Saturday, 31 October 2020

Akita: The Tears And Message Of Mary by Fr Teiji Yasuda OSV


Paperback: Written by Father Teiji Yasuda, chaplain of the convent in Akita, this book was first published in Japanese with the Imprimatur of the Bishop of Niigata. On 14 March 1989, the Most Reverend John S Ito DD, retired Bishop of Niigata who knows English and who had personally read this English translation approved it in the following words:

"I recommend this book and testify that its contents are true."

The 101 Foundation is dedicated to making Our Lady's messages known. Many well substantiated miracles confirmed these recent apparitions and messages of Our Lady given to the world at Akita, Japan. Among them were 101 miracles of tears which flowed from the eyes of a wooden statue which became animated and spoke: "If men do not repent and better themselves, the Father will inflict a terrible punishment on all humanity. It will be a punishment greater than the deluge, such as one will never have seen before. Fire from the sky will wipe out a great part of humanity..."

As angels intervened at Fátima and gave part of the message, so too at Akita. And the angel said that the number of miracles of tears was precisely 101 because that figure represents the mystery of Our Lady as the New Eve, "Mother of all the living" by the gift of Grace, as Eve is mother of all because she was the first woman. The zero, a circle, represents God with Eve on one side and Mary on the other. Eve had separated us from God by sin. Through Mary, Eve and all her children are restored to God. Thus 101 becomes a symbol of the Incarnation, of Mary's universal motherhood, of Her mediation of Grace.

At Fátima, Our Lady told us that Jesus has "entrusted the peace of the world" to Her. This we see in 101 with Eve on one side representing all men on earth now threatened with a terrible chastisement unless they turn to God, and Our Lady on the other, interceding and coming to tell us what we must do to avoid the chastisement and be joined to God.

Unlikely as it may seem at the moment that the world will respond (any more than it did after the great miracle of Fátima) the chastisement CAN BE averted. This time our Mother presents Her message in tears and She says that already the chastisement has been held back because of the sacrifices and prayers of special souls and Her own offering of the Passion of Her Son to the Father. This is the ultimate meaning of 101. 

Akita: The Tears and Message is translated from the Japanese by John M Haffert and published by 101 Foundation Inc, Asbury, New Jersey 08802-0151, USA. 

Thursday, 29 October 2020

A Killing In Amish Country: Sex, Betrayal, and a Cold-blooded Murder (True Crime) by Gregg Olsen and Rebecca Morris

Paperback: He who commits adultery lacks sense; He who does it destroys himself. - Proverbs 6:32

AN OLD WAY OF LIFE

Thirty-year-old Barbara Weaver was content to live as the Amish have for centuries - without modern conveniences - but her husband, Eli, wanted a life beyond horses and buggies. Soon he gave in to the temptation of technology, and found ways to go online and meet women. On 2 June 2009, when Barbara was found dead, shot in the chest at close range, all eyes were on Eli...and his mistress, a Conservative Mennonite named Barb Raber.

A NEW KIND OF BETRAYAL AND DEATH

Barb drove Eli to appointments in her car. She gave him everything he asked for: a laptop, rides to his favourite fishing and hunting spots and sex. Above all, she gave him the cell phone he would use to plan a murder. The Weaver case marked only the third time an Amish man was suspected of killing his wife in more than two hundred years in America. 

But the investigation raised almost as many questions as it answered: Was Barb Raber the one who fired the fatal shot? Or was Barbara Weaver dead before someone entered the house? What did Eli's friends, family, and church really know about him? And will life among the "Plain People" ever be the same?

A Killing in Amish Country (2016) is a stunning account of what happens when the dark side of human nature collides with the gentle and religious world of the Amish. Their research, not only on the legal and police procedural aspects of the crimes, but the details of Amish life most of us never see, is spot on and makes for an intense, educational and addictive read. The book includes eight pages of dramatic photographs.

