine. The one bio above mentions 6 collections of poems but I have found a total of 17, including some special editions  listed below, and also 6 volumes Irvine edited of other poems including the earliest published as J. Pennington Irvine. A few sample poems from this volume are:

        THE POET'S ASCENT
        (after Honestus)

        Thy limbs were wearied in the great ascent;
        Low waned the moon in many a sleepless dawn;
        But nectar from the springs of Pegasus
        Sustained thee on the slopes of Helicon.

        Poets have many a broken road to climb,
        But if at last thy footsteps reach the crest
        Drink of the chalice proffered by the gods 
        And feel immortal lips on cheek and breast.

ENDURING WEALTH
(after Crates of Thebes)

True wealth is culture: it shall perish not.
Age gives to age the flower of its thought,
The learning that I had I still retain
And that nobility the Muses taught.
     But all my rich possessions, where are they?
     Lost with the vanities of yesterday.

     THE END OF BEAUTY
     (after Strata)

     If thou be boastful of thy beauty,
          Remember that the rose is fair:
     But all too soon the ruined petals
          Are scattered in the morning air.

     So seasons change and summer passes
          And youth has but a little hour,
     For time the envious claims his tribute
          And beauty passes like a flower.

A DEAD CHILD
(after Zonas of Sardis)

Shadowy Charon, pitiful of woe
     On thy dark barge that bears the veiled dead
When o'er the dark and reedy lakes you row,
     Look kindly on the child's bewildered head.

When as thou sailest through the starless night
     Ploughing the lonely water, still and deep,
With gentleness 0 comfort him I pray-
     The infant son of Cinyras, if he weep.

And when at last you reach the silent land
     And from the dearth of water lift thine oar,
In mercy stretch a hand to him and see
     His little feet safe on the sandy shore.

I hope those four poems give you a feel for the collection. In many ways it feels very different his other works. The poems vary from one stanza to a few; all poems are contained on single page, with an image on the facing page. The artwork is in a Greek style but appear to be woodcuts. I reread the volume after I finished it, for each of the other 11 volumes I have read received 5/5 stars but even after a second reading I only give this one a 4. It was not as enjoyable. I am not sure if that is from the constraining in trying to write in the Greek style, or the subjects employed because of that. I am thankful I read it I just read did not connect with it the same way I did with Irvine’s other poetry.

Fountain Of Hellas Poems From The Greek Anthology - John Irvine - Sample 1

Fountain Of Hellas Poems From The Greek Anthology - John Irvine - Sample 2

Fountain Of Hellas Poems From The Greek Anthology - John Irvine - Sample 3

Fountain Of Hellas Poems From The Greek Anthology - John Irvine - Sample 4

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

Books by John Irvine:

Edited by John Irvine:
A Christmas Garland - as J. Pennington Irvine
The Flowering Branch: An Anthology of Irish Poetry Past and Present 
The Poems of Robert Burns 
The Poems of Robert Louis Stevenson 
The Poems of Tennyson 
The Poems of Thomas Moore  
… 

Wednesday, 18 February 2026

15 Days of Prayer with Dorothy Day - Michael Boover

15 Days of Prayer with Dorothy Day 
Michael Boover 
ISBN 9781565484917
eISBN 9781565485679
ASIN B00IA8SG4G

15 Days of Prayer with Dorothy Day - Michael Boover

Last year I stumbled upon a different volume in this series, 15 Days of Prayer with Saint Pier Giorgio Frassati by Père Charles Desjobert, OP, and really enjoyed it. I did some research on the series and this was the third volume I decided to work through. 

I believe as of the writing of this review there have been 40 volumes in the series, the earliest I found was from 1999 through to a volume which was published in 2025. Only about a dozen seem to be in print currently and of those only a handful appears to have eBooks. With my dual form of dyslexia this is disappointing. I greatly prefer eBooks so I can change the font, and the colour of font and page to make reading easier. I have added all the eBook editions I could find to my wish list. About the Series we are informed:

“15 Days of Prayer Series

 On a journey, it’s good to have a guide. Even great saints took spiritual directors or confessors with them on their itineraries toward sanctity. Now you can be guided by the most influential spiritual figures of all time. The 15 Days of Prayer series introduces their deepest and most personal thoughts.
This popular series is perfect if you are looking for a gift, or if you want to be introduced to a particular guide and his or her spirituality. Each volume contains:

