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)

Monday, 16 February 2026

The Boston Rob Rulebook Strategies for Life - Robert C Mariano

The Boston Rob Rulebook: 
Strategies for Life
R & A Mariano Inc
ISBN 9780989338622
eISBN 9780989338615
ASIN B07XZNNGFH 

The Boston Rob Rulebook Strategies for Life - Robert C Mariano

Now first I am not much of a TV watcher, and even less reality TV. But my wife and youngest two children are big fans, They have watched Rob on Survivor, Deal or No Deal Island, and even Traitors. Rob has appeared on the following shows:

    Survivor: Marquesas 
  • Survivor: All-Stars 
  • The Amazing Race 7 
  • Calvin Ayre Wild Card Poker 
  • Poker Dome Challenge 
  • The Amazing Race: All-Stars 
  • Survivor: Heroes vs. Villains 
  • Survivor: Redemption Island 
  • The Price Is Right 
  • Survivor: Winners at War 
  • Deal or No Deal Island 
  • The Traitors 

I have only seen a handful of episodes, and was usually sitting in the room reading. But recently someone mention he was a devout Catholic, and even shared images of his daughters receiving the sacraments. SO I took a look to see if he had a book. Appartely he has two, this volume an a cookbook called: ‘Boston Rob's Family Favorites’. 

The description of this volume states:

“Boston Rob Mariano gained notoriety from his exploits on the hit CBS reality show "Survivor." The four-time player also gained a great deal of respect for his physical capabilities, social awareness, and his strategic, outside-the-box way of thinking. Now Mariano has compiled a list of personal life lessons in his first book, The Boston Rob Rulebook: Strategies for Life. Through his signature wit and no-nonsense personality, Mariano shares some of the wisdom he's gained over the years, both growing up in Boston and through his experiences and adventures as a reality TV personality, and how he's applied it to his life to find success and fulfillment. The result is a collection of solid, practical, straight-forward advice delivered with Mariano's distinctive voice and perspective.”

I keep hoping that someday come to print from NCIS in a collection of ‘Gibb’s Rules’, and I really enjoyed Lee Child’s Jack Reacher’s Rules. So I willingly gave this volume a try. The chapters in the book are:

Acknowledgements
Introduction
Know who you are.
Be adaptable.
Smarten up.
Nobody likes a crybaby.
Clean it up.
Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.
Turn the tables in your favor.
Be positive.
No man is an island.
Build'em up.
Zip it.
Be honest with yourself.
Be a risk taker.
Stay cool.
Pay attention.
Get organized.
Family comes first. Always.
Life is a social game.
Fake it until you make it.
Miscellaneous Stuff
Beware of the underdog.
"Tell me who you go with, and I'll tell you who you are."
Never tell her she looks "fine."
Never, ever, ever give up.

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

“First of all, God. I'm a firm believer in the power of prayer. I've seen it work countless times, first-hand. This book itself is proof. The fact that a rulebook of my life strategies even exists is a mini-miracle in itself.”

“The following rules and strategies are ones I've compiled throughout my life thus far, growing up in a strong, loving, Italian family, in a no-nonsense, straightforward, loyal city like Boston. I came up with and collected these rules during my time growing up, as a student, working in construction, playing and coaching sports, as a TV personality, being a competitive poker player, being a diehard fan of the Patriots, Red Sox, Celtics, and Bruins, traveling the world and setting foot on all seven continents, and, of course, becoming a father and having a family of my own.”

“Just for fun I've also thrown in a couple not-so-serious rules because, let's face it, you should never take yourself too seriously.”

“My parents instilled solid family values in me and gave me a strong sense of self. (Being the first born didn’t hurt either.) I was taught that I could become whatever I wanted in life and that my only limitations were the ones I placed on myself. It was also an unwritten code that loyalty with your friends and family was paramount.”

“One of the biggest rookie mistakes you can make is not knowing who you are and what you stand for. It seems pretty cut and dry, but you'd be surprised how many people struggle with this.”

“Consistency is key. Staying true to who you are at all times will gain the respect of you peers. I mean, take a stance already.”

“Maybe even more importantly, know your weaknesses. Because trust me, in life someone's always going to try to figure out your weakness and use it to their advantage.”

“Those who are able to adapt to changing situations and become stronger will survive; those who can't will die off. It's like the old saying: bend, don't break.”

