Tuesday, 16 December 2025

15 Days of Prayer with Saint Pier Giorgio Frassati - Père Charles Desjobert, OP

15 Days of Prayer with Saint Pier Giorgio Frassati 
ISBN 9781565487185
eISBN 9781565487192
ASIN B0FPNVZQTZ

15 Days of Prayer with Saint Pier Giorgio Frassati - Père Charles Desjobert, OP

I stumbled upon this volume while looking for the letters of Pier Giorgio Frassati. I picked it up and started it the same day. After reading the first day, I recommended it to my youngest two children ages 17 and 15 at the time. When I picked it up I was unaware it was part of a series. 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:

“Pier Giorgio is one of those fiery, passionate souls who keeps his eyes fixed firmly on the prize. His life is a testament to the truth that holiness is not just for the saints of the past, but for each one of us. Despite his family's lack of understanding, he amazed everyone not just with his selfless generosity and humility, but with his infectious joy and boundless energy. At the tender age of twenty-four, just as he was about to finish his studies in engineering, Pier Giorgio contracted polio and passed away suddenly on July 4, 1925. This book will introduce you to the life of this remarkable young man, through his writings and the pivotal moments that defined his life of service.”

There is no ‘about the author’ section in the book or on the back. We also not informed specifically who the translator is. The chapters in this volume are:

Introduction: Who Is Pier Giorgio?
Preface to the English Edition
Abbreviations
Translator’s Note
1 To the Heights
2 Ready to Serve
3 Always Joyful
4 The Shady Characters
5 The Trials of Love
6 Have I Lost the Faith?
7 Sitting Exams
8 In Word and in Deed
9 The Interior Man
10 Charity Sows Peace
11 Beyond the Frontiers
12 Right Living
13 Our Daily Bread
14 Time Is Short
15 The Power of Prayer

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

“Pier Giorgio’s time was divided between Turin and the family villa at Pollone, about 40 miles to the north, nestled under the Alps and close to the Marian shrine of Oropa. He was very young when he first discovered the mountains. His love for the snowy heights would never stop growing. Walking and climbing, treading new paths along rock faces still out of his reach—all this was the stuff of his dreams.

“At home, he found little support for his faith: Though his grandmother was very devout, his father was agnostic, and his mother practiced mostly out of social habit. And yet, Pier Giorgio deepened his personal prayer life, especially through the Rosary. He received Holy Communion daily, despite his parents’ worrying that he might become a bigotto, “holier-than-thou.””

“His desire to follow Christ blossomed into a fuller commitment. On May 28, 1922, aged twenty-one, Pier Giorgio became a Lay Dominican in the Church of St. Dominic, in Turin. He took the name Brother Girolamo (Jerome) in honor of the Dominican friar, Girolamo Savonarola, whose ardor and determination appealed to him.”

“In his spiritual life, Pier Giorgio relied on invaluable friendships. With his best friend, Marco Beltramo, and six other young men and women, he founded the Society of Shady Characters (Tipi Loschi), on the occasion of a memorable mountain climb, May 18, 1924.”

“The year 1925 began with the opening of the Jubilee doors by Pope Pius XI in Rome. This Holy Year, Pier Giorgio’s last on earth, would be decisive.”

“Pier Giorgio is one of those fiery, passionate souls who keeps his eyes on the prize. Convinced that he cannot merely get along but that he must live to the full, he set out on the demanding way of the Gospel. His life was lived beautifully, in service of the weakest and in humility. This simple and true gift of self, inhabited by a deep joy, was something he achieved in barely twenty-four years.”

“To discover the faith that inspires Pier Giorgio, we will also walk with the saints he was particularly fond of—St. Paul and St. Augustine, St. Thomas Aquinas and St. Catherine of Siena—but also Dante and his Divine Comedy. Extracts from the Psalms, which we sing morning, noon, and night in the Divine Office, will be like little prayers to uplift our meditation throughout the book.”

“For Frassati, love of God and love of neighbor formed a single flame, which could not be distinguished. This fire, received in prayer, enabled him to become a light to his brothers and sisters.”

“Some people were fooled. Wasn’t his joy simply the fruit of his perfect health and privileged social standing? In reality, his joy emanated primarily from his uprightness, interior faithfulness, and immense trust in God. It grew progressively, in the midst of suffering and adversity. It burst forth like rare roses among thorns—and what roses!”

“Pier Giorgio realized that joy could not come from the abundance of material possessions. For him, joy comes through contemplating creation, the snowy peaks, the flowering fields in the Alps, and the dark greens of the forests of Piedmont: “Every day, I’m falling more and more in love with the mountains and, if only my studies allowed, I would spend whole days on the mountains to contemplate, in that pure air, the Greatness of the Creator” (August 6, 1923). Nature continuously revealed to him the loving face of God.”

“Enriched by faith and placed under the gaze of God, friendship contributes to the blossoming of our Christian vocation. It is fortified by coming into contact with the friendship that Jesus himself offers us: “No longer do I call you servants, for the servant does not know what his master is doing; but I have called you friends, for all that I have heard from my Father I have made known to you” (Jn 15: 15).”

“Convinced of the value friendship brought to his faith, Pier Giorgio was not content to wait for it: He worked at it. He loved to build bridges with his disarming simplicity. His spontaneity touched the hearts of the people around him, even his political opponents.”

“In fact, Pier Giorgio acted with surprising maturity. Such maturity means accepting not to live for oneself but for others. It enabled him, despite his tribulations, to bear witness again to his love for the people in his life: “. . . I can only thank God every moment for having given me parents, teachers, and all my friends, who have all set me on the royal road of the Faith” (March 6, 1925).”

