Monday, September 18, 2017

Books I'm Currently Reading


A # indicates a book read for the first time
A * indicates a book started today
Books are listed by author (or series creator)

"My Daily Spiritual Companion"
by Marci Alborghetti
daily devotional reading for 2017
I liked the book I used last year better

"Grow Up, Amy" *
by Kate Andrews
[children's fiction, "Making Friends" series]


"The Nickel-Plated Beauty" # *
by Patricia Beatty
[children's fiction, historical, 1880s]
(openlibrary.org loan)

"The Happiness of Heaven" 
by Fr. J. Boudreau, S.J.
[Catholic spirituality]


"Raising Consumers
Children and the American Mass Market
in the Early Twentieth Century" 
by Lisa Jacobson
[nonfiction]

"The Book of Sirach"  
[Bible book]

Also:
Daily readings in the Liturgy of the Hours
Nightly bedtime Gospel reading
I choose a favorite passage every night

Finished Today:

"Face Facts, Sky"  
by Kate Andrews

That Story Annoyed Me

I've read, and thoroughly enjoyed, many, many stories in the "Little Lulu" comics, but there was ONE story that annoyed me.

This story followed one of the basic patterns in the Little Lulu comics:
1: Something is missing or damaged.
2: Lulu is blamed and spanked, usually by her mother.
3: Lulu's innocence is proven, too late, most often by her friend Tubby as The Spider. (It is almost always Lulu's father who is the culprit.)
4: The parent apologizes; Lulu forgives.

Now, in this particular story,  which I haven't read in years, and whose name I don't remember, Mrs. Moppet (Lulu's mother) and Tubby are in the Moppets' kitchen; Lulu is not at home.   A cake which Mrs. Moppet had baked for a cake sale is missing, and, of course, Mrs. Moppet blames Lulu, and says that she doesn't spank Lulu very often (excuse me?) but this time she really deserves it.
Meanwhile, she makes another cake.
Lulu comes in, and her mother asks what happened to the cake; Lulu says, "I took it, Mother."
"Come here!"  orders Mrs. Moppet."
"But, Mother..."
"I won't listen to a single word.  Come here!"
This, in my opinion, was a mistake on Mrs. Moppet's part, a mistake which parents make all too often in real life. 
Mrs. Moppet spanks Lulu.
Lulu: "BAW!!!!!"
Tubby: "G-gosh"
After the spanking, Mrs. Moppet scolds Lulu, "You knew good and well that cake was for the Ladies' Bake Sale."
"I know, Mother.   That's where I took it."
Lulu explains that someone had called and told her that they had a customer who wanted Mrs. Moppet's cake, so Lulu took it over.  Of course, Mrs. Moppet is sorry that she spanked Lulu unjustly, and, of course, the customer turns out to be Lulu's father.
In other words, the usual pattern.  So why does this particular story annoy me?
Because all Lulu would have had to do would be to write a note telling her mother where she had taken the cake, and why.   Then, in keeping with the unfair-spanking pattern, the note could have fallen someplace and not have been seen until too late.  
Sorry, Lulu, but it WAS partly your own fault for not leaving a note.

Encouraging news about EWTN's Fr. Anthony

Fr. Anthony hopes to be back on the air in the near future.  Oh, HOW I'm praying for that to happen! https://franciscanmissionaries.c...