Deep Down Things

Nicodemus, Doug Weaver
Pentecost 2012 issue.

Friday Links, December 17, 2021
Roseanne T. Sullivan Roseanne T. Sullivan

Friday Links, December 17, 2021

+ Katy Carl’s 12/13 interview about her new novel is on YouTube.

+ Another YouTube video shows a tiny hermitage with a beautiful chapel—constructed by a part-time hermit part-time trekker priest in the Italian alps.

+ Reveling in unfinished conversion journeys.

+ A Christmas novella of how daily life radically changed for Catholics after the Chinese Communist Revolution and how the faith survived in one old Catholic man’s heart

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Will the Real Catholic Writers Please Stand Up?
Casie Dodd Casie Dodd

Will the Real Catholic Writers Please Stand Up?

My evangelical ancestors would be pleased to know that I’ve become obsessed with conversion; they would be less satisfied to learn that interest runs almost exclusively in a Catholic direction. As a fairly recent convert to Catholicism from the Southern Baptist tradition (through a long and painful process), I am constantly gathering more examples of other writers who made the leap as a way to shore up reinforcements against my own lingering insecurities. I’m always hopeful that the next one I find will convince me permanently that I am finally where I belong.

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A Motley Crew
Denise Trull Denise Trull

A Motley Crew

The surprising history of how Ronald Knox’s Mass In Slow Motion was written.

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Europe in These Times: Navidad, Las Islas
Kevin Duffy Kevin Duffy

Europe in These Times: Navidad, Las Islas

A lesson in unmet expectations - “Christmas Eve Mass at the Cathedral of Santa Ana in the islands’ co-capital of Las Palmas would be, I imagined, a dramatic joy, with crowd and choir, lights and palm trees, color and celebration.”

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An Invitation From Dappled Things Editor-In-Chief Katy Carl
Katy Carl Katy Carl

An Invitation From Dappled Things Editor-In-Chief Katy Carl

The short story, friends, is this: Please join me and Wiseblood Books editor-in-chief Joshua Hren for a literary reading and author-and-publisher conversation around my debut novel, As Earth Without Water, the evening of Monday, December 13. The event is cosponsored by Dappled Things Magazine and our partners in the Ars Vivendi Initiative through the Collegium Institute at Penn. I’m incredibly grateful and honored to be invited and, in turn, would like to invite you into what has developed into one of the longest and most fruitful ongoing conversations of my life.

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Friday Links, December 3, 2021
Roseanne T. Sullivan Roseanne T. Sullivan

Friday Links, December 3, 2021

+ Dante again, this time he’s inspiring a poetry contest.

+ CUA students launch a literary (and arts) magazine.

+ Joshua Hren will speak at a Scala webinar 12/9 and he’s finally got a website.

+ James Matthew Wilson’s latest, a review.

+ Rhonda Ortiz and Eleanor Bourg Nicholson talk about werewolves, fainting damsels, and genre fiction.

+ Joseph Pearce is grateful for all we all do.

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Friday Links, November 26, 2021
Roseanne T. Sullivan Roseanne T. Sullivan

Friday Links, November 26, 2021

+ Angela Alaimo O’Donnell talks back to Dante

+ Anthony Domestico critiques the first-ever biography of Elizabeth Hardwick

+ Aarik Danielsen reviews a work of graphic nonfiction about American loneliness.

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Jacopone da Todi - The Poet With a Cause
Fr. Anthony Carrozzo Fr. Anthony Carrozzo

Jacopone da Todi - The Poet With a Cause

What makes the soul of a poet? Perhaps one of the translators of Jacopone’s poems Serge Hughes puts it best in his introductory remarks to the translated texts Poetry, he claims, combines, “music, images, and conviction” to create a new appreciation for what most of us take for granted.

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Creativity Knows No Age
Denise Trull Denise Trull

Creativity Knows No Age

This young pastor, who teasingly called Ruth Grandmother, fed her soul and gave her hope that culture, beauty, and real FAITH were stronger than death. He honored her worth with conversation and songs and poetry. She responded in kind across generational lines that evaporated into thin air by the warmth of their deep and abiding love and respect.

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Taking (and Making) Stock of Criticism Today
Asher Gelzer-Govatos Asher Gelzer-Govatos

Taking (and Making) Stock of Criticism Today

The slant and gravity of cultural criticism in our age of overproduction and overconsumption tugs irresistibly at individual works of criticism, urging them to conform to the spirit of the age. What this looks like, mostly, is criticism that ends up as uniform and bland as canned soup.

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Friday Links, November 12, 2021
Roseanne T. Sullivan Roseanne T. Sullivan

Friday Links, November 12, 2021

+ James Matthew Wilson announces the first annual Summer Writers Institute.

+ Natalie Merchant sings old poems to life.

+ Can signing your name to a graffiti-ed wall affirm your enrollment in the communion of saints?

+ What do you think? Is Sally Rooney this generation’s greatest Catholic novelist?

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Death, Hope, and the Paris Morgue
Eleanor Bourg Nicholson Eleanor Bourg Nicholson

Death, Hope, and the Paris Morgue

Every story, every narrative worth its salt goes back to the primal trauma of the Fall and our deep longing for the glory—glory only accessible to us through the Cross. Novels need not always visit the Paris Morgue, but the reality of death and how we deal with it remains a critical piece of the human narrative.

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