About the authors: Gregg Olsen has been a journalist and investigative author for more than twenty years. He is the recipient of numerous writing, editing, and photojournalism awards, including citations of excellence from the Society of Professional Journalists (Sigma Delta Chi), the International Association of Business Communicators, Washington Press Association, Society of Technical Communication, and the Public Relations Society of America. He is the author of Abandoned Prayers, If I Can't Have You, A Twisted Faith, and Cruel Deception, among others. A resident of Washington state, Olsen has been a guest on dozens of national and local television shows, including educational programs for the History Channel, Learning Channel, and the Discovery Channel. Olsen also appeared several times on CBS's 48 Hours, MSNBC's Special Edition, Entertainment Tonight, Sally Jesse Raphael, Inside Edition, and Extra. He has been featured in USA Today, Salon Magazine, Seattle Times, and the New York Post

Rebecca Morris is the New York Times bestselling author of Bodies of Evidence, Overkill and If I Can't Have You: Susan Powell, Her Mysterious Disappearance and the Murder of Her Children (all with Gregg Olsen). She is the author of the bestseller Ted and Ann: The Mystery of a Missing Child and Her Neighbour Ted Bundy, and Bad Apples: Inside the Teacher/Student Sex Scandal Epidemic. As an award-winning reporter Rebecca Morris worked in journalism in New York City; Portland, Oregon; and Seattle, Washington. She lives in Seattle.

The Dignity of The Human Person


Wednesday, 28 October 2020

The Blessed Gerondissa Makrina +1995


Paperback: We need to greatly avoid idle talk because idle talk is like a wildfire, as the holy Fathers say. Just as we have seen entire forests burned down in Penteli and in Kiphisia, and their hills left bare, so does idle talk remove everything good from inside our souls. It distances all that is good from our hearts, and we remain like rusted tin. - Counsel from Blessed Geronda Makrina 

With the printing of this small booklet, it is out desire to bring the Christ-loving and monastic-loving Christians in contact with the person of the Most Reverend and Most longed-for Mother and Grandmother of our sisterhood, the Ever-memorable Gerondissa Makrina (1921-1995), who was the Abbess of the Holy Monastery Panagia Odigitria in Portaria, Volos for thirty-two consecutive years. 

This booklet consists of short excerpts of the life and teachings of the blessed Gerondissa Makrina from the book, Logia Kardias, which was first published in Greek by the Holy Monastery Panagia Odigitria in Portaria, Volos.

It is our good hope that with the help of our Panagia and the Honourable Forerunner, our Monastery will be able to publish the English translation in 2016 with the title, Words of the Heart.

We pray that the acquaintance of pious Christians with the blessed Gerondissa Makrina may be for spiritual edification and support in the personal struggle of each of us on our journey toward the acquisition of the likeness of God.

Gerondissa Efpraxia
St John the Forerunner
Greek Orthodox Monastery
Goldendale, WA

Tuesday, 27 October 2020

Soulless: Inspector Mislan And The Faceless Girl by Rozlan Mohd Noor


Paperback:      From beasts we scorn as soulless
                             In forest, field and den,
                            The cry goes up to witness
                            The Soulessness of men.

                            - William Inge

In a sleazy back alley of Kuala Lumpur, the body of a young woman is found. She was killed in a sadistic manner and her features erased beyond recognition.

Inspector Mislan Latif and Detective Sergeant Johan Kamaruddin of Special Investigations (D9) take the case. What puzzles them is that no one had lodged a missing-persons report, so the young woman is not only faceless but completely unknown.

An autopsy by Dr Safia reveals a mysterious object lodged in the victim’s stomach. Had she been killed as a result of a theft gone wrong? If so, why the need to erase any trace she ever existed?

Becoming increasingly troubled by the case, Mislan and Johan make a trip across the border and uncover a sinister network that serves some very well-connected individuals—people who will now stop at nothing to keep their inhuman activities a secret.

Soulless (2017) is the fourth instalment in the excellent Inspector Mislan series set in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The first three books in the series are 21 Immortals (2010), Duke (2011) and UTube (2012). The fifth and latest instalment - Philanthropists - was recently published on 2 October 2020 by Fixi Novo.

About the author: Rozlan Mohd Noor served as a police officer in the Royal Malaysia Police for 11 years as a crime Investigator and court prosecutor before joining the private sector. In 2010, his first Inspector Mislan novel was short-listed for the Commonwealth Writers' Best First Book Award. Subsequently, he published two other Inspector Mislan and several other crime/thriller novels. He currently resides in Thailand, leisurely enjoying his passion in writing novels. 