• A brief biography of the saint or spiritual leader 
• A guide to creating a format for prayer or retreat
• Fifteen meditation sessions with reflection guides”

Many of the books in this series were written in French and translated into English. That does not appear to be the case with this volume. This book was originally published in 2013, the physical volume appears to be out of print but the eBook is readily available. The description of this specific volume states:

“Dorothy Day connected radical faith with doing radical deeds. Beginning from her discovery of God in the Word when she was eight years old, Michael Boover shares Dorothy's reflections about her pilgrimage to the daily discipline of readiness and openness to God in her life, especially to God in her neighbor. He shares her words on why and how she prays, on her preference for frequent confession, on her intentional choice of suffering and poverty, and on her desire to imitate the saints and to make sanctity the norm of everyone's life.

In these 15 days, we see how Dorothy's discipline gave her true freedom. In particular, it allowed her to give priority to Love - to take the most direct route to God by loving her neighbor. She recognized "the paucity of her own best spiritual efforts and took refuge in the fact that God would do for believers what they could not fully do for themselves." Boover's practical exercises emulate Day's own temperament. They push you to live with more integrity and deeper love, and they show a deep compassion for the difficulty of the challenge.”

There is no ‘about the author’ section in the book or on the back. But we are informed on the page with the book description that:

“Michael Boover has been connected to the Catholic Worker movement since the early 70s when he met Dorothy Day and Catholic Worker priest Bernard E. Gilgun. Michael joined other young Catholic Workers in Central Massachusetts doing the works of mercy in a storefront and later house of hospitality in the city of Worcester and at the "House of Ammon" farm commune in Hubbardston. He also lived at the Catholic Worker Farm in Sheep Ranch, California. Michael currently lives and works at "Annunciation House of Worcester," a household blending Franciscan, Benedictine (Cistercian) and Catholic Worker influences. He and his wife, Diane, have four adult children who inspire and entertain.”

The chapters in this volume are:

How to Use This Book
A Brief Biography
Introduction
1: The Bible (and God) in the Attic
2: A Shaking Earth and Intimations of Solid Heavens
3: The Noise and Impetuousness of Youth
4: An Ever-Expanding Horizon
5: The Power of Prayer
6: Poverty and Hope
7: Spiritual Friendship
8: Love Come What May
9: Hope over the Long Haul: Investment in a Holy Alternative
10: A Self-Critical Stance that Leads to Holiness
11: The Grace of Persistence
12: Living in Christ, Living in the Church
13: Saint Dorothy?
14: Judged By Love
15: Still Sowing
Epilogue
Prayer for the Canonization of Servant of God Dorothy Day
Notes
For Further Reading

I highlighted a number of passages while reading this volume some of them are:

“Admittedly, at times the saints might well have traveled far beyond the experience of their guide and companion but more often than not they would return to their director and reflect on their experience. Understood in this sense, the director and companion provided a valuable contribution and necessary resource.”

“Lord, catch me off guard today. Surprise me with some moment of beauty or pain So that at least for the moment I may be startled into seeing that you are here in all your splendor, Always and everywhere, Barely hidden, Beneath, Beyond, Within this life I breathe.”

“Yet Dorothy would become a premier exponent of Catholic social teaching in America, and in many ways exemplifies the tradition in North America. She did not arrive at or assume this calling quickly. Her discernment went through a process of development. Her life story is quite striking in this regard; telling her story is a good starting point for examining her call to prayer, a call in which we all share.”

“Although the Days were not particularly religious, Dorothy was. Her spiritual inklings stood out from an early age. Their ties to organized religion were tenuous at best, attending services now and again in different Protestant churches. Yet these disparate and episodic encounters with Christian faith made a deep impression on young Dorothy. Within her was growing a sense of a biblical truth to be had and a sacred realm to be accessed.”

“The poor, she discovered—despite what seemed overwhelming odds—made life bearable for themselves and others in the midst of squalor. The young observer concluded that despite their economic status, all people had inherent dignity. She saw an amazing resilience and creativity in the lives of many of her poor neighbors.”

“Paradoxically, perhaps, it was this garrulous and indulgent community that somehow helped her narrow the gap between professing radical faith and practicing radical deeds. Her friends had a discipline of commitment, an observable correspondence between word and deed.”

“She learned the high cost of maintaining one’s convictions—serious and sometimes cruel opposition. She learned that anyone who would challenge injustice needed two essentials: a sturdy disposition and daring.”