“Of course, even if you do everything right, it doesn't guarantee you'll win the hand. That's just life. There is a certain degree of unquantifiable luck involved in everything we do. It's the great equalizer. You just have to adapt the best you can and let the cards fall where they may.”

“If you want to be successful, you have to do your homework. Nobody gets anywhere without a lot of hard work and determination.”

“But I did, and in 1999 I got my degree in psychology from Boston University. And believe it or not, I use it just about every day of my life, just not in the way a doctor, a lawyer, an accountant, or even a psychologist uses their formal training.”

“My education didn't only come from the classroom either. It came from my parents, my peers, my teammates on the ice and field, my neighbors; from my first jobs; and even from my failures.”

“Even if things really are bad right now, you have to be strong, lean on your family and friends and know that things will get better eventually.”

“It’s sad that we get caught up in all the materialistic things. After our basic needs are met–food, water shelter, clothing, health–the only other things we need are interaction with others and to be loved.”

“Look, things are not always going to be fair. Get over it. You have to figure out how to overcome whatever obstacles are in your way, despite all the inequalities you encounter, either perceived or real. If you're able to do this, you'll always have a leg up on the competition. If you can't, you'll suffer for sure.”

“Know your weaknesses. Remember: one person's disadvantage is another's opportunity. Don't let someone take advantage of your weaknesses or inabilities because you're too proud to realize you have them and what they are. Face them head on and find a solution; otherwise, you'll be the one getting played.”

“You have to be aware, not only of your words and your actions, but maybe even more important, your thoughts. Negativity comes from within. It starts in your head long before it comes out of your mouth.”

“No one gets anywhere in this life without the help of others. My family and friends helped to form my beliefs and personality. My coaches and teachers guided and educated me. My employers have taught me valuable skills and given me opportunities to better myself. And of course, my wife has helped me become who I am today and has given me three beautiful daughters.”

“Criticism can be valuable, but only if it's the constructive kind.”

“The fact of the matter is, you are your own barometer. It may take a bit of soul-searching, but deep down you know whether you're giving it your all in any particular situation.”

“You can change your situation, your state-of-mind, and your state-of-being if you really want to. But you have to first be willing to make the change, even if you make mistakes and have setbacks along the way. If you don't take a risk and make a change, you'll never know what you could've been or what you could've done.”

“Maintaining your composure can be hard when things are going haywire and it seems like everyone's against you. But if you want to succeed in high pressure situations, you're going to have to stay cool, keep your focus, and rise to the occasion.”

“Something I've always tried to do consistently is to learn from my mistakes and improve upon them. And so far, it's definitely paid off.”
 
I hope those quotes give you a feel for this volume. It was a fun read. Some of the advice I could easily apply. Some was similar to lessons I have already learned. Other then being a fan of the Bruins there is much to appreciate and respect about Rob and what he has accomplished so far. This was a great little book to have worked through. And my son is reading it now. 

So weather you are a fan of the many reality shows he has been on, or are just familiar with the name and personality I am sure there is something in this book you will benefit from. So pick it up and give it a try.

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

Books by Robert C. Mariano – ‘Boston Rob’:
Boston Rob's Family Favorites: Cookbook

The Boston Rob Rulebook Strategies for Life - Robert C Mariano

Boston Rob's Family Favorites - Robert C Mariano


Sunday, 15 February 2026

Prayer of the Day Prayer of Saint Erasmus

Prayer of Saint Erasmus
Prayer of the day  

O, alone of all women, Mother and Virgin, Mother most blessed, Virgin most pure, we salute you, we honour you as best we can with our humble offerings. May your Son grant us that imitating your most holy manners, we also, by the Grace of the Holy Spirit may deserve to conceive the Lord Jesus spiritually in our inmost soul, and once conceived, never to lose Him. 

Amen.

Prayer of the Day Prayer of Saint Erasmus

Prayer from:
Philippe Lefebvre (Editor)
Lawrence Lew O.P. (Photographer)
ISBN 9780852448533


Note: Every so often I post a prayer I use as part of my daily prayers. I started praying this one in 2019 when I read the book above.