Rating: 5/5

Monday, 26 October 2020

Fratelli Tutti: On Fraternity and Social Friendship Encyclical Letter by Pope Francis


Paperback: Pope Francis’s third encyclical is inspired by the life and example of St Francis of Assisi, his love for the poorest and his openness to all. The text was completed during the global Coronavirus pandemic and speaks to the possibility that through it we may rediscover a sense of common humanity. The Pontiff begins with an analysis of those trends which militate against fraternity and friendship in the world and responds through an in-depth exegesis of the parable of the Good Samaritan, calling us to follow his example of care for others no matter where they are from. Pope Francis sends out a clarion call to discover new ways of engaging in politics, society and religion that are grounded in a culture of encounter and friendship rather than fear and self-interest.

Pope Francis’s third encyclical is inspired by the life and example of St Francis of Assisi, his love for the poorest and his openness to all, and was completed during the global Coronavirus pandemic.

About the author: Pope Francis is, as the Bishop of Rome, the head of the Catholic Church and sovereign of the Vatican City State. Francis is the first Jesuit pope, the first from the Americas, the first from the Southern Hemisphere, and the first pope from outside Europe since the Syrian Gregory III, who reigned in the 8th century. (Wikipedia)

The Noble Martyr: A Spiritual Biography of St Philip Howard by Dudley Plunkett


Paperback: I hope that this work will speak to those who might be interested not only in the historical person that was Philip Howard, Earl of Arundel, but also in how the lives of saints like Philip have relevance for our society and culture today. - Dudley Plunkett 

The witness and example of their martyrs inspired the courage and endurance of Catholic recusants in England for generations. 

The prayers and example of the martyrs also speak particularly to our own world; as most Englishmen in Elizabethan times accommodated themselves to the prevailing religious climate, so in our own day people accommodate themselves to the secular climate for much the same reasons, though not yet at risk of the same cost. 

Many of these saintly men and women have long been forgotten, but in this book, Dudley Plunkett presents one outstanding layman, noble, saint and martyr, uncovering from the texts that St Philip studied, translated and wrote - mainly during his ten-year long imprisonment in the Tower of London - a deeper story than just a simple outline of his life. 

The Noble Martyr (2019) attests the saint’s vibrant spirituality and persevering life of virtue, while appealing for a fuller appreciation of the Elizabethan martyrs and of the relevance of their lives and sufferings to spiritual renewal in our own time.

The more affliction for Christ in this world, the more glory with Christ in the next. - St Philip Howard, 22 June 1587

About the author: Dudley Plunkett has taught at Southampton University and the Maryvale Institute in Birmingham. He is the author of several books on spiritual and religious topics, including Heaven Wants To Be Heard (1997)Dudley Plunkett attributes his conversion to Catholicism to a trip to Medjugorje. He has written about Medjugorje for many publications in England and the United States, and is a director of the Medjugorje Network in England. He lives in Southampton, England.

Saturday, 24 October 2020

Nazarena, An American Anchoress by Thomas Matus


Paperback: The hermit's vocation is a rare jewel in the church. Nazarena's story is a shining example of just how costly it can be to remain faithful to the unique call heard in the deepmost heart of each one of us. - Michael Downey, author of Trappist: Living in the Land of Desire (1997)

In this book, Thomas Matus tells the true story of one woman's struggle to live her extraordinary vocation to a life of total silence, solitude and hiddenness. 

A gifted musician and ordinary Sunday Catholic, Nazarena, née Julia Crotta, had a vision of Jesus calling her to the desert while in college in Connecticut. After much searching and numerous attempts to have her unique vocation recognized by the church, she eventually found her "desert" in a small room at the monastery of the Camaldolese Benedictine nuns in Rome. She lived there as an anchoress for forty-five years until her death in 1990. 

Radical yet traditional, exceptional yet simple, Sister Nazarena had a long and spiritually fruitful ascetic life. Nazarena, An American Anchoress (1998) uses excerpts from her own letters of spiritual counselling and material taken from interviews with those who knew her to tell the remarkable story of her life of silence and prayer.

About the author: Father Thomas Matus is a Camaldolese Benedictine monk who for the last thirty years has lived at the monastery of Camaldoli in Italy and at a Christian ashram in south India. He is the author of several books including Yoga and the Jesus Prayer Tradition: An Experiment in Faith (1984) and is coauthor of Belonging to the Universe: Explorations on the Frontiers of Science and Spirituality (1991). 