“Over time, Day’s radical friends acknowledged her unspoken but increasingly evident spiritual sensibilities. Some suspected openly that Dorothy was too religious to be a good communist.”

“If God would bless and multiply what this young lad had given, so too would God do for her and those who followed her way if they were generous enough to give all that they had, no matter how small it seemed.”

“After her conversion to Catholicism and baptism in 1928, she exercised greater care concerning matters of politics and matters of the heart.”

“She became a tireless seeker after a better personal day for herself and a better day for society, a renewed social order. She would pursue such seeking, however, more on her own terms, an even more dramatic change than that of her conversion.”

“At first, Dorothy kept her faith to herself. In fact, even as she began praying in churches frequented by immigrants, the very people who drew her to this Church of the poor, she had never met a Catholic face-to-face. Bit by bit, however, she sought out and formed personal relationships with the editors of Catholic publications who gave her the chance to support her child and herself as a Catholic writer, although one with an unusual pedigree.”

“One day, Dorothy had prayed to discover a holy work that would truly be her own; the next day, Maurin appeared at her apartment door. Dorothy’s life and world would never be the same.”

“She would become a living example of Catholic social teaching taken seriously in an American context. She taught Americans what it meant to uphold human dignity and promote solidarity.”

“The task that Peter and Dorothy set before themselves was no less than converting people from selfishness and hatred to personal and social responsibility, shaping a world where every person had the physical and spiritual means to live a dignified life.”

“Dorothy had no trouble acknowledging Peter’s sanctity, but when someone suggested similar recognition for her she replied brusquely: “Don’t call me a saint. Don’t dismiss me that easily.” These two “saints” never called attention to their own virtue. They did not seek holiness for themselves but for all. In dismissing her own sanctity, she intended a lesson for everyone. We are all in this together. None of us should dismiss ourselves that easily.”

“She demonstrated that freely given and undaunted love is not only an idealistic way of life; it is pragmatic as well. Indeed, such love is the only remedy that really cures, the only thing that really works in the here and now even as we look to full union with Divinity in eternal life.”

“It was her last lesson to us—because we will be judged by how we have loved, we must therefore love in that measure. It is by love that all of us, despite our many failings and weaknesses, will find our way home.”

“In fifteen days of attentiveness in prayer, we will meet Dorothy in all of her complexity and beauty and our own spiritual lives will be enriched.”

“Dorothy claimed that whatever she may have achieved came about because she was not embarrassed to talk about God. This willingness to speak makes her a spiritual figure and guiding moral voice in confusing, even perilous, times.”

“Christians are called to conversion (turning toward Love) and depth conversion (turning again and again and ever more deeply to Love).”

“Dorothy discovered the cure for her own loneliness in her fellowship of lonely friends, a fellowship that makes the friends less lonely.”

“In discovering an old Bible in the attic of her new home in Oakland, Dorothy discovered a Friend whom she knew would accompany her for the rest of her life.”

“Dorothy’s childhood recollections resemble those in Thérèse of Lisieux’s The Story of a Soul. Encounters with the sacred by these young women might inspire us to revisit our own childhood experiences to discover the hand of God at work in them.”

“Highlight(orange) - Page 53 · Location 493
This solitary experience in grave circumstances made her question the nature and source of security. Perhaps this is the event that moved Dorothy to pray the prayer of the abandoned, the lost and the rejected.”

“That requires a singularity of vision. When our energies are scattered and we hear a cacophony of mixed and distressing voices (even within us), it takes a special effort and openness to accept those graces that enable us to focus our attention on the knowledge and love of Christ and to integrate in Him the voices within and outside of ourselves.”

“Discipline left Dorothy’s soul free. At one point in her spiritual life she accepted an invitation to become a Benedictine lay oblate at Saint Procopius Abbey in Lisle, Illinois. This fellowship with vowed monks and fellow laity who adhered to a Rule—a way of living with Christian faith and integrity—further refined her vocation.”

“As we set our gaze on a wider horizon, our inner landscapes also expand. This new perspective sometimes comes through synthesizing our own varied experiences, sometimes through the shared insight of a significant other. In her mid-thirties, Dorothy was ready to take a higher, wider view of the political and spiritual landscape within and around her.”

“Dorothy was drawn to the wonder of traditional Catholicism, to the mystical tradition and later to those who spoke for that tradition and with whom she identified—Catherine of Siena, Teresa of Avila, Thérèse of Lisieux, and Brother Lawrence. The Catholic Worker creatively blended the traditional elements with openness to the needs and vicissitudes of a particular social era.”