“In Pier Giorgio, faith became a source of strength when it was not the only virtue he had. Thus, two other virtues are added to faith, especially given by God to bring us closer to him: hope and charity. They adorn the letters of St. Paul and also those of Pier Giorgio. These three theological virtues support each other, forming a well-anchored vessel that endures the storm.”

“There remains, however, a bond which one hopes will, by the grace of God, bind together in this world and the next all the Shady Characters. This sacred bond is the Faith, the only strong bond, the only solid ground, without which nothing can be undertaken. And this Faith, received in holy Baptism, which made us companions on some lovely alpine hikes, will accompany us, we hope, right until the last day of our earthly voyage. May it serve as a bond to spiritually cement, by means of prayer, all the Shady Characters dispersed throughout the world. (August 11, 1924)”

“Being ready to follow Christ in sorrows and struggles, not just in moments of peace and rest—that’s how far Pier Giorgio’s faith went.”

“But there’s only true renewal when it is animated by the Gospel. To study is to accept that what is new should burst forth in our life every day. In this sense, all study is an act of contemplation that leads us to a new and better vision of the reality which surrounds us.”

“The Faith given to me at Baptism speaks to me with a sure voice: “On your own, you will do nothing, but if you take God as the center of all your actions, then you will arrive at the goal.” And that is precisely what I want to be able to do, taking as a maxim this saying of St. Augustine: “Lord, my heart is restless until it rests in you.” (January 15, 1925)”

“Like Mary, Pier Giorgio knew himself to be filled with grace. Had he not received grace upon grace? But how difficult it is in practice to abandon oneself to grace, to let it bloom in us! Such a welcome requires humility and, at the same time, makes humility grow.”

“Since a person does not know when Death will take them, it makes very good sense to prepare yourself every day to die that same day. So, from now on, I will try each day to make a little preparation for death, to avoid finding myself unprepared at the hour of death and lamenting the good years of youth, wasted in spiritual terms. And you, what will you do? What do you think of these resolutions, which I hope I can keep by the grace of God? (July 19, 1923)”

“Convinced of the power of prayer for oneself and for others, it saturated his whole day. “Is it true that when you are in your room, you spend a long time in prayer?” a priest questioned him one day. Faced with a dumbstruck Pier Giorgio, he continued: “I know it, your mother told me. Well, you’re causing her some anxiety; she gets up during the night.” “I have so many prayers to say,” murmured Giorgio. “And who is forcing you to say them?” “No one. I just have to say them” (LFJ 68). Even the man of the Church seemed not to grasp the freedom that drove Pier Giorgio to pray. It was because he felt a deep desire to pray that he loved to do it so often. It was no duty except one of love.”
 
I hope those quotes give you a feel for this volume. I really enjoyed working my way through this book. And I can see myself easily returning to it again in the future. It has also inspired me to get going and read Frassati’s collected letter. The samples in this work were very inspiring and challenging. This is an excellent volume in what looks like a great series.

I believe as of the writing of this review there have been 40 volumes in the series, the earlies I found was from 1999 through to this 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.

As stated an amazing volume about an incredible saint. Frassati is an inspiration no matter our age. His life and witness is incredible and spending this 15 days reading excerpts from his letters, from his prayers, 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.

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2025 Catholic Reading Plan!

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
Dorothy Day - Michael Boover
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 Bernadette of Lourdes - François Vayneepub
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

Monday, 15 December 2025

Praying the Rosary for Inner Healing - Dwight Longenecker - Second Edition

Mystery of the Magi
The Quest to Identify the Three Wise Men
Father Dwight Longenecker
ISBN 9781681924274
eISBN 9781681924281
ASIN B07PS1KBXB
 
Praying the Rosary for Inner Healing - Dwight Longenecker - Second Edition

I have followed Father Longenecker on social media since I started blogging 20 years ago. I have picked up a few books that he has written, and a few that he has contributed to. I became aware of this volume a while ago, and it was very timely for me to read this second edition of the book when I did. Once I got going, I could hardly put it down, but I forced myself to take my tame and only do a couple of mysteries a day.  The description of this second edition states:

“In a very practical way, Fr. Dwight Longenecker invites you to consider how each of the events in the lives of Jesus and Mary, represented by the mysteries of the Rosary, corresponds to an event or stage in your own life. Through stories, reflections, and prayerful meditations, you will uncover areas where you may need Christ's healing touch, and learn how to take them to him in prayer through Our Lady. Learn to pray the Rosary for inner healing and discover a new life in Christ that is radiant, abundant, and free.”

The chapters in the volume are:

Preface to the French Edition
Preface to the Second Edition
Introduction
How to Pray the Rosary for Healing
I. The Joyful Mysteries
     Annunciation: Conception
     Visitation: Gestation
     Nativity: Birth
     Presentation in the Temple: Childhood
     Finding in the Temple: Adolescence

II. The Luminous Mysteries
     Baptism in the Jordan: Vocation and Early Adulthood
     Wedding at Cana: Love and Marriage
     Preaching the Kingdom: The Prime of Life
     Transfiguration: The Face of Christ
     Institution of the Eucharist: Relationship with the Church

III. The Sorrowful Mysteries
     Agony in the Garden: Facing Despair
     Scourging: Facing Pain
     Crown of Thorns: Facing Humiliation
     Carrying the Cross: Facing Illness and Suffering
     Crucifixion: Facing Death

IV. The Glorious Mysteries
     Resurrection: Claiming Christ’s Victory
     Ascension: Watching and Waiting for Total Fulfillment
     Pentecost: Receiving the Fullness of the Holy Spirit
     Assumption: Dying Peacefully
     Coronation: Being All We Were Created to Be

Appendix: Prayers of the Rosary

I only highlighted a few passages while reading this, because otherwise I would of highlighted several different reflections. Some of my highlights are:

“However, praying the Rosary for inner healing is not magic. Right from the beginning, Father Dwight warns us: the course is a difficult one. The cases he mentions do not witness to 100 percent success. Rather, he calls us not to neglect the regular remedies offered by our Church, such as meditating on the Word of God, reaching for the sacraments, etc. If the world only knew! We would be running on all fours to the sacrament of confession, for it sets us free.”

