Support Us. Advertise Here.

CatholicBargains.com. Click for this week's unbeatable Bargain!

Literary Mag Seeks Talent

October 9th, 2007 by ruah

Bernard Aparicio, President of Dappled Things, a faith and culture quarterly, would like to give you a little preview of their newest issue.  For souls of couple-colour, you may be drawn to this great little mag, which I’ve just subscribed to. Peruse especially the poems of Gabriel Olearnik, a one time Polish acquaintance who resides in England. Fantastic!

Fr. RJ Neuhaus is quoted as saying, that Dappled Things is “trolling for talent,” and providing a forum for the emerging artist, a literary landscape, plotted and pieced. Writers and other fine artists may be interested in submitting work for future issues. Whilst the next deadline is oh-so-close (Oct 14th), take a look a their submission guidelines here. 

With all the pied beauty of fall leaves upon the still-green grass, comes the “Mary, Queen of Angels 2007″ edition of Dappled Things, now available online. The new issue is brimming over with wonderful essays, stories, poems, and works of art by talented young writers and artists working within the

 Catholic tradition. We invite you to explore the new issue and then head over to our forums to share your thoughts with other readers.

Herewith a sampling of the marvelous pieces you will find in our “Mary, Queen of Angels 2007″ edition:

- Following the September implementation date of Pope Benedict’s much talked-about motu proprio, comes Philip Carl Smith’s  “The Monastery, the Motu Proprio, and the Heart of the Church,”  a personal meditation on the importance of liturgy for the Church’s life:

Dom Antoine Forgeot, the abbot of Notre Dame de Fontgombault, greeted me upon my arrival at the monastery by pouring water on my hands before the evening meal, welcoming me as if I were Christ. Fontgombault, founded in the eleventh century, has had an immense influence on the religious life of France and the United States since its reestablishment in 1948 by the Benedictines of Solesmes, and it is now an important center of Gregorian chant. For several days this past summer I received the hospitality of the monks, attending the singing of the Divine Office and participating in the solemn conventual Mass chanted each day according to the Missal of Blessed John XXIII—a form of the Mass also known as the usus antiquior or the Tridentine Mass.

- The main character in Eve Tushnet’s “Distortions” struggles with questions as applicable to a distopian world as to our own:

And that’s how my thing is all over. Crumpled up, crippled. Like a glob with deep wrinkles, almost folds or fissures, covered with lanugo, and a thing like a face on one end. You can definitely see the noseholes and the mouth, and you can tell where the eyes should be, but either they aren’t there or they’re gummed shut. I’m not really interested in that part; what I’m supposed to be investigating are the flippers and the wings. I don’t like these ones, the very large malformations. They’re part of the reason I want to move into a more administrative or research-design position, rather than directly carrying out the work.

- Author Eleanor Bourg Donlon treats us to a second installment of her developing Magdalen Montague saga in “The Flight from Magdalen Montague” :

I found the girl on the street, as one does. Down by the Danube. I glanced into the ugly green depths of the river and thought of filth. And then I looked up and saw her. A miserable object, but well suited to my purpose. Blonde, with straggling hair, and small, dull eyes. Rather like that girl in Vienna. Do you remember her? She wept when we left, but I think it was because she had wanted more money.

- Poet Gabriel Olearnik ponders the end of times in “An English Apocalypse” :

Death, War, Famine
and the other member of the band
(you know the one, his name escapes me)
Will run amok in Camden market
And overturn three stalls of leather goods
And upset some arrangements
Of ersatz Gucci handbags.

- Pope John Paul II’s theology of the body has much to say about relations between the sexes, but what is its connection to social justice? Catherine Rose explores this question in “Social Justice and the Theology of the Body”:

Secular governing bodies have their particular roles in the temporal sphere. But they cannot substitute the work of the Church, who addresses the needs of the whole person, including the ultimate transcendent need. It is an impoverishment for Catholic charitable organizations to discount or deny their spiritual ministry.

- Our featured article for this issue explores the nature of art and beauty through the work of 20th century Catholic painter Carl Schmitt in a profound essay written by his son, historian Carl Schmitt, Jr.:

Artistic beauty is only possible because of the Incarnation. In this world, we cannot see God’s supreme beauty: We can only find our way to it through the light of faith. Through the Incarnation, we may now experience God in this world through our own discovery of the beauty in people and things.

Visit our website (www.dappledthings.org) to enjoy these works and many more. Spread the Word!

Posted in Artists, Ecclesia de Creativity, Submission Op |

Leave a Comment

Please note: Comment moderation is enabled and may delay your comment. There is no need to resubmit your comment.