“Both scholar and worker himself, Maurin modeled the ideal of threading the intellectual’s clarified thought with the worker’s muscle, thereby giving ennobled thought the momentum to generate needed change, to making the ideal become real. Yet Peter proposed an even higher ideal. He called scholars to become workers and workers to be scholars.”

“Although it is difficult to acknowledge our sins and failings, over the years life offers many chances to do so. We cannot underestimate the value of an honest estimate of our actual state and its promise of a better day ahead.”

“When we fall, we need to know there is a way to a better place, to remedy poor choices. Dorothy often chose self-criticism and penance for herself. Although she found going to confession difficult, she received the sacrament often, learning there that new freedoms and hopes need to be born again and again. Through her acts of penance and hope, she understood how to pursue better ways.”

“In poverty, both physical and spiritual, Dorothy discovered herself rich in God’s providence and love. Simplicity, she discovered, brought to her life extraordinary balance and harmony.”

“We are possessed by our possessions, even our non-material ones. It takes a lot to seek the pure path. Sometimes that pure path begins with recognizing our own impurity, even in our quest for purity.”

“Spiritual friendship is the raison d’être for a book such as this, one that explores how one of God’s friends influenced others. Those who are close to God celebrate spiritual giftedness; their distinct witness cannot help but have a profound influence—not only for their peers, but also for those in other places and in other times.”

“But Dorothy so appreciated the retreats because she needed them almost desperately as a source of rest and a wellspring for her grace-thirsty soul. She urged her co-workers to look to their own spiritual needs and to slake their thirst as she did at these springs of grace. The activity of those in the Worker movement had to be based on prayer. Action that springs from such deep sources bears fruit, even if in ways that the world does not recognize or appreciate.”

“Authentic discipleship, however, calls for steadfastness.”

“Dorothy’s life was hard, filled with multiple challenges. Her books, diaries and letters convey how difficult her life really was, but also how sturdy she was, facing each day’s hardships with faith.”

“We must be undaunted in living beautiful lives even though life can be ugly. Love does cast out fear, but it costs—often a lot, sometimes everything.”

“Dorothy never ceased inviting God into her own pain and that of others. She understood the receptivity believers needed to savor fully divine assistance. In the mid-seventies she told the editors of Sojourners Magazine, “You have to imbibe faith, hope and love; otherwise you get too discouraged.” 11 She knew that the Church’s mission included members of the Body doing this imbibing together.”

“She conveyed the faith lessons she learned from Dostoyevsky and Tolstoy into the daily round of apostolic labors at the houses of hospitality. The colorful Russian characters, be they ordinary or eccentric, reflected the colorful spirit of the men and women who peopled Worker houses. Soul-centered radical Russian Christianity impressed Dorothy and influenced her movement. The Worker houses became schools of love where students studied with and learned from each other.”

“Dorothy acknowledged her vocation and learned how to meet its demands by consulting those who had gone before, and those who were facing the same challenges in the present.”

“Although Dorothy would find the title “Servant of God” more appropriate than “saint,” her cause for canonization has been opened. Interest in Dorothy, her lifetime of good works and her holiness is on the rise. Whether she is declared a saint or not, those familiar with her life story recognize her genuine sanctity.”

“The “school of hard knocks” sometimes left Dorothy grumpy, and the good in her life she saw not as something she merited, but as pure gift. Gratitude for grace is expressed in praise directed to God, not to self. Perhaps she feared that people would mistake grace for virtue.”

“A “Saint Dorothy” would not be content with being a passive, sweet heavenly intercessor. The Church, in its wisdom, knows full well the challenge Dorothy presents. Dorothy wanted and needed the Church. The Church, in proposing Dorothy for sainthood, is acknowledging the world’s need for Dorothy’s living witness to gospel truth.”

“The Church teaches that asking a saint’s intercession and emulating her virtues edifies and enriches the entire Body. Emulating the sterling faith, generosity and intelligence of someone like Dorothy can help us on our own path to sanctity. From time to time she stumbled, but by the grace of God always got up and returned to her path to holiness.”

“Dorothy has been named “Servant of God.” The movement’s and Dorothy’s recognition, however, are not her followers’ ultimate concern. Love is. Is the movement still grounded in love for God and for neighbor?”