“Since then the book has helped thousands of people and has continued to be reprinted. Now, some twelve years later, I am pleased that it is going into a second edition with a fresh cover and an updated text. The book has been translated into Polish, Croatian, and French, and we would love to see it published in Spanish, Italian, and other languages.”

“There have always been doctors and wise people who have exercised healing gifts. There have also been shamans and showmen who would “heal” people through the power of suggestion and hypnosis. Others have healed through the power of demons, and their healing has always come at a price.”

“There’s no point trying to deny the fact of sin. Sin is as ancient as the Garden of Eden and as fresh as today’s headlines. Sin is a fact of life. It’s the one Christian belief that no one can deny, because we all experience it firsthand every day.”

“When Mary’s Son died on the cross, he took on the final battle with humanity’s sin. Sin rose up and killed the one who was sinless. In this sacrifice, Jesus Christ took on himself the cancer of sin, and he suffered its result. But the Evil One overestimated himself. He forgot that evil cannot extinguish the good.”

“Mary is like the mother who goes with her injured child as they enter the hospital to be healed. Mary is like the loving sister or aunt who sits by the bedside as we endure a long illness. She is like one of Mother Teresa’s Missionaries of Charity who care for the dying until the surgeon can come. She doesn’t heal us. Jesus does. She is there as the vitally important sister, mother, nun, nurse, and friend. Her prayers are those of a mother for her children.”  

“Healing Example
When I was living in London, I was invited, along with some other Christian leaders, to a preview of Mel Gibson’s film The Passion of the Christ. It was rumored that Gibson might be present to ask for our comments and reactions. Sure enough, after the film a quiet, unassuming man took the stage as the lights came up. Gibson asked for our views and took notes for the final editing of the film. We also had the chance to ask the famous actor and director about his intentions.

He shared his own witness, of how he was brought up as a Catholic and then went his own way. He fell into the big-time temptations of Hollywood, wealth, and fame. Then he went on retreat and came face-to-face with himself through a deep reflection on the mystery of the crucifixion. He realized that his own sin and death were locked into the death of Jesus Christ. Then he told us that the actor in the close-up shot of a soldier’s hands picking up the hammer and spikes and nailing Jesus’ hands to the cross was him, and that it was his hands crucifying the Lord.

For Mel Gibson, making The Passion of the Christ was a profound meditation on the death of Jesus. His spiritual life was renewed as he knew his sins were forgiven, and his career and priorities in life were straightened out. Sure enough, there were future failures, but we hope and pray that the turning point in Mel Gibson’s life will be the foundation for further turning points.”

A full sample reflection is:

Scourging - Facing Pain
Then he released for them Barabbas, and having scourged Jesus, delivered him to be crucified.
Matthew 27:26

The scourges that the Romans used were strips of leather with sharp bits of metal or broken pottery tied onto them. They ripped into the flesh and tore strips off the victim’s back. Jesus is sent out to be flogged, not as a punishment, but to appease the crowd. He is innocent of any wrongdoing, but he suffers severe physical torture. He takes not only the physical pain, but the mental and emotional anguish of being punished for something he never did.

It is easy to say that we are healed through his suffering, and redeemed by his passion. It is much harder to enter the mystery and experience what this means. As you meditate on his sorrowful mysteries, allow the Holy Spirit to take you into an understanding that is beyond words.

Think It Through
Physical pain will come to most of us at some time in our lives. If that pain is the result of something we’ve done wrong, we might be able to see the reasons and make sense of the pain. If we suffer physical pain as the result of someone else’s wrong actions, we can also see where their pain comes from and begin to understand and make sense of it. If the physical pain is the result of old age, an accident, or an injury, it also has some reason and we can learn to accept the pain.

The problem comes when we are hit with physical suffering that seems absurd. Why do people get cancer? Why do strange diseases hit out of nowhere? Why are we born with physical disabilities, or have to face diseases or crippling illnesses? If we’re not the ones suffering, we share the pain of our loved ones who are caught in the web of illness and pain, or we sympathize with victims of natural disaster, famine, and plague. We can honestly say we didn’t do anything to deserve these physical sorrows. In one sense, we’re innocent victims. That’s why the suffering is more than physical pain — because we can’t make sense of it. It seems absurd and evil.

As we meditate on Jesus enduring the cruel scourging, we are taken into the heart of evil. Evil seeks innocent victims. That is why it is so evil. If only wicked people suffered, we wouldn’t consider suffering to be evil at all. Instead, the wicked seem to get away with it and ordinary good people are hit with terrible suffering. There seems to be no justice. There seems to be no reason except that a horrible force in the world not only inflicts pain and suffering but also chooses innocent victims.

Healing Example
Sister Clare is a nun. She has been a contemplative for more than fifty years, and for most of that time she has been blind. For a time, the doctors were able to restore her sight, but then the shadows descended and she was left in darkness again. Now, as an old woman, she has become a hermit. She is alone in the woods with her God and with her suffering. In addition to the blindness, Sister Clare has curvature of the spine and is in constant pain. I have never heard her complain. Instead, she greets me with a radiant smile, and when I ask about the pain she says, “Oh, it’s not so bad!” When I ask about her eyesight, she says: “You know, I can’t bear to see very much. It is all so real — and besides, because I am blind I can see so much more that other people can’t see!”