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Saturday, 14 February 2026

Coached by Paul the Apostle Lessons in Transformation - Father Nathan Cromly

Coached by Paul the Apostle 
Lessons in Transformation 
Father Nathan Cromly 
ISBN 9781594175237
eISBN 9781594175244

Coached by Paul the Apostle Lessons in Transformation - Father Nathan Cromly

I did not realize I had fallen so far behind on this series. I had a digital copy of this and two over volumes in the ‘Coached by’ series on my reader, When I went to write this review found another forthcoming volume. Reading this volume marks the third in the series I have read.

When I read the first book in this series, Coached By Joan of Arc by Alexandre Havard, I was unaware it was the beginning of a series. They are to date all excellent reads. When I returned to University in my late 20’s the first course I took was ‘Paul’s Life and Letters’ the final was an independent reading course on ‘Pauline Theology’. Since then I have tried to read at least one Pauline Studies book a year. This one is a good read.

The description of this book states:

“St. Paul’s initial transformation was a dramatic shift from Saul to Paul, from persecutor to believer, from darkness to light. And yet, the scales falling from his eyes was only the he lived and taught the lesson of transformation for the rest of his life.

In his book, Fr. Cromly reveals the universality and timelessness of St. Paul’s leadership, what can happen if we let Christ transform our lives, and how we can find guidance from this great saint who is, in fact, much like us. Paul is the one who dares us to be impactful Christians in an often-perilous world, and who shows us how to transform our fears into courage, our rejections into opportunities, our suffering into grace, and our solitude into union with Christ.”

Another on the Scepter site states:

“St. Paul’s initial transformation was a dramatic shift from Saul to Paul, from persecutor to believer, from darkness to light. And yet, the scales falling from his eyes was only the beginning: he lived and taught the lesson of transformation for the rest of his life. 

In his book, Fr. Cromly reveals the universality and timelessness of St. Paul’s leadership, what can happen if we let Christ transform our lives, and how we can find guidance from this great saint who is, in fact, much like us. Just a few of the lessons we can learn include:

  • Five essential questions that help us engage our God-given freedom into action
  • The forms of inner paralysis that result from giving in to fear and negativity
  • How to follow Christ’s call to love – in whatever state of life we find ourselves in
  • How God meets us where we are broken and weak – and how to be open to it
  • The role of the Holy Spirit in confronting fear and uncertainty
  • St. Paul’s secret to turning negative circumstances into positive results
  • The redemptive role of the “daily grind” – and how to use it to glorify God

Paul is the one who dares us to be impactful Christians in an often-perilous world, and who shows us how to transform our fears into courage, our rejections into opportunities, our suffering into grace, and our solitude into union with Christ.”

About the author we are informed:

“Fr. Nathan Cromly is the founder of the St. John Institute and the podcast Dare Great Things for Christ. He is a speaker, writer, and educator whose retreats, workshops, and seminars have touched the lives of thousands of people nationwide. Originally from Toledo, Ohio, he is currently living out his priestly ministry in Denver, Colorado.”

The chapters in the volume are:

Introduction
One: Freedom’s Roadmap
Two: With Eyes like Flames of Fire
Three: Hold Your Head High
Four: In Ashes, Flame
Five: In Darkness, Light
Six: Jumping
Seven: In Pain, a Name
Eight: In Loss, Gain
Nine: In Solitude, Friends
Ten: Life on the Edge

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

“This book is not a work of deep spirituality, and it is not a work of spiritual direction. It is a practical book, written simply to help us answer a question: What would our everyday lives look like if they were coached by St. Paul?”

“Second, Paul gives us an approach to leadership that is different from that of the world. Its structure and circumstances are the same, but its impact is entirely new. Paul encourages us to engage our world, not for any gain this could bring us, but in order to bring the influence of Jesus Christ to bear upon it. The impact of St. Paul’s leadership is not measured as much by the scope of his influence as by its depth.”

“Stat crux dum volvitur orbis. It’s a Latin expression which, loosely translated, means, “The world spins while the cross stands erect.””

“This book intends to help Christians in every state of life find a deeper relationship with Jesus by engaging in the duties of the life to which God has called them.”

“When we try to act, we discover our weaknesses—the holes in our lives, if you will. St. Paul will coach us that we do not need to avoid or even overcome these to be successful in God’s eyes because God wants to meet us there and sanctify us. Indeed, St. Paul shows us that the “holes” of our lives are where God wants to make us holy!”