“Dorothy demonstrated that the gospel mandate for Christian life in the modern world focuses on unadorned love and advocacy for the poor. Peter and Dorothy taught us that the personal and the communal dimensions of living serve each other. Workers should become scholars and scholars workers.”

“The Catholic Worker movement has become international. The tiny seed planted in New York City has sprouted and continues to grow, with houses of hospitality in Canada, Mexico, Australia, Uganda and in various European nations. Like the mustard seed in the parable, the Catholic Worker movement has spread to welcome “the birds of the air who find rest in its branches” in many parts of the world.”

“If we are rushed for time, sow time and we will reap time. Go to church and spend a quiet hour in prayer. You will have more time than ever and your work will get done. Sow time with the poor. Sit and listen to them, give them your time lavishly. You will reap time a hundredfold. Sow kindness and you will reap kindness. Sow love, you will reap love. “Where there is no love, if you put love, you will take out love”—it is again St. John of the Cross. The Long Loneliness, 252”

“She had the humility and perhaps also the audacity to say that if God meant for the movement to continue after her death, it would. If not, that was all right too. She displayed what spiritual writers call “holy indifference,” an attitude of detachment, resignation and submission in all things to the will of God.”

“Dorothy devoted her life to fulfilling the great commandments: love of God and love of neighbor. And she also committed herself with equal fervor to a life of thanksgiving for the gifts of creation and redemption. She sought to imitate Christ in her work for social justice as well as in her work of praise, seeking to love as Christ loved.”

“Can we be better people of the Book? How would spending more time with the Bible help our spiritual lives? How we take up and live a Biblical world view? Are our own children open to the Sacred? Does their wonder and joy in relating to God show us how we should think and act?”

I hope those quotes give you a feel for this volume. I highlighted way more than I though. There was so much in this volume that really spoke to me. I am now trying to figure out which book by Dorothy or about her to read next. Prior to reading this I had encountered excerpts of Dorothy’s works in my schooling. And I have read one brief biography. I really enjoyed working my way through this book. As the third in the series I appreciate the series even more now. I can see myself easily returning to it again in the future. I have been inspired me to get going and read as many in the collection as I can lay my hands on. 

This is an excellent volume in what is shaping up to be a great series. Spending these 15 days with Servant of God Dorothy Day, the written reflections and the discussion questions was a moving experience. I can easily recommend this book and look forward to reading others in the series. I just really wish all of the 40 volumes were available as eBooks, I would work through them all if so.

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

Books by Dorothy Day:
All the Way to Heaven Selected Letters
By Little and By Little
Dorothy Day: Selected Writings
From Union Square to Rome
Hold Nothing Back
House of Hospitality
Loaves and Fishes
Meditations
On Pilgrimage
On Pilgrimage: The Seventies
On Pilgrimage: The Sixties
Peter Maurin: Apostle to the World
The Dorothy Day Book
The Duty of Delight
The Duty of Delight
The Eleventh Virgin
The Long Loneliness
The Reckless Way of Love
Therese
Writings from Commonweal

Books About Dorothy Day:
All Is Grace A Biography - Jim Forest
American Catholic Pacifism - Anne Klejment
Dorothy Day A Radical Devotion - Jeffry Odell Korgen, Christopher Cardinale, et al.
Dorothy Day and the Permanent Revolution - Eileen Egan
Dorothy Day Portraits by Those Who Knew Her - Rosalie G. Riegle
Dorothy Day The World Will Be Saved By Beauty - Kate Hennessy, Randye Kaye, et al.
Love is the Measure - James H. Forest
Searching for Christ - Brigid O'Shea Merriman
The Life You Save May Be Your Own - Paul Elie
The Moral Vision of Dorothy Day - June E O'Conner
Unruly Saint - D.L. Mayfield and Robert Ellsberg

