Wednesday, 8 July 2026

15 Days of Prayer With Saint Louis De Montfort - Veronique Pinardon and Jean Bulteau

15 Days of Prayer With Saint Louis De Montfort 
Veronique Pinardon
Jean Bulteau 
Victoria Hébert (Translator)
Denis Sabourin (Translator)
ISBN 9780764807152
ISBN 0764807153

15 Days of Prayer With Saint Louis De Montfort - Veronique Pinardon and Jean Bulteau

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 tenth volume I have work and prayer through. In my research to date there have been at least 40 volumes in this series. Many written in French and then translated, including this volume, this book was first published in French in 1996, the English edition appeared 2001. There does not appear to have ever been an eBook edition of this volume. 

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. The earlier editions were published by Liguori, but they have now moved to New City Press which is now part of Focolare Media. 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. And have been tracking down older out of print editions like this one and scanning them to read them. 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”

The description of this specific volume states:

“15 Days of Prayer Collection Now distributed by New City Press, this popular series is perfect for those looking for an introduction to a particular spiritual guide, those searching for gift ideas and those who merely wish to know more about the person and his or her spirituality. Additional volume planned in 2 to 3 months intervals. Each volume contains A brief biography of the saint or spiritual leader introduced in that volume A guide to creating a format for prayer and retreat 15 meditation sessions with focus points and reflection guides Follow in the footsteps of Saint Louis de Montfort A childlike devotion to the Mother of God marked Louiss life from the start. At confirmation he took the name Mary. Studying with the Jesuits at Rennes, and then at the Sorbonne and SaintSulpice, Louis became familiar with the French school of spirituality and as he himself declared, read nearly all of the books dealing with devotion to Our Lady. Seek Christ through Mary In the brief 16 years of his priesthood, Saint Louis de Montfort fulfilled a career of founder, missionary and prolific writer. Two years after ordination he organized the nursing and teaching congregation of the Daughters of Wisdom and in 1705 founded his missionary congregation of men, the Missionaries of the Company of Mary (Montfort Fathers). Throughout his life, Louis stressed that a tender devotion to Mary is the greatest secret of achieving union with Christ. It is Mary, Louis emphasized, who intercedes on our behalf when we pray, for just as Jesus passed through Mary in his Incarnation, all graces and Gods gifts pass through her hands. Enjoy your time with Saint Louis de Montfort as you journey with one of the most engaging spiritual figures of all time.”

The back of the volume states:

Follow in the footsteps of Saint Louis de Montfort

A childlike devotion to the Mother of God marked Louis's life from the start. At confirmation he took the name Mary. Studying with the Jesuits at Rennes, and then at the Sorbonne and Saint-Sulpice, Louis became familiar with the French school of spirituality and, as he himself declared, read nearly all of the books dealing with devotion to Our Lady.

Seek Christ through Mary

In the brief 16 years of his priesthood, Saint Louis de Montfort fulfilled a career of founder, missionary, and prolific writer. Two years after ordination he organized the nursing and teaching congregation of the Daughters of Wisdom and in 1705 founded his missionary congregation of men, the Missionaries of the Company of Mary (Montfort Fathers). Throughout his life, Louis stressed that a tender devotion to Mary is the greatest secret of achieving union with Christ. It is Mary, Louis emphasized, who intercedes on our behalf when we pray, for just as Jesus passed through Mary in his Incarnation, all graces and God's gifts pass through her hands.

Enjoy your time with Saint Louis de Montfort as you journey with one of the most engaging spiritual figures of all time.”

About the authors on the back cover we are informed that:

“Veronique Pinardon is a member of the congregation of the Daughters of Wisdom. She spent ten years in the hospital chaplaincy at Angers and now is involved in pastoral work in the health field.”

and

“Jean Bulteau formerly was superior general of the Brothers of Saint Gabriel. He gives retreats focusing on Louis de Montfort's spirituality.”

The chapters in this volume are:

How to Use This Book 
Brief Chronology of Saint Louis de Montfort's Life xv
Introduction xxi
Abbreviations Used in This Book 
1. Day One— I Have a Father Who Is Infallible 
2. Day Two — Come to Me, I Want to Make You Happy 
3. Day Three — Jesus Christ, Eternal Wisdom and Born of Mary 
4. Day Four — The New Wine of the Holy Spirit 
5. Day Five — Everything Comes Through Prayer 
6. Day Six — The Authority of the Word of the Holy Spirit 
7. Day Seven — To Jesus Through Mary 
8. Day Eight — The Irrevocable Gift of Our Heart 
9. Day Nine — To Give Everything to Mary, to Lose Oneself in Her 
10. Day Ten — I Thank God a Thousand Times for Passing As a Poor Person 
11. Day Eleven — The Loving Invention of the Eucharist 
12. Day Twelve — To Make Our Lord Loved 
13. Day Thirteen — To Give Us Proof of His Love, Wisdom Chose the Cross 
14. Day Fourteen — Students of a Crucified God 
15. Day Fifteen — The Rose Is the Queen of All Flowers, the Rosary Is the Rose of All Devotions 
Bibliography

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

“Louis Marie was sent to Rennes (the capital of Brittany) to enroll in the Jesuit college there. His uncle, a priest, became one of his closest friends. Louis Marie was considered to be intelligent, studious, deeply religious, shy, as well as artistic.”

“Louis Marie was ordained and celebrated his first Mass in the parish Church of Saint Sulpice on June 5, 1 700 (his ministry would last a mere sixteen years).”

“He decided to go to see the pope to ask for answers to his queries; to be able to go and be a missionary. He set out on foot from Poitiers, begging food and shelter on his way to the Holy City. Once he reached St. Peter's Basilica, he removed his sandals and immediately went to Peter's tomb.”