Friday, 23 October 2020

Miracles Do Happen by Briege McKenna OSC with Deacon Henry Libersat


Paperback: Some people believe in the theory of miracles. Sister Briege McKenna believes in the reality of miracles because she sees them happen. 

Since 1970, when she was healed of crippling arthritis, Sister Briege has experienced more of the extraordinary ways of the Spirit than most Christians ever imagine. Today her healing ministry takes her all over the world - from huge rallies in Latin America to retreats in Korea. 

Miracles Do Happen (1987) tells the story of Sister Briege's encounter with the healing power of God. It shares her insights about faith for healing, the power of the Eucharist in healing, the vital importance of prayer, and the ministry of the priesthood. Most of all, it points the way to closer fellowship with Christ, greater knowledge of his love, and deeper faith in his power to do the impossible.

About the authors: Sister Briege McKenna OSC was born in Ireland and entered the Sisters of St. Clare at the age of fifteen. Following her final vows and after suffering for more than three years with rheumatoid arthritis, she was transferred to her community in Tampa, Florida with the hope that the Florida sunshine would relieve her suffering. At the age of twenty-four, she was miraculously and instantaneously healed during the celebration of the Eucharist and some time later received, in prayer, the gift of healing for which she has become so widely known. In 1974, again during prayer, she was given a deep spiritual insight into the mystery of the call to priesthood. Since then, bishops and priests in many parts of the world have invited her to speak and minister at their retreats and conferences.

Sr Briege ministered to priests in collaboration with Fr Kevin Scallon CM for over forty-two years until his death in June 2018. She now continues with this ministry. Her books Miracles Do Happen and The Power of the Sacraments (1996) have been translated into many languages throughout the world.

******

Deacon Henry Libersat was ordained for the Orlando Diocese in 1986 by the late Bishop Thomas J Grady. He ministers at St. Mary Magdalen Parish, Altamonte Springs, Fla. His ministries include preaching, ministry to persons in assisted living, Men’s Bible Study, and evangelization. He serves as volunteer chaplain to the Winter Springs (FL) Police Department. He also served for three years as volunteer chaplain to the McCoy US Army Reserve, 377th Military Intelligence Battalion, Orlando.

Deacon Henry is a veteran of more than 50 years in Catholic journalism. In 1999 he retired as editor and general manager of The Florida Catholic, a newspaper which he and his staff developed into six editions for six of Florida’s seven dioceses. In addition to this blog, he writes a monthly “Chaplain’s Chat” for police personnel. 

He is the author of several books including Catholic and Confident (2012). He served as coauthor for Sister Briege McKenna’s international best seller, Miracles Do Happen (50 languages). He is the author of a four-volume series on the Catholic Catechism under the general title, A Catholic Confession of Faith. 

Deacon Henry was born of Cajun parents on 4 July 1934 in Groves Texas. He grew up in Cajun Louisiana where he met his wife, Peg. They were married 4 June 1952. They have seven married children, 21 grandchildren, and 36 great-grandchildren.

The Power Of Stories by Elif Shafak

My Life With Murderers: Behind Bars With The World's Most Violent Men by David Wilson


Paperback: Professor David Wilson - the UK's leading criminologist - has spent his professional life working with violent men - especially men who have committed murder. Aged twenty-nine he became, at that time, the UK's youngest ever prison Governor in charge of a jail and his career since then has seen him sat across a table with all sorts of killers: sometimes in a tense interview; sometimes sharing a cup of tea (or something a little stronger); sometimes looking them in the eye to tell them that they are a psychopath.

Some of these men became David's friends; others would still love to kill him.

My Life with Murderers (2019) tells the story of David's journey from idealistic prison governor to expert criminologist and professor. With experience unlike any other, David's story is a fascinating and compelling study of human nature.

My Life with Murderers was shortlisted for the Saltire Non-Fiction Book of the Year 2019.

About the author: David Wilson is Emeritus Professor of Criminology and the founding director of the Centre for Applied Criminology at Birmingham City University. Prior to taking up an academic appointment in 1997, David was a prison governor and at twenty-nine became the youngest governing governor in England.