Sister Clare doesn’t deserve her pain. On the contrary, she deserves great bliss and happiness. But she hasn’t asked for physical healing. Instead, she is able to enter into the passion of Christ and experience with him the mysterious redemption that comes with sacrifice.

Pray for Healing
Can you glimpse what is going on as Jesus is scourged? Can you sense that something far greater than we can imagine is taking place within his terrible torture? The pain is real. The torture is excruciating, the flesh screams out in agony, but within that innocent suffering a cosmic transaction is taking place. This transaction is the most mysterious and marvelous. It is beyond all words, and it can only be experienced with an inner knowing.

Now reflect on the suffering and pain you have experienced. Did it seem pointless? Maybe there was a reason beyond human reason. Does it seem absurd? Maybe God is doing things through that suffering that we cannot see. If you are in the midst of pain at this time, give it to Jesus as he is scourged. Ask that your pain might be joined with his, and ask for that pain to be used as his was used.

Have you ever caused pain or suffering to another innocent person? Through loss of your temper, violence, or unkindness, have you inflicted pain? In Jesus’ scourging, you can see how the pain hurts not just the body but also the emotions and heart of the innocent victim. If something you have done has caused pain, bring it to confession and allow Christ’s forgiveness and healing to transform your memories.

Thank God for this Gift
Heavenly Father, by the scourging of your Son, Jesus Christ, help me to understand the deeper mystery of suffering. Take my poor suffering and pain and let it be identified with his. Heal me from the bitterness and lack of faith that come with pain, and help me to know that in your eternal plan there is a deeper beauty and truth that I cannot always see. This I pray through Christ our Lord. Amen.”

I hope those quotes and sample reflection give you a feel for this volume. It is an excellent read. It is one I know I will return to. So many of the prayers at the end of each section were so fitting for my life and our current circumstances. The reflections are excellent. And the examples of people Father Longenecker has encountered and ministered with and to are deeply moving. A few sections I copied and emailed to friends and recommended the book even before I finished reading the whole book. 

This is an excellent read. And one I am certain will bless any reader. I would encourage you to give this a read and see where it leads you.

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2025 Catholic Reading Plan!

Books by Father Longenecker:
A Sudden Certainty: Priest Poems 
Adventures in Orthodoxy 
An Answer Not An Argument: Essays on Apologetics 
Catholicism Pure and Simple 
Challenging Catholics: A Catholic Evangelical Dialogue 
Christianity Pure and Simple 
How to be an Ordinary Hero 
Immortal Combat 
Is Anybody There?: The Question of God 
Letters on Liturgy 
Listen My Son: St. Benedict for Fathers 
Mary: A Catholic-Evangelical Debate 
More Christianity: Finding the Fullness of the Faith 
Mystery of the Magi 
Our Lady?: A Catholic-Evangelical Debate 
Praying the Rosary for Inner Healing 
Praying the Rosary for Inner Healing: Second Edition 
Praying the Rosary for Spiritual Warfare 
Saint Benedict for Busy Parents 
Slubgrip Instructs 
St. Benedict and St. Therese: The Little Rule & the Little Way 
The Gargoyle Code 
The Great Battle: Living by Faith 
The Path to Rome 
The Quest for the Creed 
The Romance of Religion 
The Vicar of Great Snoring 
Why Do You Believe That?: A Protestant-Catholic Conversation 


Sunday, 14 December 2025

Shard of Eden - Eric Sammons

Shard of Eden
Eric Sammons 
Saragossa Press
ISBN 9781734765618
ASIN B0FWGTNY6S

Shard of Eden - Eric Sammons

I have yet to read anything from the pen of Eric Sammons that was not very well done. From some of his excellent non-fiction works such as Holiness for Everyone and Be Watchful to his wonderful fictional short story, The Profession. Since he released that short story I have been awaiting another fiction offering from his pen. This is that volume. The description of this book states:

“In the early 22nd century, the world is recovering from the Chaos Wars—the bloody AI revolt that left more than a billion dead and the planet in disarray. From the ashes of this conflict emerges a revitalized Vatican, with war hero Pope Gregory XIX leading the way.

Now Vatican scientists have detected a mysterious signal from deep space which does not appear to be natural. To investigate, the pope commissions the Stella Maris, the first ship capable of traveling faster than light and going beyond our solar system. Captained by Chaos Wars veteran Dominic Rourke, the crew of the Stella Maris will face many trials and have their most fundamental beliefs challenged in order to solve the mystery of the Signal.”

This story is masterfully written; it really draws the reader in and keeps their attention. The story is not written linearly. We have or main story of the mission that is going to take at least 16 years to investigate and return. But we also have flashbacks that give us insight into each of the characters, their motivations, their concerns, and even their hopes. It some ways this story is epic science fiction or space opera. It is speculative fiction at its best. A small crew, a mission they might not return from, a mission with the potential to change the future of humanity. And to be honest questions.  

While reading this; I though often of the Catholic Truth Society volume; Artificial Intelligence by Father Andrew Pinsent and Sean Biggins and Robert Reed. And the story can be interpreted a few different ways. I would love to work through this with a group and compare the interpretations, especially after the epilogue.

This is a novel with a great plot, an excellent pace, the characters are complex and well written. Catholic Science Fiction is not something new, and some of the greats in the genre have been Catholic and woven their faith into their stories. Sammons has done that in this story. It is Science Fiction at its best! A story masterfully written that leaves you wanting more. When I read Eric’s story The Profession I wanted more stories in that work and have awaited them for a few years now. That feeling is even greater after reading this one.

Well done Eric! An excellent story I can easily recommend.

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2025 Catholic Reading Plan!