“It is said that Louis Marie's greatest contribution to the Church are his writings and teachings about total self-consecration to Mary. This, for Louis Marie, was a way in which a believer could renew and fulfill his baptismal promises.”

“Louis Marie is a master because of the quality of his teaching and the originality of the spiritual path that he proposes. He is a witness by means of the holiness of his life and the fruitfulness of his actions. At the same time both a mystic and a missionary, he knew to allow himself to be "molded" by Mary in order to become a living part of Jesus Christ, all the while teaching others to do the same.”

“Louis Marie always gave Jesus Christ preference. Throughout his entire life, he sought to know him. Having found him, he still sought him. He loved him above all else in the world and gave of himself without regard in order to make him known and loved. His preaching and writings map out a path of a characteristically Christian life.”

“We propose to present to you one of these "facets" of the unique gem that is Jesus Christ, in and through whom is made manifest both the Father and the Holy Spirit.”

“Complete trust in God's will: that is the spiritual outlook Louis de Montfort took early in his life. When events in his life were good, or when they seemed not to be going his way, Louis abandoned himself to God's plan.”

“The death of his benefactor did not seem to bother him in the least: he abandoned himself to God and his divine providence.”

“Louis Marie's motto, "God alone," was not just a passing phrase written on a piece of paper. It was a conviction of faith, the source and expression of his vital relationship and constant attitude towards God.”

“Modern man, even a Christian, is less inclined to defer to God in all things, to see an active presence of the heavenly Father in his life.”

“Father, you are only love, you love me immensely, you can't go on without me. Your nature is to give, to give of yourself. You give eternally of yourself to your Son, and, through him, to each human. Your plan, as the Father, is to transmit your life to your children, to make each of them, freely, an heir to your happiness.”

“The constant flow from the Father is not an invitation to laziness. God needs the responsible commitment of man after having made him a partner in creation.”

“The Lord is always calling us, calling us to a deeper union with him. Louis Marie recognized this in his own life, and always sought to draw closer and closer to God.”

“The Incarnation, the consequence of Mary's faith and her unconditional reply to God through love, plainly reveals Mary's vocation to us, her place in God's plan: Mary had no other reason for being than Jesus, in him and in his members.”

“Louis Marie makes us notice the discretion of the interventions by Wisdom which reaches from one extremity to another with strength and disposes of everything with gentleness. His action is gentle, without any violence (see ASE 53). It is an invitation for us to put ourselves into the hands of Wisdom, to let ourselves be led by his Spirit. It assures us that Wisdom works in us, unbeknownst to us, often in a way that is so secret we don't even know it.”

“In what ways do I welcome the Holy Spirit into my life? How am I fostering a devotion to Mary?”

“For Louis Marie, there was a cyclical relationship between prayer and desire for Wisdom (God). Each one feeds off of the other, so the more a person prays, the more one desires Wisdom, and the more a person desires Wisdom, the more one prays.”

“Prayer must be a constant in a person's life; one must never be discouraged in their spiritual life to the degree that they cease praying. It is especially during the dry spells in our spiritual life that we must pray with the most vigor.”

“Dry periods in one's prayer life are wonderful opportunities to grow in love with God; perseverance in one's practice of prayer is necessary during these times. Might I pray for God's grace that I persevere through difficult periods in my prayer life?”

“Years of study and meditation had prepared the author for this text. But these pages also reflect his life, suffering, prayer, and his meeting with Wisdom.”

“Let us pray to Eternal Wisdom. May we learn to "speak well" so that we may inspire others with his love.”

“The acquisition of God's holiness is your vocation; it is to there that your thoughts, words, actions, suffering, and all the movements of your life must be aimed; or you resist God by not doing what you have been created to do.”

“The saints did not go beyond their humanity. They assumed it, anchored in the realities of their lives, trying to fulfill it bountifully and by identifying themselves more closely to Christ, the Eternal and Incarnate Wisdom.”

“When we give ourselves totally to Mary, we accept her as our Mother in order to receive from God, through her, the life as "adoptive children"; it is to make the gift from God become "effective" by welcoming it; therefore glorifying God in the most sure manner: "You never praise nor honor Mary without her praising and honouring God with you.”

“Then, we live in Mary, as in a divine milieu and she is at home within us. "Here is only what we can believe / I carry her in the middle of myself / Engraved with traits of glory / Even through the obscurity of faith...! do everything in and through her / That is the secret for holiness / To always be faithful to God / To always do his will in all things" (C 77, 15 and 19).”

“Do I, like Mary, seek to clear a space in my own life so that God may take his rightful place inside me?”

“Do I attempt to shape my obedience to God according to the model given by the Blessed Virgin? Do I accept Mary as my guide in faith? Do I seek to build my faith life in the manner she lived, with the spiritual abandonment she lived so that the Lord might fill me with his grace and divine will?”

“All of this was not improvised. It was the fruit of a profound interior life, of a contemplation of Christ in his Incarnation. He was overcome with divine Wisdom who made himself a poor person by assuming the human condition, and he wanted to reproduce this poverty in his life.”

“To pray with Louis Marie is to unite oneself with his search for Wisdom. There, our gaze will see beyond indifference and our compassion will take the shape of effective service. God, Father of the poor, give us the divine Wisdom that comes from you.”

“We can also ask ourselves about what recognition we give to the poor and how we can make their plight reach our hearts. May the Poor One reach our hearts and inspire our prayers.”

“Eternal Wisdom, in order to get close to man and give tangible witness to his love, went so far as to become a man, become a child, become poor, and die for us all on the cross....”

“In order to know him, we must seek him. Let us be reminded that it is from the side of what is humble, without flash.... Let us ask him to help us turn to the poor.”

“His vocation had its roots between two things he loved which mutually called to him: the love of Eternal Wisdom and love for the poor.”