Professor Wilson appears in the print and broadcast media as a commentator and presenter. His critically-acclaimed documentary, Interview with a Murderer, won the Broadcast Award and the Royal Television Society Award in 2017. David frequently gives public, school and university lectures which he announces on Twitter and Instagram.

Follow him on Twitter @ProfDavidWilson.

Tuesday, 20 October 2020

The Priest Barracks: Dachau, 1938-1945 by Guillaume Zeller


Paperback: Remember those who are in prison, as though in prison with them. - Hebrews 13:3

At the Nazi concentration camp Dachau, three barracks out of thirty were occupied by clergy from 1938 to 1945. The overwhelming majority of the 2,720 men imprisoned in these barracks were Catholics--2,579 priests, monks, and seminarians from all over Europe. More than a third of the prisoners in the priest block died there.

The story of these men, which has been submerged in the overall history of the concentration camps, is told in this riveting historical account. Both tragedies and magnificent gestures are chronicled here--from the terrifying forced march in 1942 to the heroic voluntary confinement of those dying of typhoid to the moving clandestine ordination of a young German deacon by a French bishop. Besides recounting moving episodes, the book sheds new light on Hitler's system of concentration camps and the intrinsic anti-Christian animus of Nazism.

How does the experience of the priests at Dachau compare to those of their comrades who were laymen?

What were their privileges and what were their particular sufferings?

Did the persecution undertaken by the Nazis against the clergy have ideological or political underpinnings?

Did the faith and religious commitment of the priests reinforce them or render them helpless against the methodical dehumanization undertaken in the camps?

Were their moral convictions, forged by the Gospel and the Tradition of the Church, able to resist the perversion of values imposed by the SS?

Did the sufferings endured by the priests at Dachau bear fruit within the ecclesiastical institution and also outside, at the peripheries of the Church?

Recounting this strange story, this fragment of the tragedy of the concentration camps, allows us to outline answers to these various questions. 

The Priest Barracks (2017) was published on the recommendation of Jean-Louis Thiériot and is translated from the French (La baraque des prêtres: Dachau, 1938-1945 (2015)) by Michael J Miller. 

About the author: Guillaume Zeller is a French journalist. He is the former editor in chief of I-Télé, a national news television channel in France. His other two historical books are Un prêtre à la guerre about a French paratrooper chaplain and Oran, 5 juillet 1962 about the Algerian War.

Monday, 19 October 2020

The Cold Vanish: Seeking The Missing In North America's Wildlands by Jon Billman


Hardback: Until a person is found, you do not know if they are dead, their remains entombed forever under a rockslide or hidden in a crevasse, scattered by wolves or, more likely, birds. What then, when you open Schrödinger's box, and there is no cat inside at all - what if it is empty?

These are the stories that defy conventional logic. The proverbial vanished without a trace incidents, which happen a lot more (and a lot closer to your backyard) than almost anyone thinks. These are the missing whose situations are the hardest on loved ones left behind. The cases that are an embarrassment for park superintendents, rangers and law enforcement charged with search and rescue. The ones that baffle the volunteers who comb the mountains, woods and badlands. 

On 4 April 2017, a young cyclist named Jacob Gray left his bike on the side of the road, disappearing into Olympic National Park in northwestern Washington. In The Cold Vanish (2020), John Billman follows Jacob's father, Randy Gray, in his courageous and life-halting search for his son, exploring exactly what happens when someone goes missing. 

Braided around this narrative are accounts of those who fill the vacuum created by a vanished human being: a bloodhound handler, backcountry search and rescue experts, the world's foremost Bigfoot researcher, psychics, and countless others who dedicate their time to assist family members desperately searching for loved ones or, at least, a sense of closure.

By delving into the voids left behind by the missing, this book embraces the faulty memories of those who search and the histories of the lost. But, at its core, The Cold Vanish (2020) is about now and tomorrow, when another person will be lost to the wilderness. These are the stories that should give you pause every time you venture outdoors, lest you be next.

P/S Twenty percent of author royalties generated by sales of The Cold Vanish will be donated to the nonprofit Jon Francis Foundation, a Minnesota-based outfit that helps families of persons missing in the wild.

About the author: Jon Billman is a former wildland firefighter and high school teacher. He holds an MFA in Fiction from Eastern Washington University. He is the author of the story collection When We Were Wolves (1999). Billman is a regular contributor to Outside and his work has appeared in Esquire, The Paris Review, and Zoetrope: All-Story. He teaches fiction and journalism at Northern Michigan University in the Upper Peninsula, where he lives with his family in a log cabin along the Chocolay River.