Books by Eric Sammons:
Holiness for Everyone: The Practical Spirituality of St. Josemaria Escriva
Who Is Jesus the Christ?: Unlocking the Mystery in the Gospel of Matthew
The Old Evangelization: How to Spread the Faith Like Jesus Did
Be Watchful: Resist the Adversary, Firm in Your Faith
The Jesse Tree: An Advent Devotion
Bitcoin Basics: 101 Questions and Answers

Fiction:
The Profession
Shard of Eden 


Contributed to:
Ecumenism and Interreligious Dialogue
The Passion of St. Edward, King and Martyr
The Sacrament of Confirmation - Presenter's Guide

Saturday, 13 December 2025

The Handy Little Guide to Novenas - Allison Gingras - OSV Handy Little Guides

The Handy Little Guide to Novenas
ISBN 9781639661800
eISBN 9781639661817
ASIN B0CWMB61DQ

The Handy Little Guide to Novenas - Allison Gingras - OSV Handy Litte Guides

This is the fourth of the ‘Handy Little Guide’ books from Our Sunday Visitor that I have read, it is available in eBook format and I believe it is one of 4 available digitally from the 9 in the series, though one of them is not available digitally in Canada. This is a pity. I want to state that this is a wonderful little book or booklet. It was a great little read, and one that could read repeatedly, and with new benefits each time. Second, I really wish this that others in the ‘Handy Little’ series were available as eBooks. After having read four in the series I want to read the others but almost never pick up physical books anymore, or if I do I scan them to make digital copies if I am very desperate to read them. Mainly due to my dyslexia. 

The chapters in this booklet are:

1. Discovering Novenas
2. History of the Novena
3. Biblical Connections
4. The Novena Prayer Mindset
5. Novena Fundamentals
6. Indulge Me for a Minute
7. Flexible and Joyful
8. Remembering to Pray
9. What Novena Should I Pray?
10. Gather Your Saint Posse
11. Make Friends with the Poor Souls
12. Novenas to Add to Your Repertoire
13. Novenas with Extra-Special Blessings
14. Miracles Happen

The description of this volume is:

“The Blessed Mother and the twelve apostles remained in the Upper Room in prayer for nine days after the Lord's Ascension. From those nine days of prayer, the tradition of novenas — praying for a specific period of time for a special intention — was born. The word "novena" is derived from the Latin novem, meaning nine.

The Handy Little Guide to Novenas is your easy-to-read, down-to-earth introduction to this beautiful devotion. In this brief booklet, author and novena enthusiast Allison Gingras helps you understand and practice this ancient, yet totally relevant, form of prayer. You'll learn:
  • The fundamentals of novenas — when to pray them, for how long, and to whom
  • The biblical connections of novenas
  • The proper mindset for praying a novena, including what not to do
  • Recommendations for tried-and-true novenas”
I only highlighted a few sections while reading this volume, they are:

“The effect of that first foray into praying a novena? I learned prayer’s most significant outcome: the change it brought about in me.”

“Fr. William Saunders defines a novena: A nine-day period of private or public prayer to obtain special graces, to implore special favors, or make special petitions. (Novena is derived from the Latin novem, meaning nine.) As the definition suggests, the novena has always had more of a sense of urgency and neediness.”

“Whether the novena lasts nine minutes, nine hours, five days, forty days, or fifty-four days, all are valid ways of praying for intercession in your time of need.”

“All prayer is good, all have merit, and I guarantee all will have some positive outcome, though most of the merit and grace will be found in what prayer does to the one who prays. He may not change our circumstances, but God will certainly touch and change our hearts.”

“As with all things, the growing popularity of something good can lead to abuses and misconceptions, and novena devotions are no exception. As so wisely explained by the Marian Fathers: “There are no absolute guarantees. Prayer must always be made according to the will of God. Even Christ himself prayed, ‘Not my will, Father, but Yours be done.’ We pray with trust that God will give us what he knows is best for us.”*”

“The plan God has for our lives is perfect, and we could spend a lifetime contemplating his mind, ways, and thoughts and not make a dent in uncovering their depth. Additionally, at least for me, tremendous solace can be acquired in this famous quote attributed to Saint Teresa of Ávila: “There are more tears shed over answered prayers than over unanswered prayers.””

“All prayer should begin with the Sign of the Cross, as it invokes the Triune God—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.”

“Father Mitch Pacwa, SJ, a respected Scripture scholar, recommends three essential elements for the use of novenas: First, the prayers are specific, which helps us make our needs before God specific without telling God how to answer our prayer. Second, the prayers include an expression of trust and confidence in God’s ability to answer them. “Often we have some doubts, so we pray like the man with the epileptic son,” he said. “‘ Lord, I believe; help my unbelief.’ Prayers that rouse our trust in God are aids to the graces of faith and hope.” Third, repeating prayers and repeating them over time is helpful because we often need that length of time to move beyond merely making a request to learning to listen to God as he speaks to us in prayer.”

“In his book The Church’s Most Powerful Novenas, the late Michael Dubruiel lists three main benefits of praying a novena: It helps develop the habit of daily prayer. It reinforces a sense that God is our Father and that he loves us. It teaches us the benefits of praying with others to God.”

“Devotions help us give order and structure to prayer, and they come with blessings and graces. Some offer additional benefits in the form of an indulgence, either plenary (full) or partial.”

“The Rosary, for me, is an act of waging war against all the obstacles that fight to keep me from the peace Jesus has for me as I await his answer or the resolution of a situation or circumstance.”

I hope those quotes give you a feel for the wisdom and instruction contained within this volume. When I was in university, I was involved with Campus Crusade for Christ, there was a series of booklets by the founder Bill Bright, called Transferable Concepts, and by reading them many times you could almost memorize them and the message so that you could share it. This volume and series remind me a lot of those books.