“Louis Marie asks us to expose ourselves to the light of Wisdom, let his rays shine on us in prayer, listen to his words and let them penetrate into our hearts, let ourselves be transformed into him in order to be able to transmit a spark of his love to others.”

“Now, at the beginning of the third millennium, Louis Marie appears to us to be a model for the new evangelization. With him, we can ask for the passion of the Gospel and the capacity to enter into a new dynamic adapted to the needs of the hearts who await God.”

“We honor Jesus, God the Father, and the Holy Spirit by honouring Mary as we pray the rosary. Mary is a glorious model of detachment. She abandoned her will for that of the Father's so that the Son might be born of her womb. May we all seek such self-abandonment in our own lives, that God will find a home in our hearts and souls, and use us as instruments of his divine will.”

“Saint Gregory of Nyssa graciously said that we are painters. Our soul is the waiting canvas... the original that we must copy is Jesus Christ, the living image who perfectly represents the eternal Father (SAR 65).”

I hope those quotes give you a feel for this volume. It is a great read. 

This is a good volume in an excellent series. Spending these 15 days with Louis De Montfort was well worth the time and effort. I just really wish all of the 40 volumes were available as eBooks, I would work through them all if so. If you read all 40 volumes back to back without tasking a day for the introduction, and biography between it is 600 days of praying. If you do take extra days for those sections, or end up missing a day here or there, or choose to reread a day from time to time it would take close to 2 years to work through the collection. They are excellent books. As mentioned I just wish they were all in print and available digitally!

A great read in an excellent series!

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

Books in the 15 Days of Prayer With Series:
Blessed Frédéric Ozanam - Christian Verheyde
Brother Roger Of Taize - Sabine Laplane
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 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 John of the Cross - Constant Tonnelier
Saint Katharine Drexel - Leo Luke Marcello 
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


15 Days of Prayer Series from New City Press


Tuesday, 7 July 2026

Grace Through Simplicity The Practical Spirituality of Evelyn Underhill - John J. Kirvan - Great Spiritual Teachers

Grace Through Simplicity 
The Practical Spirituality of Evelyn Underhill
Great Spiritual Teachers
John J. Kirvan
ISBN 9781594710261
ISBN 1594710260

Grace Through Simplicity The Practical Spirituality of Evelyn Underhill - John J. Kirvan - Great Spiritual Teachers

This is the nineteenth volume in the Great Spiritual Teachers series I have read, it is also the most recent, published in 2026, and another is coming out soon in mid 2026. Two Years ago I read my first book in the series, it was Born to Do This: 30 Days with Joan of Arc by Jaymie Stuart Wolfe, and loved it and the concept of the series. I have read one almost every month since that first one, and if I can track down all the out of print, will do so until I finish all 25 released to date in the series. This one jumped to the top of my list as soon as it released. First it was an eBook, which with my dyslexia is easier to read. Second was the subject Óscar Romero. 

The description of this volume states:

“John Kirvan adds the wisdom of beloved English writer, Evelyn Underhill (1875-1941) to the The Thirty Days with a Great Spiritual Teacher series. For Evelyn Underhill, spirituality was never mysterious or remote, but "the heart of religion and therefore of vital concern to ordinary men and women." The focus of her spirituality is that life is a journey into Reality. Underhill never separated the world and the spirit, but defined mysticism as "the art of union with Reality." Grace Through Simplicity offers us the opportunity to see this ordinary world with new eyes and to discover the deeper dimension of Gods presence in it. Over 340,000 copies sold in this series.”

The back of the book states:

“Writing at the beginning of the twentieth century, Evelyn Underhill was a thoroughly modern woman who explored one of the most abused words in the English language—mysticism. For her, mysticism was the art of union with Reality. It is a definition that includes both great saints and stumbling seekers.

Spirituality is not an intense form of other-worldliness
remote from the common ways and incompatible
with common life.
but rather the heart of religion and
therefore of vital concern to ordinary men and women.”

About the series we are informed:

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

I believe there are 19 volumes in this series currently in print, but only 16 of those have digital editions. There are also a number that are currently out of print, The oldest I have seen are from the late 1980’s and it looks like they went through a rebranding and format change in the mid 00’s, and they have undergone yet another rebranding beginning in the 2020’s including some new titles available in the series. 

I must admit I do not recall running across this series prior to that first volume on Joan. I have however added all of them to my ‘to be read list’. I love the recent rebranding, and hope Ave Maria completes the rebranding across all volumes. I hope also that Ave Maria brings back into print some of the volumes currently not available; specifically the volumes on John of the Cross, Evelyn Underhill, Mother Theresa and others. This specific volume was released in 2004, making it the antepenultimate of the original series before new volumes started being added in 2020. 

The sections in this volume are:

Evelyn Underhill
How to Pray This Book
Thirty Days With Evelyn Underhill
One Final Word

While reading this I numerous passages, so many that I exceeded the 10% Ave Maria allowed for export, so some of them are:

“When Evelyn Underhill wrote in the late 1930s that her "object was to present some of the great truths concerning man's spiritual life in simple language" she was referring to a series of BBC radio talks, but she could have been summarizing her life's work and indeed the changing face of western spirituality.”

“Spirituality was for her, as it has become for most seekers, not "an intense form of other-worldliness remote from the common ways and incompatible with the common life, but rather the heart of religion and therefore of vital concern to ordinary men and women."”

“For her, spirituality must be compatible with ordinary life— the kind of life that most of us live. It is not an accident that the heart of her spiritual insight—and this book—is a journey into Reality rather than the escape that marks so much spiritual teaching and writing.”

“Most important perhaps, in understanding her life and work, is a word that may not appear above but which was the focal point of her writings and speaking. The word is mysticism—"one of the most abused words in the English language." The abuse continues. But in that one word, too often reserved for the spiritually privileged when it is not being debased as a synonym for magic, she professed and taught her belief that holiness is not for the few, but is rather an invitation extended to all. It involves not a retreat into a silent soul, but a reaching out to a noisy world, a reaching out that is best done hand in hand with your fellow "mystics."”

