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éclair - n. a divine little french pastry

éclairer - v. to enlighten, to light up

éclaire - n. an electronic version of Claire


Wednesday, January 1, 2014

There's nothing like a good book...

The week between Christmas and New Year’s seems to always be the week when I read more books than any other time of year.  It’s that wonderful stillness of this week that allows for a few extra hours of indulgent reading.  No sporting events, no birthday parties, no shopping, no school.  Just staying home and playing, resting, recovering!

So, I wanted to share with you the book I just finished.  It is called “Pope Awesome and Other Stories: How I found God, had kids and lived to tell the tale” By Cari Donaldson.  It was such an awesome book I couldn’t put it down and it merits sharing.  I bought this book for Brett as a Christmas present, but wanted to flip through it the other day and make sure it still looked as intriguing as I thought it would be when I gave it the ten-second glance over at our church’s bookstore last week.  Well, once I read the preface and started the first chapter, I couldn’t put it down. So, I finished it.  Now Brett is the recipient of a used book.  Sorry honey!!

This book is written by a woman who converted to Catholicism in her early thirties, and it tells her very unlikely and insanely comical journey from a spiritually lost individual to one who found her faith and purpose in life.  It is so funny that I laughed until I cried during several parts of the book.  Brett came in to the bedroom as I was laugh-crying hysterically the other night and said, “What in the world is wrong with you?”  I almost couldn’t explain I was laughing so hard.  The author has a perfectly sarcastic and witty tone that makes a book about a subject that is actually quite serious so enjoyable, relatable and approachable.  The book covers about fourteen years of her life beginning on the day she married the love of her life in “a twenty-minute Presbyterian ceremony that I insisted must be scrubbed clean of all references to Jesus.”  Although they began their marriage with an emphatic proclamation they would never have children, her faith journey makes her completely reevaluate her vision and her concerns about children, marriage, and life in general.  The author began her faith journey looking for a path to God, knowing for certain she would not find it in Catholicism, then after eliminating all other faith and belief systems, realized to her dismay that there was really only one left, and once she opened herself up to it, fell in love with the beauty of the Catholic faith.  She now has six little ones and says that by the grace of God her life is more magnificent than anything she could have possibly ever dreamed up for herself.  Her story is so touching, so real and so uplifting. 

There are so many funny anecdotes in this book.  It is hilarious to read the account of someone you know to now be a devout and enthusiastic Catholic describe her previous irritation (prior to her conversion) with all those crazy Catholics for standing vigil at church in anticipation of the death of John Paul II back in 2005.  And all the TV coverage and hoopla!  On the day John-Paul finally passes, the author is in a local café getting lunch with her husband and daughter and looks up to see on the TV that he has passed, and she inexplicably bursts into tears.  She runs to the bathroom in embarrassment and cries her eyes out, not knowing why.  Numerous little incidents like this one, along with lots of what she calls “late night internet research” eventually lead her to call her neighboring Catholic Church for RCIA classes.

I highly recommend this book to any Catholics out there and also recommend it to anyone who is friends with or a relative of someone Catholic and has always wondered, “What is the deal with Catholicism?  Why is (s)he Catholic?  I don’t get it!”  Her journey and her research address a lot of the most common questions about Catholicism and the Church’s often misunderstood teachings and positions (on marriage, on birth control, on Mary, on the papacy, for example).  It’s not a book meant to convert anyone, but certainly approaches the Catholic faith from an outsider’s perspective and then narrows in on what I (and most Catholics, I presume) find to be the most significant and most beautiful aspects of our faith. 

As with all great books (and aren’t there SO MANY of them!), this one will inspire you and make you a better person.  (And in the off chance it doesn’t, it will give you a good laugh or two!).

You can order and autographed copy of this book directly from her at clan-donaldson.com or get a copy on amazon where it is available in paperback or on kindle.


Happy New Year, friends!  And happy reading in the new year!  If you have any book suggestions for me, please send them my way!

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