Books in the 15 Days of Prayer With Series:
Blessed Chiara Badano - Florence Gillet and Bill Hartnett
Blessed Frédéric Ozanam - Christian Verheyde
Brother Roger Of Taize - Sabine Laplane
Charles de Foucauld - Michael Lafon 
Chiara Lubich - Florence Gillet and Bill Hartnett
Dietrich Bonhoeffer - Matthieu Arnold
Don Bosco - Robert Schiele
Henri Nouwen - Robert Waldron
Jean-Claude Colin - Francois Drouilly
Johannes Tauler - Andre Pinet
Meister Eckhart - André Gozier
Peter Joseph Triest - Brother René Stockman
Pierre Teilhard de Chardin - André Dupleix 
Saint Alphonsus Liguori - Jean-Marie Segalen
Saint Augustine - Jaime García
Saint Benedict - André Gozier
Saint Bernard - Pierre Yves Emery
Saint Catherine of Siena - Chantal van der Plancke 
Saint Clare of Assisi - Marie-France Becker
Saint Dominic - Alain Quilici 
Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton - Betty Ann McNeil
Saint Eugene de Mazenod - Bernard Dullier
Saint Faustina Kowalska - John Cleary
Saint Francis de Sales - Claude Morel
Saint Francis of Assisi - Thaddée Matura O.F.M.
Saint Jeanne Jugan - Michel Lafon
Saint John of the Cross - Constant Tonnelier
Saint Katharine Drexel - Leo Luke Marcello 
Saint Louis De Montfort - Veronique Pinardon
Saint Martín de Porres: A Saint of the Americas - Brian J. Pierce
Saint Philip Neri - Jean-François Audrain
Saint Teresa of Avila - Jean Abiven
Saint Therese of Lisieux - Victoria Hebert
Saint Thomas Aquinas - Suzanne Vrai and André Pinet
Saint Vincent de Paul - Jean-Pierre Renouard
The Curé of Ars - Pierre Blanc
Thomas Merton - Andre Gozier

15 Days of Prayer Series from New City Press



Tuesday, 17 February 2026

The Snow - Adam Roberts

The Snow 
Adam Roberts
ISBN 9780575076518
eISBN 9781473224438
ASIN B07KF9YZK3

The Snow - Adam Roberts

I picked this up when it came out back when I was a bookseller. The concept really intrigued me, and I started the volume. I started it and from this read was about a third of the way through it. Then my backpack went missing and with it this volume. The book would come to mind from time to time, and to be honest I could not recall the author. I though the title was just ‘Snow’. Every now and again I would do a search for it, but never stumbled upon it again. Jump ahead 22 years and with Ai I was able to track it down by redefining my search 4 times. I picked up the eBook, having switched to mainly eBooks because of my dual form of dyslexia and started reading it.

The description of the story is:

“And this is how the world will end ...

'The snow started falling on the sixth of September, soft noiseless flakes filling the sky like a swarm of white moths, or like static interference on your TV screen - whichever metaphor, nature or technology, you find the more evocative. Snow everywhere, all through the air, with that distinctive sense of hurrying that a vigorous snowfall brings with it. Everything in a rush, busy-busy snowflakes. And, simultaneously, paradoxically, everything is hushed, calm, as quiet as cancer, as white as death.

And at the beginning people were happy.'

But the snow doesn't stop. It falls and falls and falls. Until it lies three miles thick across the whole of the earth. Six billion people have died. Perhaps 150,000 survive. But those 150,000 need help, they need support, they need organising, governing.

And so the lies begin. Lies about how the snow started. Lies about who is to blame. Lies about who is left. Lies about what really lies beneath.”

The story began as I recalled and I felt some of the same bewilderment as reading the story. It is mainly personal narrative, and primarily from one source. But it is written as redacted reports and document control source much like you would expect from a secret government project. For example:

“[Warning: this is an Illegal Document under the Texts (Restricted) Act of is. The Minimum punishment for reading, possessing or disseminating this document in part or whole is a 3rd degree fine and up to one year in confinement. Do NOT proceed beyond this legal notice; notify your nearest certificated police officer or certificated military officer AT ONCE, quoting your provenance for the document and your period of access.]

[Tampering with the official seal on this document is an offense under the Government of the People (Emergency Powers) Act of 2, punishable by fines in the 6th or 7th degree and up to two weeks in confinement]

[Notice: this document, having been in general circulation for a period not exceeding two months one year or less prior to the establishment of a legal interdiction, is now an Illegal Document. Anybody who may have read part or all of this document during the period in which it was in general circulation is hereby reminded that the recall, republication (in part or whole) of any element of said document, substantive or marginal, is now an offense under the Texts (Restricted) Act of 15]

{{<<G S Seidensticker is one of the most eminent scientists to have survived the Snow. A household name for his dedication to Freedom as well as the brilliance of his technical and scientific work, he talks here to Science for Freedom about the question on everybody’s lips – the origins of the Snow.>>}}”
 
The chapters in the work are:

Snow
So You Want To Be A Food-Miner?
Interview with Gerard Louis Seidensticker
Know Your Snow!
Doc 08–999 [Clouds]
Confession
Text Title: [not specified] Text Code: 341–999
Website
Also by Adam Roberts
About the Author
Appendix
Coda Tira Bojani Sahai

I was close a couple of times to having this volume end up on my ‘Did Not Finish’ pile. But because it had come to mind so often over the intervening years I pushed through. Over all it was an interesting read. Parts of it feel very disjointed. And parts seem like random jumps. I really feels like 2 different stores that were mashed up in the middle. Both might have worked really well on their own. But together it just seems to miss the mark. 