“In this book she defined mysticism as "the art of union with Reality/' and the mystic as "a person who has attained that union in greater or lesser degree; or who aims at and believes in such attainment." It is a definition that includes great saints and stumbling seekers. Without ever dumbing down the richness of the western mystical tradition, she has made it accessible to seekers of every tradition and personal history. She has helped us to understand our mysterious journey, even as she provides encouragement and nourishment along the way.”

“The purpose of this book is to open a gate, to make accessible the spiritual experience and wisdom of one of the modern world's most important spiritual scholars and teachers, Evelyn Underhill.
This is, therefore, not a book for mere reading. It invites you to meditate and pray its words on a daily basis over a period of thirty days.”

“It is a handbook for a spiritual journey.”

“We have to want the Reality that invites us.”

“It is in prayer and meditation 
that we will discover 
in our inmost sanctuary 
a self, an “I,” 
not wholly practical,
who refuses to be satisfied by our busy life, 
a self who hungers for communion 
with a spiritual universe.”

“Within us is a self
that refuses to be satisfied
with our busy life.”

“Reality is with us 
but we are too frightened to respond.”

“Keep me in the embrace of your Reality 
through this night, 
and the day to come.
Surround me with your silence 
and give me the rest that only you can give
Real peace, 
now and forever.”

“We are like actors
who have another life when we are not onstage.
When we do not merely believe this but know it,
when we have acquired this power of withdrawing our self, of making the first distinction between appearance and Reality,
the initial stage of our contemplative life has begun.
The Real world awaits us.”

“The struggle is to see clearly.”

“Getting to know ourselves 
is always a lonely and arduous journey.”

“I need you to keep me
in the embrace of your Reality through this night, 
and all the days to come.
Give me the courage that only you can give— 
Real courage, 
now and forever.”

“Freedom beckons.”

“These attitudes,
so ordinary that they can pass unnoticed, 
have a name given to them by our blunt forefathers— 
they are the Seven Deadly Sins of 
Pride, Anger, Envy, Avarice, Sloth, Gluttony and Lust.”

“Make Real, 
by your presence, 
every part of my life.”

“Keep me in your embrace 
through this night, 
and in all the days to come, 
be my Reality.”

“Our pursuit of Reality 
is an act of love.”

“Reality surrenders to love not ideas.”

“As long as we live out heart is subject to change.”

“Let me fix my eyes and my will steadily and deliberately on the new world
that I am just now beginning to see.”

“My growth depends on the walls coming down.”

“The walls I have built 
to protect my self 
will have to come down, 
so that others, 
so that you 
may come in.”

“Let me neither pass by the world at my gate nor be content with it.
Rather, let me recognize in everything a gateway to the rest.
You are to be found in what I usually pass by.”

“To see you in the world I need to see with your eyes, feel with your heart, walk in your shoes.”

“We will not enter peace until we enter into the wild strange place of silence.”

“Open my eyes to what is really important, all those delicate movements of your presence that go unnoticed by me.”

“We have entered into an intense and vivid silence that exists in itself through and in spite of the ceaseless noises of the world around and within us.
It is a silence within which we can lose ourselves, in whose ebb and flow we are able to wander lost in an imageless world.”

“Lord, you have been with me all through this day, stay with me now.
As the shadows lengthen into darkness let the noisy world grow quiet, let its feverish concerns be stilled, its voices silenced.
I know that this at long last is where I want and need to be.
I am beginning to understand what the psalmist meant when he said: "Be still and know that I am God."”

“Let me wake to a new day, to a new world,
to an utterly different way of living, to a life united to yours.”

“I am a stranger in a strange and bewildering place.
There are no familiar landmarks here, nothing that I can cling to but you.
You will have to take my hand.
Keep me in your embrace, in the dark silence of this night, and in the day to come
keep my eyes and my heart open to what is Real.”

“This book not has been written as a final word, but as a gateway to the spiritual wisdom of a specific teacher, a gateway opening on your own spiritual path.
You may decide that Evelyn Underhill is someone whose experience of God is one that you wish to follow more closely and deeply. If so a wide variety of books is available. Over a lifetime she published many books that demonstrate a constantly growing mind and spirit. Still others are being developed from her notes and retreats. You might begin with The Spiritual Life or Practical Mysticism, both of which are widely available. Pray them as you have prayed this gateway book.”

“Spirituality is not meant to be self-absorption, a cocoon-like relationship between God and me. In the long run, if it is to have meaning, if it is to grow and deepen and not wither, it must be a wellspring of compassionate living. It must reach out to others as God has reached out to us. No one better captures this dimension of spirituality than Evelyn Underhill.”

“True spirituality, she repeatedly reminds us, breaks down the walls of our soul to let in not just heaven, but the whole world.”

Each day follows the same format with three main sections:

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

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

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

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

It is a time for summary and closure.”

A sample day is:

DAY 13
 My Day Begins
 
Homily of the Funeral Mass for Fr. Rutilio Grande, Manuel Solórzano, and Nelson Lemus, March 14, 1977

If we experience a fundamental opposition between the things of this world and those of the spirit it is a conflict we have created for ourselves.

The problem is not in the things themselves, but in our self-created attitude toward them... an attitude to "things" that consists of demands, appetites, wants, an enslavement to the verb "to have," with its quiet certitude that we are well within our rights in pushing the claims of "the 1, the Me, the Mine”

We are driven by a demand either for a continued possession of what we have, or for something which as yet we do not have: wealth, honor, success, social position, love, friendship, comfort, amusement.

We are convinced that we have a right to have our abilities recognized to be immune from failure or humiliation. We come to resent anything that stands in our way. We are upset when others prove themselves more skillful than we are in the game of acquisition.