Follow Jon Billman on Twitter @jonbillman.

Saturday, 17 October 2020

In Praise Of The Hiddenness: The Spirituality of the Camaldolese Hermits of Monte Corona by A Camaldolese Hermit


Paperback: Living at the heart of the mystery of the hidden life of Jesus at Nazareth, a Camaldolese hermit here sings the praises of the silent life in the desert of those men and women whom Christ calls. 

In In Praise of Hiddenness (2007), these few and very simple conferences were given to some brother hermits. They endeavour to express the meaning of their "disappearance", which in our difficult and grandiose period of history has about it a savour of modernity. 

A subsequent reflection of the author on St Romuald's (founder of the Camaldolese order and a major figure in the eleventh-century "Renaissance of eremitical asceticism") monastic experience has been translated from the Italian and added to this edition as an appendix. 

"A son of St. Romuald, you have sensed the call to disappear, as do all lovers. Hermits themselves are, in fact, lovers who have chosen the shade, a life hidden with Jesus in God... It ought to be enough for us to be known by God." 

In Praise of Hiddenness was edited by Father Louis-Albert Lassus OP. 

About the editor: Father Louis-Albert Lassus, OP (1916 - 2002), who prepared this anonymous work for publication in its original French edition and wrote the introduction, was a longtime friend of the Camaldolese Hermits. His writings include Livre de vie des ermites et des reclus du bienheureux Paul Giustiniani, Pierre Damien, l'homme des deserts de Dieu, and Nazarena, une recluse au Coeur de Rome. An Italian translation of the present work was published in 2003.

Monday, 12 October 2020

A Pathway Under The Gaze of Mary (Biography) by Carmel of Coimbra


Paperback: Sister Lúcia was a prominent figure of the Portuguese Catholic world of the 20th Century. 

As the Shepherdess of Fatima who, together with Francisco and Jacinta saw our Lady in 1917, she is regarded as a child blessed and chosen to spread the message of peace and salvation of God throughout the world.

As a Carmelite nun, she was known as as a privileged person dedicated to God and in service to His Church, one in whom people placed enormous confidence because of her role as Our Lady's confident. The contemporary history of the Church would hardly be complete without the inclusion of Sister Lúcia's role.

The references to the Holy Father and to his sufferings since the apparitions, as well as the revelation of the third part of the Secret of Fatima and the dramatic events experienced by the Church in the late second and early third millennium do not allow us to ignore Sister Lúcia. 

Reading the biography, A Pathway Under the Gaze of Mary (2013) - a biography of Sister Maria Lúcia of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart - gives us a broader perspective of Sister Lúcia's personality. Written by the Sisters of Carmel of Coimbra, it reflects their personal knowledge of her daily life and writings, and provides testimonies that mirror the depth of her soul.

This book will help readers appreciate the distinctive qualities essential to the life of Sister Lúcia: love of God, devotion to Our Lady, unconditional fidelity to the Church and commitment to the salvation of lost humanity. After all, the Message of Fátima impels each and every one of us as Christians to fulfil our pathway under the gaze of Mary. 

A Pathway Under the Gaze of Mary is translated from the Portuguese by James A Colson. 

This book is a revised second edition published in 2019 by the Blue Army Press, World Apostolate of Fatima, USA. 

About the authors: In the 19th century, following the extinction of religious orders in Portugal, the nuns were forced to abandon the Carmel and were welcomed by relatives and friends. Later, many of them entered several Carmelite convents in Spain. 

In 1933, when Portugal was already enjoying religious freedom, three of the nuns of this community who had moved to Spain, decided to return, and with the support of three other Spanish nuns, restored the community and the Carmel of Coimbra. 

Years later and after many endeavours, the Carmelites managed to recover the keys of the convent from which they had been expelled, and this was the only Carmel that the government returned to the order, thus it continued being the retirement home of a Carmelite community that lives a life of silent  for the church and for mankind.

Among the many religious who lived in the Carmel of Saint Theresa stands out Sister Lúcia, seer of Fátima, who lived in the convent from 1948 to 2005 (the year she died) having professed in 1949. 

