Deep Down Things

Nicodemus, Doug Weaver
Pentecost 2012 issue.

John Tuttle John Tuttle

Creativity and Obedience

A book review of Fr. Andrew Stephen Damick's new book Arise, O God: The Gospel of Christ's Defeat of Demons, Sin, and Death.

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The Action of Grace in Territory Largely Held by Physicists
Ann Thomas Ann Thomas

The Action of Grace in Territory Largely Held by Physicists

“This is what it means to live out your faith in Christ,” I told them. “It’s hard, it’s violent,” I said, gesturing toward the statues lining the church walls’ entire length from choir loft to sanctuary: each of the twelve Apostles, holding the instruments of their martyrdom. I meant it both of the Apostles and Flannery O’Connor’s writing.

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Friday Links, October 8, 2021
Roseanne T. Sullivan Roseanne T. Sullivan

Friday Links, October 8, 2021

+ Ever wonder if Chaucer could save your life? Terence Sweeney tells you why not. And then tells why you should read him anyways.

+ Iconographer Raymond Vincent’s lectures cover the origins, the theology, and the growth of sacred art.

+ Michele McAloon interviews Katy Carl about her newly published first novel, As Earth Without Water.

+ Karen Ullo’s 2018 book, Jennifer the Damned, gets a glowing recommendation in a Tweet.

+ Ottowa’s Chaudiere Books asks resident writer Natalie Morrill six questions.

+ Prof. Timothy Bartel teaches how to read sonnets in a Catholic Literary Arts class.

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Anne-Sophie Olsen Anne-Sophie Olsen

What Lasts Recalls What’s Lost

Hazo’s poems are evidence that wisdom and delight are not enemies, but rather twin leaves off the same vine, the one balancing and beautifying the other.

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Friday Links, October 1, 2021
Roseanne T. Sullivan Roseanne T. Sullivan

Friday Links, October 1, 2021

+ “Return to Beauty” Chicago in-person conference with Sorab Ahmari, Liz Lev, and Cameron O’Hearn.

+ Trevor Merrill reviews Portrait of a Mirror: A Novel.

+ Not too late to eavesdrop on a conversation that Mike Aquilina and Fr. Colum Power had last summer about fallen Catholic writers, Jack Kerouac and James Joyce.

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Rebecca Moon Ruark Rebecca Moon Ruark

Singing Ave Maria for an Audience of One

They are tired of hearing it. I am tired of hearing it. So, I shut up. And I decide to truly listen, with my God-given ears—as much instruments of music as my mouth and throat. I close my eyes and listen, not just to Schubert’s “Ave Maria,” but to Liszt and Tchaikovsky, Bach and Brahms, Sibelius and Williams. The holy and the profane. Piano concertos, cello, violin, flute. My heart soars, and I thank God I’m witness to such breath and beauty, even if I can’t replicate it.

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Casie Dodd Casie Dodd

Seeking (Fictional) Converts at the End of the World

Spark, Waugh, and Greene all limped their way to Catholicism as the visible world failed them in ways relational, intellectual, and spiritual. Although I see enough glimpses of myself in them and in their characters to want to keep reading, I have wandered along on my own long enough to begin to have more questions.

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Friday Links, September 24, 2021
Roseanne T. Sullivan Roseanne T. Sullivan

Friday Links, September 24, 2021

+ Catholic Literary Arts Fall Series of workshops and lectures.

+ Katy Carl’s new novel, reviews, comments, & first day sales.

+ Duncan Stroik interviewed about positive trends in sacred architecture.

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Europe in These Times:  Mundiata, Munich, Me
Kevin Duffy Kevin Duffy

Europe in These Times: Mundiata, Munich, Me

Saint Mundiata’s full skeleton reclines on its side, skull propped up on a pillow-stand, kneecaps drawn toward the rib cage, jewel-eyes staring, jewel-studded arm bones leading down to the hands that grip, respectively, a chalice and a quill, bejeweled dressing gown hanging loosely over the clavicles down to the ankles. The display’s decadence evidences the devotion that must have led to its creation, just as its unflinching exposure of elemental human structure evidences an unwillingness to turn away from suffering and death, a testament to the commonalities—the high and the low, the elaborately-decorated and the stripped-of-all-flesh—that connect the faithful across centuries.

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Let Us Be Lost Always
Caleb Westbrook Caleb Westbrook

Let Us Be Lost Always

“Sometimes the desire to be lost again,” Mary Oliver writes, “comes over me like a vapor. With growth into adulthood, responsibilities claimed me, so many heavy coats. I didn’t choose them, I don’t fault them, but it took time to reject them.”

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

Friday Links, September 17, 2021

+ Now visible: a Cupid formerly overpainted on a well-known Vermeer.

+ Online seminar on Sigrid Undset’s Vows, with Katy Carl, starts Oct. 4.

+ Three ways Dante’s 700th death anniversary was observed this week.

+ Recent publications by Dappled Things editors and a contributor.

+ A retreat for artists and art lovers, with Dana Gioia and Kevin Turley, Sept 29.

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Denise Trull Denise Trull

Kanye Is Still Fresh

My son told me, “You will like it. It is for his mom, Donda. Listen to the first track.” My initial thought was, “Kanye had a mother?”

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Christopher Petter Christopher Petter

This is America

Michael Horan’s long poem, America, America reflects deeply on the events of 9/11 and its aftermath. Over the next few days, Dappled Things will have the privilege of bringing the poem to you in all three parts.

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Jeffrey Essmann Jeffrey Essmann

Writing My Own Magnificat

I said out loud to the ceiling, to the sky, to the heavens, “They wrote it down! THEY WROTE IT DOWN!!!” My faith in God may have been weak, nearly dead, but I still recognized the faith at the heart of all good writing, real writing.

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