These attitudes, so ordinary that they can pass unnoticed, have a name given to them by our blunt forefathers— they are the Seven Deadly Sins of Pride, Anger, Envy, Avarice, Sloth, Gluttony and Lust.

As long as these egotistical attitudes govern our character, we can never see or feel things as they are, but only as they affect ourselves.

This is why the mystics tell us perpetually that "self-centeredness must be killed before Reality be attained."

All Through The Day

It is not “things,” it is us.

My Day Is Ending

Lord, you have been with me all through this day, stay with me now.
As the shadows lengthen into darkness let the noisy world grow quiet, let its feverish concerns be stilled.

In the silence of this night let me recognize how deep is my need for "things," how driven is my soul to protect what I have, how hungry I am for what I "want," for what I think I need.

I know that as long as I blind myself to anything beyond my own needs I will never see or feel things as they are. I will live with the unreal. Reality beyond my reach, locked into the "deadening" sins of my own need "to have."

Here in the silent darkness of this night break through my blindness, cut away at what is not Real, the ridiculous megalomania that makes me the center of my universe.

Embrace me with your Reality.”

I hope those quotes and sample day give you a feel for this volume. I have now read 19 books in this series from the 25 I believe have ever been in print. And this is one is an wonderful volume in the series. I was really blessed by this volume I have recommended it to a number of friends, if they can track it down, my own copy has already been given away. 

I have benefited from every volume I have read in the series and I have now completed more than half of them. I have now read 19 volumes in this series, and currently working on a twentieth I can state this is another great offering in the series. I find that some speak to me more than others. I can state I benefited from the month with each person being profiled. If I went back and did a volume again at a different point or season in life I might interact with it differently. I already plan to circle back to the volume on Joan and some of the others and reread them once I have completed the series, and this would be towards the top of that list.

This is a great read, it is one I really enjoyed reading. I can easily recommend this volume, and the series as a whole, and I look forward to reading others in the series. If you can track it down I highly recommend this volume.

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

Great Spiritual Teachers Series from Ave Maria Press

Books in the Great Spiritual Teachers Series:
Abide in love: the Gospel spirituality of John the Evangelist – John Kirvan 
Fear Not the Night - John of the Cross and John Kirvan 
God Awaits You Based on the Classic Spirituality of Meister - Richard Chilson 
Love Without Measure - Mother Teresa and John Kirvan 
Stay with Me, Lord: 30 Days with Padre Pio - Susan de Bartoli     
Where Only Love Can Go - The Cloud of Unknowing and John Kirvan  

Monday, 6 July 2026

Smashed, Mashed, Boiled, and Baked-and Fried, Too! - Raghavan Iyer

Smashed, Mashed, Boiled, and Baked and Fried, Too!  
Raghavan Iyer
ISBN 9780761185475
eISBN 9780761189732
ASIN B01BEGV5DO

Smashed, Mashed, Boiled, and Baked-and Fried, Too! - Raghavan Iyer

I picked this up when it was in an email blast for discounted Kindle books. I am so thankful I did. Having been raised Irish Catholic I grew up with Potatoes as a major staple in our diet. It was not unusual to have them at least 2 different ways, and for holidays often even three. I have yet to meet a potatoes or potato dish I do not like, white, red, yellow, sweet, even purple, I love them all. And this volume has some excellent new dishes and some twists on some older ones. 

The description of this volume states:

“Enjoy 75 glorious dishes from around the world with this cookbook from a James Beard Award winner featuring potato recipes for dessert, entrees, sides, and so much more!

Inspired by a diversity of cuisines, James Beard Award-winner Raghavan Iyer's passion for potatoes shines through in his continent-by-continent celebration of the amazing potato and the tastiest ways you can cook it—including soups, salads, gratins, tarts, and the Ultimate French Fries.

Features recipes for:
     • Potatoes to start—from Cheesy Tarragon Tots to Steamed Potato-Chive Buns
     • Potatoes for dinner—from Creamy Massaman Curry to Chorizo-Stuffed Hash
     • Potatoes on the side—from Kung Pao Potatoes to Hasselback Potatoes with Cardamom Butter
     • And potatoes for dessert—from Thick-Cut Potato Crisps with Dark Chocolate to Sweet Potato Rolls with a Creamy Cointreau Glaze”

About the author we are informed:

“Raghavan Iyer, an IACP Award–winning Teacher of the Year, is the author of Indian Cooking Unfolded, 660 Curries, Betty Crocker’s Indian Home Cooking, and the James Beard Award Finalist for The Turmeric Trail: Recipes and Memories from an Indian Childhood. He is a spokesperson and recipe consultant to General Mills, Target, and Canola, among others. Mr. Iyer is also host of the Emmy-winning documentary Asian Flavors. Articles by him have appeared in print and online in Eating Well, Cooking Light, Fine Cooking, Saveur, and Gastronomica. Born in Mumbai, Mr. Iyer lives with his family outside of Minneapolis, Minnesota.”