“All human beings have something in common: we sleep until we wake up. After that, the hard part begins. It’s not that our lives are bad—our days are, in fact, full of many wonderful things—but undoubtedly they are often still a grind.”

“It’s not that we don’t have a justification for not living the lives we want to; we all want to move our lives forward. It’s just that sometimes we see so much that needs to be done while simultaneously we feel incapable of knowing where to start.”

“The important thing is to realize that paralysis isn’t an illness, but a symptom. What the world often forgets is that true leadership is fundamentally a question of the heart.”

“If leadership requires courage, and courage comes from the heart, then the more we can engage our heart in our leadership, the more impactful our leadership will be. Since no one knows the heart better than God, no one leads better than the one who lets God teach them how to lead from the heart.”

“Whenever we do something intentionally whether great or small, we engage our freedom. And this means we necessarily pass through five stages. First, we start by wanting to do something. Next, we decide on the best way to do it. Then we choose to begin to do it and discover how to finish what we started. And, finally, we find a way to share with others what we have done so that they can be a part of it. St. Paul—indeed, any impactful leader—has followed this map from paralysis to freedom, and we can too.”

“This is what being coached by St. Paul is all about—it’s all about us discovering and putting the power of our freedom behind the fire of our love. What else is true freedom other than loving truly good.”

“Being Christian means shaking off the inner paralysis of negativity and fear, and waking up into loving activity that shapes the world we are called to lead.”

“1. What is the good that I want to pursue? 2. What is the best way for me to obtain it? 3. What are the first steps I need to take? 4. How can I persevere in my pursuit, despite whatever struggles I encounter? 5. What is the best way to share what I am doing with others so that they can be a part of it.”

“Just as surely as these questions swirl around the hearts of all who look honestly at their lives, the life of St. Paul stands like a colossal monument to the power of Christian hope.”

“Christian Courage shone through his fears as he found his way to his first steps; and Christian Constancy kept him from stopping. Despite all that he went through, St. Paul never stopped traveling, preaching, writing, and exhorting. He was a man of action, giving us a real example of Christian Courage as he dared the risks and acted on his love—following through despite the cost.”

“It is a daring thing to walk on water; it is a daring thing to raise people from the dead; it is a daring thing to be transformed. It is a daring thing to follow Jesus as St. Paul did. It is a daring thing to lead.”

“There are also, however, many truths that stick out to us with stark clarity. One of these is that, when it comes to our lives as human beings on this earth, God is not a big fan of the status quo.”

“But, the followers of Christ are able to do more than just heal the body. His followers can address an even deeper need: they can bring the transforming power of the loving mercy of God to the souls of those longing for life.”

“God does not do anything randomly or without intention, and the same holds true for how he transforms St. Paul and us. When God transforms us, he shapes us into the image of Jesus, his Son. This has major implications for how we understand our lives as Christians. At its core, it means that the goal of our Christian lives cannot be found on this earth.”

“A Christian leader uses the same tools as every other kind of leader but uses them in a different way. We speak, decide, act, and collaborate, but we do not do these things alone. Christ works through us. Christ leads through us.”

“He strides across the stage of history like a great lion of God, this saint, Paul. His achievements are incredible. Conversant in at least three languages, he used his approximately forty years as a disciple of Christ to found over twenty Christian communities, traveling well over ten thousand miles by foot as he summited mountain passes, crossed deserts, slept on highways, and hiked along trails. Along the way, he wrote thirteen of the twenty-seven books of the New Testament, found himself at the starting point of at least five riots, spent over five years in prison, and lived often as a guest in the homes of the wealthy as he was left destitute to survive by the working of his own hands. His presence was considered so volatile to the status quo that at one point he was escorted by no fewer than 470 armed troops to protect him from the forty assassins who lay in wait to kill him, under an oath made to God to neither eat nor drink until they did so. He was a single man, with no money to his name, but the power of his word gave him the reputation of a man who would turn “the world upside down” (Acts 17: 6).”

“You see, our sins are not instruments of God’s grace—quite the contrary—but the human weaknesses, imperfections, and inner wounds that can point us to sin, can also, if we are brave enough to be humble, point us to the Savior instead. Rather than letting the flaws in us induce us to sin out of fear, we can bravely face them instead, and rely on the strength and grace of Jesus who comes to save us in our weakness.”