After the death of Sister Lúcia, the Carmel of Saint Theresa created the Sister Lúcia’s Memorial, where you can see a replica of her cell, as well as some of her personal belongings, photographs, her manual work and other elements that help us understand her life path.

Saturday, 10 October 2020

The Life Of Teresa of Jesus: The Autobiography Of St Teresa Of Ávila


Paperback: St Teresa of Jesus was born on 28 March 1515, in Ávila, Spain. Her mother died when she was 14, and she entered the Carmelite Monastery in Ávila in 1535. Her life as a Carmelite, though far removed from the mainstream of modern culture, still speaks powerfully to us today.

Teresa longed for a deeper relationship with God, but due to the laxity of convent life in those days, she struggled to reconcile her desire to live for God with other relationships that kept her from devoting herself completely to Him.

Repeatedly, Teresa asked God to help her, seemingly to no avail. It was not until 1554 that she experienced the conversion that would mark the rest of her life. Coming upon a statue of the wounded Christ, Teresa was suddenly and intensely moved by what Christ had suffered for her and was overwhelmed by her own lack of gratitude for His sufferings. In tears, she begged the Lord to strengthen her desire to belong to Him, and resolved not to move from there until her prayer was granted. At that moment, Teresa felt a growing strength within her.

Teresa’s conversion, which actually occurred over a period of four years, set her on a new pathway that led her to an intimate experience of God, a God she came to perceive as a beloved Friend. In prayer, God poured out His love on His daughter, who had become a willing and open vessel as she surrendered totally to her Lord and King.

Teresa’s indomitable love for God made her determined to give her all, willing to overcome any obstacle to do what God asked of her. Convinced that God wanted it, she set about reforming the Carmelite order, establishing convents throughout Spain where religious would live according to the original spirit of Carmel.

The special gifts she received from God in prayer were often misunderstood by others - her writings even came under the scrutiny of the Inquisition - and Teresa suffered much. At times she would try to suppress the ecstasies that accompanied God’s intimate presence, even questioning herself if they had come from God. Yet God continued to lead her into the innermost dwellings of her heart, where she beheld the awesome beauty of her King.

Fortunately for us, Teresa’s superiors ordered her to document the remarkable events of her life and her original works still exist today. The Book of Her Life, The Way of Perfection, The Interior Castle, and The Foundations are her main works, detailing her remarkable pathway to God. It is through these profoundly human yet mystical writings that we experience Teresa’s spirit that inspires us to enter into an ever deeper relationship with God.

Teresa died in 1582 at the age of 67. 

In 1622, she was canonized.

In 1970, Pope Paul VI declared her a Doctor of the Church, the first woman ever to be so recognized.

Prayer of St Teresa

Let nothing disturb you;
Let nothing frighten you.
All things are passing.
God never changes.
Patience obtains all things.
Nothing is wanting to him
Who possesses God.
God alone suffices.

The Life Of Teresa Of Jesus is translated from the Spanish and edited by E Allison Peers with a new introduction by Sister Benedicta Ward, SLG. Sister Benedicta is a theologian and historian of early Christian spirituality at Harris Manchester College, University of Oxford. She is particularly known for her research on the Desert Fathers, popularizing the collection known as the Apophthegmata Patrum and has also written extensively on Anselm of Canterbury and Bede.

Signs Of Murder: A Small Town In Scotland, A Miscarriage Of Justice And The Search For Truth (True Crime) by David Wilson


Hardback: Before David Wilson became the UK's pre-eminent criminologist, he was just a young boy growing up in the Scottish town of Carluke. As a child, the brutal murder of a young woman rocked this small community, but very quickly a man was arrested for the crime, convicted and put behind bars. For most, life slowly carried on - case closed. 
But the whispers in the town were that the wrong man imprisioned; whispers that grew and grew over the years to the point that any time David would visit, friends and acquaintances they would ask, in hushed tones, 'But what are you going to do about the Carluke Case?'

Carluke believed that a young man had been wrongly convicted. 

A murderer was still on the loose.

Forty years later, David realised it was time for him to find out if the whispers were correct. It was time for him to return home, and find out the truth.

Signs Of Murder (2020) is a search for the truth.