The offerings in this book are:

Introduction: A Deep-Rooted Obsession
Munchies, Morsels, Tidbits & Fingerfoods
     A Tale of Two Cities (Mustard- or Garlic-Spiked Crispy Potato Cakes)
     Cheesy Tarragon Tots
     Crash & burn Potatoes with Cinnamon Malt Vinegar
     Crispy Potato Skins with Crème Fraîche
     Llapingachos
     Nutty Potato Phyllo Triangles
     Potato Empanadas
     Potato Latkes with Clove-Scented Applesauce
          Clove-Scented Applesauce
     Potato-Stuffed Gougères
     Water Chestnut Potato Potstickers
     Rice Paper-Wrapped Potato Rolls
          Thai-Style Peanut Sauce
          Scallion-Pepper Dipping Sauce
     Savory Potato Aebleskivers
     Steamed Potato-Chive Buns
     Spinach-Stuffed Potato Cakes
          Golden Raisin-Ginger Sauce
     Sweet Potato Samosas

Savory Soups & Stunning Salads
     Locro de Papas
     Potato Soto Ayam
     Sweet Potato-Peanut Stew
     Dukkah-Rubbed Potatoes with Pomegranate Seeds
     Dutch Lettuce
     Grandmother Ida’s Russian Potato Salad
     Harissa Potato Salad
     Mojito Potato-Pomegranate Salad
     Skillet Potato Salad with Basil
     Nepalese Potato Salad
     Sandra Gutierrez’s Papas a la Huancaína
     Yukari Sakamoto’s Japanese Potato Salad

Entrees, Mains & Full Plates
     Creamy Massaman Curry
     Irish Lamb Stew
     Canadian Lamb-Potato Tourtière
     Sweet Potatoes with Chicken and Lemongrass
     Bird’s Nests with Shrimp & Potatoes
          Bird’s Nests
     Persian-Style Potatoes and Eggs
     Chorizo-Stuffed Hash Browns
     Moroccan Potato Stew with Saffron Biscuits
          Saffron Biscuits
     Potato Leek Pie
          Creamy Jalapeño Sauce
     Twice-Baked Potatoes with Bacon
     Baked Potatoes with White Beans & Béarnaise
     Mozzarella Potato Stacks
     Creamy Bow Tie Pasta with Potatoes and Basil
     Potato Lasagna
          Homemade Ricotta Cheese
     Potato Moussaka
     Potato Pierogies
     Potato-Basil Gnocchi
     Hearty Vegetable Sauce
     Stuffed Crispy Flautas
          Avocado Salsa
     Potato-Stuffed Chiles Rellenos

Small Plates & Side Dishes
     Ultimate Mashed Potatoes
     Burning Love
     Vegetable-Filled Potato Knishes
     Ultimate French Fries
          Black Bean-Queso Dip
     Kung Pao Potatoes
     Potato Gratin with Vanilla Caramelized Onions
     Cheesy Potato Gratin with Rosemary
     Pommes de Terre Anna with Cardamom & Nutmeg
     Irish Colcannon
     Hasselback Potatoes with Cardamom Butter
     Patatas Bravas
     Roasted Potatoes with Spinach Sauce
     Tea-Infused Potatoes
     Breakfast Hash with Basil
     Rosti
          Hunan Pepper Sauce
     Shredded Potatoes with Pepper and Chiles
     Potato-Habanero Biscuits
     Lefse
     Potato Tortillas
     Purple Potato Focaccia

Sweets, Desserts & Grand Finales
     Thick-Cut Potato Crisps with Dark Chocolate
     Sweet Potato Rolls with a Creamy Cointreau Glaze
     Chocolate Sweet Potato Pound Cake
     Sweet Potato Pithivier

Special Diets
Conversion Tables
About the Author

I have tried a few of the recipes. And have several others I plan on cooking. It is an excellent volume and a must have for fans of the spuds. We are informed in the ‘Acknowledgements’ that:

“To get a potato varietal to the marketplace often takes ten years or more of creation, cultivation, and testing for its survival in disparate climates. Writing a cookbook can be similar in so many ways. My passion for potatoes spans over fifty-five years, but the idea to put it in writing was relatively quicker than that. An evening dinner at a Turkish restaurant with my dear friend, who happens to be my editor, was enough to get the dialogue started over a side of potatoes. Within weeks I was on my way to start creating and writing Smashed, Mashed, Boiled, and Baked—and Fried, Too! And for that I thank the amazing editor Suzanne Rafer and my agent, Jane Dystel, for making it happen.

Researching the material was a monumental task for which I have Phyllis Louise Harris’s diligence to thank. Sita Krishnaswamy, a close Canadian friend, led me to Agnes Murphy, the research scientist who provided crucial info on the life of a tuber. Her friends became mine as I spent a long weekend getting to know all about french fries from the owners of McCain Foods—Allison McCain, his wife, Clare, and their son, Brian.”

In the introduction called ‘A Deep-Rooted Obsession’ we are informed:

“I am not petrified to openly admit my addiction. It may be the first step toward recovery but, honestly, I have no intention of recovering. There are billions like me who fall into this category. We are all victims of the easy-to-love vegetable known simply as the potato. Once its dirt-smothered skin is scrubbed and cleaned, it’s amenable to being smashed, mashed, whipped, stir-fried, roasted, baked, poached, fried, and even braised.”

That introduction ends with:

“I think it’s pretty obvious that I’m not the only one who is a potato-holic. Potatoes are the fourth-largest crop in the world, next to wheat, rice, and maize. This member of the nightshade family (which includes eggplant, peppers, and tomatoes) was rooted in the Andean civilization that cultivated it around 10,000 BCE. But it wasn’t until the Inca civilization (around 1500 CE) that the potato’s true agricultural impact was unleashed. The Incas’ intricate and sophisticated agricultural planning and tools, along with the ability of the potato to survive severe shifts in climate within short time periods, made for a winning partnership. Now potatoes are an essential ingredient in billions of kitchens in more than one hundred countries around the globe.”

The section at the end of the book ‘Special Diets’ has links to the recipes to accommodate:

Gluten-Free
Vegan
Lacto-Vegetarian
Lacto-Ovo Vegetarian

They are broken down by each section of the book and a final section with sauces. A fantastic cookbook that I can easily recommend!

Books by Raghavan Iyer:
The Turmeric Trail
Betty Crocker Indian Home Cooking
Indian Cooking Unfolded
On the Curry Trail
Gluten-Free Cooking 
660 Curries
...