“Of course, leading requires tremendous personal strength. Leading in Christ, however, requires something even more: tremendous personal humility. In our humility before the strength of Christ’s desire to work through us, we find an even greater power than we could have on our own. This is what it means to become a saint in leadership, and it is the path that God marks out for each of us to walk on as he raises up saints to lead.”

“Following Jesus into love is like climbing a steep mountain, pulling against the gravity of our selfishness and the force of comfort into the cold, rarefied air of a mountain summit. We know that in order to love we need to act.”

“To lead others effectively, we have to pass over from the warm, soft shores of our dreams onto the cold, hardened land of action by the singular bridge of making decisions about how we will get there.”

“Perhaps, instead, the key to following God’s will lies in entrusting ourselves humbly and constantly to the Holy Spirit, allowing God to make all things work out for the good in his perfect time."

“Watching St. Paul in action, we notice something else. St. Paul had a strategy and a kind of plan, and yet he was ready to pivot depending on what he found in front of him.”

“To do anything, we have to start. Sometimes, starting is the hardest of things. What could I do before I try to start something that would make starting even easier? What small step could help me make the bigger step I need to make?”

“St. Paul was always ready to pivot in order to keep moving forward. Is God asking me to pivot in my life? What do I need to change to keep moving forward?
Seven: In Pain, a Name”

“Leadership talks and motivational speeches are all the rage these days. Whether from podcasts or radio talk shows, from books or videos, our modern public is ready to consume messages that challenge, inspire, and push us to action. It all seems wonderful—imagining ourselves fit, healthy, educated, leading our businesses—until we try it.”

“We learn to give cheerfully even when it comes at a cost. This is the essence of what we can call Christian Constancy and it is the blessing God gives the world when we persevere through the pain of “the grind” by his grace.”

“And, somewhere in the grind of forty years of living what was a “daily death” (see 1 Cor 15: 31), his identity became as real as his action. In the grind, he found his name. Deep within Paul’s sacrifices, God was at work—gradually transforming Paul into whom God created him to be: an apostle of Christ Jesus.”

“The truth is, each of us was made uniquely by God from within an unrepeatable act of love. God did not make us because he needed to; he did not make us because in some way we made him any better. He made us out of his sheer good pleasure, because he wanted us to exist. He literally loved us into being.”

“He spent much of his time in prayer, made sure to have periods of rest, and was able to spend time alone. If we are going to stretch ourselves through demanding, challenging activity, we need to take the time to be centered and healthy.”

“This is because, in fact, leadership is only half about a leader’s vision and ability. The other half of leadership is about how effectively a leader can forge a bond with those who follow them. Trust, it turns out, is just as important for reaching our goals as vision and passion.

“Coaches need to inspire the members of their team to play their best as much as they need to know how to recruit the talent for their team. Managers need to earn the respect of those whom they manage as much as they need to understand their company’s operations.”

“But St. Paul shows us his secret: we don’t live for their opinions; we live for God. He could not live based on the opinions others had about him. He had to walk the narrow, higher path—he had to follow the same Christ who finished his life naked upon the Cross. And he did.”

“Just like a Christian who meets the strength of Christ in the very place where they experience their own unique blend of human weakness, a sword has two sides, strong and flat, that are forever inseparable. And, like Christians whose courageous faith allows them to boast of their weaknesses, who lift up their heads before the intimidating fears that could otherwise dull the impact of their lives, the two sides of the sword come to an edge in a fine point. Christianity requires courage in the same way that a sword requires an edge. And a Christian soul is made to be used by Christ in the same way that a sword is wielded in the hand of a warrior—to set free a world bound by the effects of sin.”

“What would our world look like if we Christians decided to live our lives more on the edge of courage? What would our marriages look like if we overlooked the bruises and hurts of the past and braved the mercy of forgiveness? How would our friendships be transformed if we lived them in the pursuit of something greater than ourselves? How would our society be transformed if people decided to build new things in hope instead of destroy old things in fear? It would look . . . wonderful.”

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

Having read so much about Saint Paul over the years I was intrigued by the concept of this volume even before I began it. Some of the lessons I found better and more applicable than others. 

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

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

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

Coached by Series from Scepter Publishing