This book and series would be excellent for High School Students, College or University Students and older adults. It is easy to engage with. Can be read in a brief time. Allison writes in an engaging manner and offers a lot of personal examples and includes a good serving of humour. An excellent little volume. 

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2025 Catholic Reading Plan

Books in the Handy Little Series from OSV:
The Handy Little Guide to Adoration - Michelle Jones Schroeder
The Handy Little Guide to Confession - Michelle Jones Schroeder
The Handy Little Guide to the Holy Spirit - Michelle Schroeder
The Handy Little Guide to the Lent - Michelle Schroeder
The Handy Little Guide to the Liturgy of the Hours - Barb Szyszkiewicz


Books in the OSV Companion in Faith Series:
For Those Who Grieve - Jeannie Ewing
Living in Peace - Father Jeffrey Kirby
The Beatitudes - Kathleen M Basi
The Lord's Prayer - T.J. Burdick
The Power of Forgiveness - Patrice Fagnant-Macarthur

Our Sunday Visitor Pocket Guide Series

Handy Little Guides - Our Sunday Visitor

Companion in Faith Series Our Sunday Visitor

Books by Allison Gingras:
The Gift of Invitation: 7 Ways That Jesus Invites You to a Life of Grace
Seeking Peace: A Spiritual Journey from Worry to Trust
The Handy Little Guide to Novenas
Jesus Heals: Finding Hope, Wholeness, and Peace
Three Persons, One God

Contributed to:
Called by Name: 365 Daily Devotions for Catholic Women
Encountering Signs of Faith: My Unexpected Journey with Sacramentals, the Saints, and the Abundant Grace of God
The Ave Prayer Book for Catholic Mothers
Living the Word Catholic Women's Study Bible RSV2CE

Friday, 12 December 2025

Anne of Green Gables Stratford 2025 A Review

Anne of Green Gables
2025
Director Kat Sandler
Set and Costume Designer Joanna Yu 
Lighting Designer Davida Tkach
Composer James Smith
Sound Designer Debashis Sinha
Fight and Intimacy Director Anita Nittoly
Movement Director Julie Tomaino

Anne of Green Gables Stratford 2025 A Review

This was the sixth of six planned shows this season my son, and I attended with shows ranging from late May to early November. This one my youngest daughter also attended, at 14 she absolutely loved this production. Over the last few years my son, who is now 17, and I have attended a number of plays in Stratford at the festival, and each year we have an ever growing list of shows we want to see. This year his younger sister found a love for theatre and this is the fourth show she joined us for. We have already looked at the announcement of next season’s shows and we often buy our tickets early in the winter. The other shows we have this season are Macbeth As You Like It, The Winter's Tale, Annie, and Goblin Oedipus

This is an wonderful production, excellently staged! 

All three of us loved this production. It was a wonderful experience from the beginning to the end. There were so many excellent elements in this production.  

The summary of the play on the festival site states:

““IT SEEMS LIKE SUCH A WASTE TO LOOK AT A PERSON AND NOT ASK ABOUT ALL THE THINGS THEY'RE THINKING AND FEELING AND WONDERING, DOESN'T IT?” 

When Anne Shirley arrives at Green Gables she’s a bit of a surprise to Matthew and Marilla Cuthbert, the brother and sister who had planned to adopt a boy to help out around the farm. With her tenacious spirit and winning personality, Anne earns their love and respect. But when Anne’s fiery temper causes sparks to fly in Avonlea, will she be able to win the town over too? Will her best friend Diana be lost to her forever? What about her arch nemesis Gilbert Blythe?

Generations of readers have fallen in love with Lucy Maud Montgomery’s timeless tale about the red-headed orphan longing for a forever home. Prepare to be swept off your feet once more by a fresh, new adaptation that will touch your hearts and tickle your funny bone.”

The synopsis in the house program states:

“Generations of readers have fallen in love with Lucy Maud Montgomery’s timeless tale of imagination, resilience and the transformative power of love. In this playful retelling of the literary classic, freckle-faced orphan Anne Shirley arrives in Avonlea, Prince Edward Island, with little more than the clothes on her back. Soon, her vivid imagination, fiery temper and tenacious spirit win over her adoptive parents, Matthew and Marilla, as well as local residents and her schoolmates, including her arch-nemesis, Gilbert Blythe and her kindred spirit, Diana Barry. In this exuberant take on the beloved classic novel, audiences meet Anne, illuminated by her signature charm and irrepressible glory—minus the show tunes!”

After the play we have an almost an hour drive home, and usually spend the time discussing the performance. One of the things we often discuss is favourite performers. We each come up with our list; this time there is significant overlap. And it is the first time we all had the same top pick. I did not include Caroline Toal
 In my list as in the lead role you would expect a good performance and hers was outstanding!

My top ranking for the performers would be:
Tim Campbell as Matthew 
Jordin Hall as Gilbert
Sarah Dodd as Marilla
Julie Lumsden as Diana
Maev Beaty as Rachel

My son's top picks are:
Tim Campbell as Matthew
Helen Belay as Josie
Sarah Dodd as Marilla
Josue Laboucane as Mr. Phillip
Caroline Toal as Anne

My daughters were:
Tim Campbell as Matthew
Maev Beaty as Rachel
Jordin Hall as Gilbert
Caroline Toal as Anne
Julie Lumsden as Diana

The full cast is:

Anne Shirley - Caroline Toal
Marilla Cuthbert - Sarah Dodd
Matthew Cuthbert - Tim Campbell
Rachel Lynde, Chorus - Maev Beaty
Diana Barry, Chorus - Julie Lumsden
Gilbert Blythe, Chorus - Jordin Hall
Prissy Andrews, Chorus - Jennifer Villaverde
Moody Spurgeon, Chorus - Josue Laboucane
Josie Pye, Chorus - Helen Belay
Jane Andrews, Chorus - Steven Hao

Understudies
Josie Pye, Chorus - Yoshie Bancroft
Diana Barry, Chorus - Ijeoma Emesowum
Prissy Andrews, Chorus - Manami Hara
Rachel Lynde, Chorus - Jenna-Lee Hyde
Anne Shirley - Allison Lynch
Gilbert Blythe, Jane Andrews, Chorus - Douglas Oyama 
Marilla Cuthbert - Irene Poole 
Matthew Cuthbert, Moody Spurgeon, Chorus - Rylan Wilkie

As mentioned all three of us loved this production. I believe it is the first show we have seen directed by Kat Sandler. Kat at the end of her director’s note states:

“Our adaptation celebrates AGG’s rich legacy while bringing something new: a fusion of ancient Greek drama, vaudevillian comedy (did you know the Avon was once a vaudeville house?), irreverent meta-fiction and swoony rom-coms. For us, this true Canadian epic is a timeless tale that celebrates our differences and revels in chosen family, belonging, the quest for women’s rights and the power of education. 

With everything happening in the world, it has meant so much to us to spend time in a story that is all about love. Anne reminds us that if we can dream it, it can become reality. She shows us the power in our differences, the beauty in our surroundings and the joy of returning to a beloved story again and again. She reminds us to be grateful for Octobers.”

The first act is a traditional presentation of Anne, We are surprised by the chorus, a book club that is reading the book, and their imagination brings the story to life for us. The second part after the intermission is updated to today’s clothing, set, technology and some language. The two parts work well together, and overall it is a stunning production. 

Originally we had tickets much earlier in the season, but had to move them because of a family situation. I am very grateful we were able to attend. It was well worth the wait. Days later, long after the show ended we are still talking about it. 

This was another absolutely wonderful production from the cast, crew and artistic team at the Stratford Festival. The show was extended twice that I am aware of well into the fall. 

Note: Photos by David Hou/Stratford Festival, or my own.

Anne of Green Gables Stratford 2025 A Review 1

Anne of Green Gables Stratford 2025 A Review 2

Anne of Green Gables Stratford 2025 A Review 3

Anne of Green Gables Stratford 2025 A Review 4

Anne of Green Gables Stratford 2025 A Review 5

Anne of Green Gables Stratford 2025 A Review 6

Anne of Green Gables Stratford 2025 A Review 7

Anne of Green Gables Stratford 2025 A Review 8

Reviews of Other Stratford Productions:
Richard III – 2022
Hamlet – 2022
The Miser – 2022
King Lear – 2023
Grand Magic – 2023
Cymbeline – 2024
Twelfth Night – 2024

Reviews of Shakespeare Movies:
Cymbeline – 2014

Related Posts:




Thursday, 11 December 2025

Set Aside Every Fear: 30 Days with Catherine of Siena - John Kirvan - Great Spiritual Teachers Series

Set Aside Every Fear:
30 Days with Catherine of Siena
Great Spiritual Teachers
John Kirvan (editor)
ISBN 9781594719752
eISBN 9781594719769
ASIN B082FW2Z8Z

Set Aside Every Fear: 30 Days with Catherine of Siena - John Kirvan - Great Spiritual Teachers Series Rebranded

This is the twelfth volume in the Great Spiritual Teachers series I have read. It is a an older title in the series, it was originally released in 1997, and rebranded in 2000’s, the physical edition was rebranded again in 2024 or 2025 rebranding’s, but not the eBook yet. Over a year ago I read my first book in the series, it was Born to Do This: 30 Days with Joan of Arc by Jaymie Stuart Wolfe, and loved it and the concept of the series. I have read one almost every month since that first one, and if I can track down all the out of print, will do so until I finish all 24 released to date in the series.

The description of this volume states:

Set Aside Every Fear is a simple, thirty-day devotional based on the classic spirituality of St. Catherine of Siena, who was declared a Doctor of the Church in 1970. In only a few minutes each day, this book offers you a glimpse of St. Catherine's passion for living steeped in the intimate connection between love of God and service to others, which has inspired people of faith for more than six centuries.

Originally published in 1997 and now back in print, Set Aside Every Fear is the perfect prayer companion for busy people who want to root their spiritual practice in the solid ground of St. Catherine of Siena's timeless--and timely--teachings on divine and human relationships. Catherine brought together two frequently unconnected charisms--mysticism and active ministry--and embodied both throughout her life. Her intimacy with God through prayer enabled her to minister to the poor and sick more deeply and to boldly speak truth to Church authorities. When the papacy fled Rome for Avignon because of political conflict, Catherine tirelessly encouraged the popes to return to Rome, and was ultimately successful.

Set Aside Every Fear offers prayers in the voice of God and responses in the voice of humanity based on Catherine's own words, which encourage you in your own practice of dialogue with God. As you reflect on the mystery of divine love, Catherine shares her own relationship with God in a way that challenges you to place your trust in God and abandon your worries as you follow him.

All the titles in the 30 Days with a Great Spiritual Teacher series contain a brief morning meditation, a simple mantra to use throughout the day, and a night prayer to focus your thoughts as the day ends. John Kirvan is the series editor.

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 16 volumes in this series currently in print. There are also a number that are currently out of print, The oldest I have seen are from the mid 90’s and it looks like they went through a rebranding and format change in the mid 00’s, and they have undergone yet another rebranding in the 2020’s including some new titles available in the series. I must admit I do not recall running across this series prior to that first volume on Joan. I have however added all of them to my ‘to be read list’. I love the most recent rebranding, and hope Ave Maria completes the rebranding across all volumes, and brings back into print some of the volumes currently not available; specifically the volumes on John of the Cross, Evelyn Underhill, Mother Theresa and others. This specific volume was released in 1995, making it one of the oldest in the series. 