Sunday, 5 July 2026

Sermon Trinity Sunday Year A Frassati Leadership Program Commissioning Most Reverend Wayne Lobsinger, VG

Sermon Trinity Sunday Year A 
Frassati Leadership Program Commissioning 
Most Reverend Wayne Lobsinger, VG
May 31, 2026

First Reading: Exodus 34:4b-6, 8-9 
Responsorial Psalm: Daniel 3:52, 53, 54, 55, 56 
Second Reading: 2 Corinthians 13:11-13 
Gospel Reading: John 3:16-18 

Mount Mary Schoolhouse Chapel May 31, 2026

(Note: This sermon really struck me. It was from the commissioning of the future leaders who had completed the Frassati Leadership Program, in the Diocese of Hamilton. My youngest two children have both now completed the program, one 3 years ago and one this year. It was an excellent sermon. It is posted here with permission from Auxiliary Bishop Wayne Lobsinger, with thanks.)

My dear brothers and sisters in Christ. It is my great joy to be here with you this morning and to share in your completion of the Frassati Leadership program.  I bring you greetings from Bishop Dabrowski.  He has asked me to assure you of his prayers and support for you.

Today the Church celebrates Trinity Sunday, one of the most mysterious and beautiful feasts of the year. We believe in one God in three Persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Not three gods. One God. Three Persons united in perfect love.

You may be wondering: "What does the Trinity have to do with my life?" Or even, "What does that have to do with leadership?"  The answer is, quite a lot.

When most people hear the word leader, they think of someone powerful. Someone in charge. The captain of a team. The student council president. The person with the most followers on social media. The person who gets everyone else's attention.  But Jesus teaches something very different.  The Trinity shows us that true leadership is not about power over people. It is about love, service, and relationships.

Think about the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Each Person is distinct, yet each is constantly giving to the others. The Father gives everything to the Son. The Son gives everything back to the Father. The Holy Spirit is the bond of love between them. There is no competition, no jealousy, no trying to be more important than the others.  Imagine how different our schools, sports teams, families, and friendships, even our world, would be if we lived that way.

Many conflicts begin because someone wants to be the center of attention. Someone wants credit. Someone wants to win every argument. Someone wants things their way.  The Trinity shows us another way: a life centered on love rather than ego.  That's the first lesson about leadership: A leader is not the person who asks, "How can I be important?" A leader asks, "How can I help others flourish?"  Jesus demonstrated this perfectly.  He is God. Yet He washed His disciples' feet. He welcomed outsiders. He forgave sinners. He sacrificed Himself on the cross.

In the world's eyes, leadership often means climbing higher.  In Jesus' eyes, leadership means bending lower to serve.  At your age, you already have opportunities to lead.  You may not run a country or a company, but you influence people every day.  Your friends notice how you speak.  Your younger siblings watch what you do.  Your teammates observe how you react when things go wrong.  Leadership isn't a position. It's influence.  And every one of you has influence.  The question is: What kind of influence are you having?

The Trinity teaches us a second lesson: Great leaders build unity without destroying individuality.

The Father is not the Son. The Son is not the Holy Spirit. They are different Persons, yet perfectly united.  Sometimes people think unity means everyone must be exactly the same. But that's not how God works.  A great soccer team needs different positions. A great band needs different instruments.

A great school needs students with different gifts.  Some of you are athletes.
Some are musicians.  Some are artists.  Some are excellent listeners.  Some are natural organizers.  Some are brilliant at science.  Some are kind and compassionate.  Leadership means helping different people work together toward something good.  The best leaders don't make everyone become copies of themselves. They help others discover their gifts.  The Trinity reminds us that diversity and unity can exist together.

We have a wonderful example of this kind of leadership in Pier Giorgio Frassati.  Pier Giorgio lived just over 100 years ago, and he died when he was only 24 years old. He loved mountain climbing, sports, laughter, and spending time with friends. In many ways, he was a lot like the young people sitting here today.  Yet what made him a leader wasn't that he was famous or powerful. It was the way he loved people.

Many of his classmates came from wealthy families, and so did he. But instead of spending all his time thinking about himself, he regularly visited the poor, the sick, and the lonely. Sometimes he even gave away money that he had been given for himself. His friends noticed that wherever Pier Giorgio went, people felt valued and cared for.  He wasn't the loudest person in every room. He didn't seek attention. He led by example. 

One of his famous sayings was, "To live without faith, without a heritage to defend, without a steady struggle for truth, that is not living but merely existing."  That's a challenge for all of us. Are we merely existing, or are we living with purpose?

Pier Giorgio's leadership reflected something of the Trinity. Like the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, his life was focused on others rather than himself. He built friendships, brought people together, and used his gifts in service of those who needed help.

When his funeral procession passed through the streets, his family expected only a few people to come. Instead, thousands of poor people appeared: people whom Pier Giorgio had quietly helped over the years. His parents hardly knew who they were. But those people knew him. They knew they had been loved.

That is real leadership.  Not having everyone know your name.

But making sure people know they are loved.

On this Trinity Sunday, the Church invites us to see that leadership is not first about authority; it is about relationship, service, and love. The Holy Trinity shows us what perfect love looks like, and young saints like Pier Giorgio Frassati show us that this kind of leadership is possible even for ordinary young people. The question is not whether you are old enough to lead. The question is whether you are willing to love as Christ loved.

Mount Mary Schoolhouse Chapel May 31, 2026



Saturday, 4 July 2026

ERROR 404: LOVE NOT FOUND: A Romeo and Juliet Reboot - Ty Balt - Shakespearean Shorts

ERROR 404: LOVE NOT FOUND: A Romeo and Juliet Reboot  
Shakespearean Shorts
Ty Balt
ISBN 979-8313851433
ASIN B0F1CHY9K5
ASIN B0DZRSZ2XT

ERROR 404: LOVE NOT FOUND: A Romeo and Juliet Reboot - Ty Balt - Shakespearean Shorts

I have long been a fan of Shakespeare. And have enjoyed many adaptations of the source play for this work over the years. I have been working through a different series from this publisher when I stumbled upon these stories. I picked both that are available up right away, but it did take me a while to get around to reading it. I am in my mid 50’s, and my youngest two children are currently 18 and 15. Both of them have a fondness for the bard. For the last few years we have been reading the plays, as they have had to do them in school, or because we had plans to go see them at the Stratford Festival. I have also been working through Ted Neill’s 
Post Apocalyptic Space Shakespeare Series. And starting in on this series was the next logical step.