Was the story entertaining? - Yes
Was the story enjoyable? – So so
Is there anyone I would immediately recommend it to? – No

I have read numerous books about terraforming planets. Mostly around terraforming Mars. Including the Solar System series by Manual Alfonseca that begins with Under An Orange Sky. Or In the Shadow of Deimos by Jane Killick Terraforming Mars Book based on the Board Game. As well as the non fiction volume Terraforming Mars edited by Martin Beech, Joseph Seckbach, and Richard Gordon. This final one had essays deal with the ethics of Terraforming that fit in really well with this story, and Alfonseca’s deals with some unexpected consequences for and from native inhabitants. 

I seldom look at other reviews or opinions before working on my own. But because I could not pin this one down I did take a peek. A lot of commentary out there is similar to my own impressions. But I am thankful I finally tracked it down and finished it even if 22 years after starting.

Overall it is an interesting story. And as one of the earliest in Adam’s career I can understand the roughness. For fans of more esoteric Science Fiction it will be a good read. The trajectory switched midstride in what feels a surreal way. But it was good enough that I have just picked up 'Salt' to give a try. So who knows maybe it will hit for you.

Books by Adam Roberts:
Salt (2000)
On (2001)
Stone (2002)
Polystom (2003)
The Snow (2004)
The Va Dinci Cod (2005) (as by A R R R Roberts)
Star Warped (2005) (as by A R R R Roberts)
Gradisil (2006)
Doctor Whom (2006) (as by A R R R Roberts)
Land of the Headless (2007)
Splinter (2007)
Swiftly (2008)
Yellow Blue Tibia (2009)
I Am Scrooge (2009)
New Model Army (2010)
The Dragon with the Girl Tattoo (2010)
Anticopernicus (2011)
By Light Alone (2011)
Jack Glass (2012)
Twenty Trillion Leagues Under the Sea (2014)
Bete (2014)
The Thing Itself (2015)
Bethany (2016)
The Black Prince (2018) (with Anthony Burgess)
The Compelled (2020) (with Francois Schuiten)
Purgatory Mount (2021)
Middlemarch: Epigraphs and Mirrors (2021)
The This (2022)
Stealing For The Sky (2022)
The Death of Sir Martin Malprelate (2023)
High (2024)
Lake of Darkness (2024)
The Swoon (2024)
Frankenstein Rex (2027)

Novellas:
Park Polar (2002)
Jupiter Magnified (2003)
Anticopernicus (2011)
Bethany (2016)
The Lake Boy (2018)
The Man Who Would Be Kling (2019)
The Compelled (2020)
Stealing for the Sky (2022)
The Midas Rain (2023)
High (2024)

Parodies:
The Soddit (2003, The Hobbit)
The McAtrix Derided (2004, The Matrix)
The Sellamillion (2004, The Silmarillion)
Star Warped (2005, Star Wars)
The Va Dinci Cod (2005, The Da Vinci Code)
Doctor Whom: E.T. Shoots and Leaves (2006, Doctor Who)
I am Scrooge: A Zombie Story for Christmas (2009, Charles Dickens, A Christmas Carol).
The Dragon with the Girl Tattoo (2010, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo)
I, Soddit: The Autobiography (2013, The Hobbit)

Non- Fiction:
Get Started in: Writing Science Fiction and Fantasy 
Wodwo Vergil

Criticism:
Silk and Potatoes (1998)
Science (2000, second edition 2005)
Fredric Jameson (2000)
Tolkien: A Look Behind The Lord of the Rings (2003)
The History of Science (2006, second edition 2016)
The Riddles of The Hobbit (2013)
Sibilant Fricative: Essays and Reviews (2014)
Rave and Let Die: The SF and Fantasy of 2014 (2015) 
H G Wells: A Literary Life (2019)
It's the End of the World: But What Are We Really Afraid Of (2020) 
Fantasy: A Short History (2025)