The sections in this volume are:

Timeline
Catherine Of Siena
How To Pray This Book
Thirty Days With Catherine Of Siena
One Final Word

This volume begins with this quote from Catherine:

“With God as your companion
you will
live in the light of faith,
with hope and fortitude,
with true patience and perseverance,
all the days of your life.
You will never be alone,
never fear anyone or anything,
for you will find your security in God.”

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

Here, we will focus on the image of the river and the bridge—the river that most of us dispiritedly slog through, and the bridge built over it for our safe passage. And we have chosen one of several great themes, perhaps the most central that gave substance to her insights and her career as a world figure—the irreducible connection between love of God and service of humanity.”

“The purpose of this book is to open a gate for you, to make accessible the spiritual insight and wisdom of one of history’s most extraordinary women, Catherine of Siena. This is 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 and in a special way to enter into prayer through the unique doorway of Catherine’s visionary experiences, her dialogue with “Sweet Truth.” It is a handbook for a special kind of spiritual journey.”

“You will never fear anyone or anything, for you will find your security in me.”

“I loved you before you existed, and knowing this you can place your trust in my love and set aside every fear. Enjoy my love, live in me and take from me the light of my wisdom.”

“The only way to taste my truth and to walk in my brilliant light is by means of humble and constant prayer, that is rooted in a knowledge of yourself and of me.”

“You have loved me even before I existed, and knowing this, I can place my trust in your love and set aside every fear. Amen.”

“You can in no way repay me for the love I have lavished on you, except by taking the path I have given you, serving me by serving your neighbor.”

“But be clear about this: in order for you to have life, it is not enough that I have built this bridge, You must walk across it.”

“You have loved me even before I existed, and knowing this, I can place my trust in your love and set aside every fear. Amen.”

“If you keep in mind my mercy, you will not be mean-spirited with yourself or with your neighbor. On the contrary, you will be generous in your compassion, nourishing your neighbor with all that you have, all that I have given you.”

“The soul naturally relishes goodness though it is also easily blinded by self-love, and readily fails to discern what is truly good and valuable to both soul and body.”

“This book is no more than a gateway—a gateway to the spiritual experience and wisdom of a specific teacher that opens on your own spiritual path. It is an opportunity to join the dialogue between Catherine and God.

Each day follows the same format with three main sections:

AS YOUR 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 
God Speaks …

There are two ways,
and both are hard to travel.
There is the way of the river,
but there is also the way of the bridge
that I have built to cross that river.
How strange it is
that so many
still prefer to walk through the water,
even though I have built a bridge for them,
a bridge that offers delight,
where all that is bitter becomes sweet,
and every burden light.
Those who cross the waters of life
by taking the way of the bridge
see light,
even though
they are still in the darkness of their body.
Though mortal,
they taste immortality,
though weary,
they receive the refreshment they need
when they need it,
in my name.
There are no words adequate
to describe
the delight experienced by those
who choose the way of the bridge.
While still in this life
they taste and participate
in that good
which has been prepared for them
in the next.
You would be a fool, indeed,
to reject such a great good
and choose instead
to walk by the lower road
with its great toil,
and without refreshment or advantage.

All Through The Day

There are always two roads …

My Day Is Ending
I Respond …

Be my companion
through the darkness of this night.

How strange it is
that despite the trust I profess,
I still so often
prefer to take the harder path,
battling dangerous currents,
risking the shoals
rather than crossing
by the bridge you have made for me.

Point out the bridge to me again.
Let me experience light
in the darkness of my days,
a taste of immortality,
a moment of refreshment
in your presence.

You have loved me
even before I existed,
and knowing this,
I can place my trust
in your love
and set aside every fear.
Amen.”

I hope those quotes and the sample days give you a feel for this excellent volume. This volume does not have the section Night Prayer to end the day that some have. But the My Day is Ending is mostly a prayer and as can be seen from the times I highlighted and shared them above. 

I have now read 12 volumes in this series, and currently working on a thirteenth, and I can state this is another great offering in the series. I find that some speak to me more than others. With one I did not highlight as much as in previous volumes, nor even as extensive highlights. But I still greatly enjoyed it. I can state I benefited from the month with each person being profiled. And if I went back and did a volume again at a different point or season in life I might interact with it differently. I already plan to circle back to both this volume and the volume on Joan and reread them once I have completed the series, or at least those I can track down.

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

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2025 Catholic Reading Plan

Great Spiritual Teachers Series from Ave Maria Press

Set Aside Every Fear: 30 Days with Catherine of Siena - John Kirvan - Great Spiritual Teachers Series  Older Cover

Books in the Great Spiritual Teachers Series:
Abide in love: the Gospel spirituality of John the Evangelist – John Kirvan 
Fear Not the Night - John of the Cross and John Kirvan 
God Awaits You Based on the Classic Spirituality of Meister - Richard Chilson 
Grace Through Simplicity - Evelyn Underhill and John Kirvan 
Living in the Presence of God - Brother Lawrence and John Kirvan 
Love Without Measure - Mother Teresa and John Kirvan 
Rejoice in the Lord - Augustine of Hippo and Trenton Mattingly  
That you may have life: let the mystics be your guide for Lent - John Kirvan 
True Serenity - Thomas a Kempis and John Kirvan 
We Are Beloved - Thea Bowman and Karianna Frey MS 
Where Only Love Can Go - The Cloud of Unknowing and John Kirvan