My first reaction was WOW! I absolutely loved this volume. The description of this book states:

“In a world of rival AI corporations, love was never part of the code.

Romeo and Juliet were on opposite sides of a tech war, but their secret connection changed everything. Their AIs watched. Learned. Adapted. Then the system crashed—and so did their world.

A darkly comic, cyberpunk reimagining of Shakespeare’s most famous tragedy, Error 404: Love Not Found, A Romeo and Juliet Reboot is a story of love, deletion, and the dangerous question—can an AI truly die?

Error 404: Love Not Found is the second instalment of our new series Shakespearean Shorts. Tell us what other classic stories you'd like to see rebooted!”

The chapters or scenes in this work are:

      1: The Feud – A War of Algorithms
      2: The Hacker Masquerade
      3: Love in the Time of Algorithms
      4: The AI Love Triangle
      5: The Duel Goes Digital
      6: Exile from the Code
      7: The Corporate Marriage Proposal
      8: The AI Ghost in the Machine
      9: The Cyber War Escalates
      10: The Last Upload
      11: Into the Lion’s Den
      12: The Trap
      13: The Code Breaks
      14: Error 404 – Love Not Found

The story opens with these words:

“The war wasn’t fought with bullets. It didn’t leave bodies on battlefields. It didn’t need to. Montague Systems and Capulet Industries were engaged in a different kind of warfare—one waged in boardrooms, server farms, and the hidden corridors of cyberspace. The casualties? Privacy, autonomy, free will. The prize? Total market domination.”

Then later:

“Montague Systems – The House of Algorithms

Romeo Montague sat hunched in his dimly lit cubicle, the glow of six monitors reflecting off his tired face. The Montague Systems headquarters was an architectural monolith of glass and steel, a temple to Big Data where creativity went to die. The walls were lined with digital screens flashing stock prices, real-time consumer behavior analytics, and AI-generated propaganda slogans. “OPTIMIZE. MAXIMIZE. MONETIZE.” The company motto blinked at him in sterile blue light.

He stared at the latest iteration of MERCUTIO-5, a state-of-the-art AI designed to predict human behavior down to the millisecond before a thought even formed. It optimized ad targeting, product placement, political opinions, and, if necessary, human emotions themselves.

Romeo leaned back in his chair, rubbing his face. "We're literally building Skynet, but with better branding."”

Our introduction to the fair Juliet:

“Capulet Industries – The Ethical Illusion

Juliet Capulet sat in a high-rise conference room at Capulet Industries, watching a data visualization chart bend reality to corporate will. Floor-to-ceiling windows revealed a skyline of neon-lit skyscrapers, and the polished floors reflected the cold glow of countless screens displaying user engagement metrics and sentiment analysis reports.

“ROSLINE-3 is adjusting emotional states,” she said, her voice tight.

Paris Laine, Capulet’s golden boy and CEO-in-training, leaned against the conference table, adjusting his perfectly tailored suit. He had the kind of smirk that screamed venture capitalist podcast host. "That’s fantastic news, Juliet. If we can subtly nudge user sentiment, we’re ahead of Montague Systems by years."

Juliet forced a smile through gritted teeth. "You mean we’re basically puppeteering the human psyche. Just a tiny ethics violation, don’t you think?"

Paris scoffed, flipping through a report on his tablet. "Juliet, ethics are just PR for nerds. Investors don’t care about your moral dilemmas. They care about results."

Juliet knew this was how the game was played. Capulet Industries pretended to be the ethical alternative to Montague’s data-harvesting empire, but in reality? They were just better at hiding their claws.

She stared at the numbers on the screen. How long before the AI decided what happiness was? Or grief? Or love?”

I hope those three quotes give you a feel for this volume. Romeo and Juliet meet at an underground hackathon. And the sparks fly at first between the two and then between the AI’s they have been creating. 

In our modern age with AI seemingly being everywhere and having purchased all Ram that will be available for over a year. Massive data centres underway around the world. And a surveillance state underway in many countries. And this book could be both romantic and prophetic. 

This is an incredible twist on the Bards tale. It was so fascinating I plan to give it a reread in a few weeks. I absolutely loved this iteration of the tale of two star crossed lovers. It is an excellent read and one I can easily recommend.


Other Posts Related to Shakespeare:

Reviews of Stratford Shakespeare Productions:
The Tempest - Stratford Festival 2019 
Richard III – 2022
Hamlet – 2022
King Lear – 2023
Cymbeline – 2024
Twelfth Night – 2024
The Tempest - 2026  
Something Rotten – 2026 
Othello - 2026 
...

Reviews of Shakespeare Movies:
Cymbeline – 2014

Books by Ted Neill:
Post Apocalyptic Space Shakespeare Series:
Twelfth Night
As You Like It
A Mid Summers’s Night Dream 
Much Ado About Nothing 

Shakespearean Shorts from Pettyfeather Publishing:

Guy Hale's Shakespeare Murders Series:
1. The Croaking Raven 
2. All Our Yesterdays 
3. Put Out the Light 
4. Sleep No More 
ERROR 404: LOVE NOT FOUND: A Romeo and Juliet Reboot - Ty Balt - Shakespearean Shorts

Hostile Takeover: A Macbeth Remix - Rex MacDuff - Shakeapearean Shorts