About the author: David Wilson is Emeritus Professor of Criminology and the founding director of the Centre for Applied Criminology at Birmingham City University. Prior to taking up an academic appointment in 1997, David was a prison governor and at twenty-nine became the youngest governing governor in England.

Professor Wilson appears in the print and broadcast media as a commentator and presenter. His publishing includes Hunting Evil, A History of British Serial Killing and his autobiography, My Life With Murderers, which was shortlisted for the Saltire Prize for Non-Fiction.

Follow him on Twitter @ProfDavidWilson.

Tuesday, 6 October 2020

Hell In The Heartland: A True Story Of Murder And Two Missing Girls by Jax Miller


Paperback: Hell in the Heartland (2020) is the stranger-than-fiction cold case from rural Oklahoma that has stumped authorities for two decades, concerning the disappearance of two teenage girls and the much larger mystery of murder, police cover-up, and an unimaginable truth.

On 30 December 1999, in rural Oklahoma, sixteen-year-old Ashley Freeman and her best friend, Lauria Bible, were having a sleepover. The next morning, the Freeman family trailer was in flames and both girls were missing.

While rumours of drug debts, revenge, and police collusion abounded in the years that followed, the case remained unsolved and the girls were never found.

In 2015, crime writer Jax Miller - who had been haunted by the case - decided to travel to Oklahoma to find out what really happened on that winter night in 1999, and why the story was still simmering more than fifteen years later. What she found was more than she could have ever bargained for: jaw-dropping levels of police negligence and corruption, entire communities ravaged by methamphetamine addiction, and a series of interconnected murders with an ominously familiar pattern.

These forgotten towns were wild, lawless, and home to some very dark secrets.

Finally, in April 2018, the first arrests were made. 

Could justice finally be in sight for the girls and their families?

Please follow the case on Facebook at 'Find Laurie Bible', as run by the Bible family, for photos, information and more. There is a $50 000 reward in place. 

About the author: Jax Miller is an American author. She wrote her first novel, Freedom’s Child, in her twenties while hitchhiking across America, winning the 2016 Grand Prix des Lectrices de Elle and earning several CWA Dagger nominations. She has received acclaim from the New York Times, NPR, Entertainment Weekly, and many more. She now works in the true-crime genre, having penned her much-anticipated book and acting as creator, host, and executive producer on the true-crime documentary series Hell in the Heartland on CNN’s HLN network. Jax is a lover of film and music, and has a passion for writing screenplays and rock ‘n’ roll.

Sunday, 4 October 2020

Fall In Love by Father Pedro Arrupe SJ (1907-1991)




A Nun's Story: The Deeply Moving True Story of Giving Up a Life of Love and Luxury in a Single Irresistible Moment (True Life) by Sister Agatha with Richard Newman


Paperback: Shirley Leach lived in a world of extreme comfort, wealth and status. With every good thing life had to offer, she was due to marry the man she loved - a man who, in turn, adored her. 

But all this was to change in a single moment.

One happy day, in the midst of writing to her fiancée, her hand stopped writing unbidden; then it continued by itself, etching the words which would change her life forever: ‘…but there’s no point now, as I am going to be a nun.’ 

That bolt from the blue set events in motion that caused Shirley to lose her mother and sisters, her husband to be, her horses, her parties and life of ease.

Within months, Shirley had become Sister Agatha. But her faith in her choice never faltered, despite years of great difficulty when her Convent was close to bankruptcy. Her belief took her to London to knock on the intimidating Sir Paul Getty’s door and secure the money to ensure her community would not lose their home….and getting it. Now eighty-five, she looks back on an incredible life of love, loss and belief.

This is at once a deeply poignant tale of doomed romance, and a heart-warming story of taking a leap of faith and finding a meaning in life beyond wealth and comfort. Whether a believer or not, Sister Agatha’s momentous life will touch and inspire, whilst reminding us that it is perhaps better to accept that not everything in the world is yet explained.

A Nun's Story was first published in 2017.

About the author: Shirley Leach (Sister Agatha) had the perfect life: she had enviable wealth, a grand estate and a devoted fiancé. However, she gave it all up to become Sister Agatha. In the 1970s, she moved to the Bar Convent in York and became the mother superior of England’s oldest living convent. Sister Agatha still lives at Bar Convent. She is now a recognised public speaker and has begun to share her inspiring story across the world.