August 31, 2012

Review from The Story of a Writer

A priest that enjoys eating peaches? A priest that has some sort of incident with peaches? Hum. I had to find out, and I’m so glad I did.

http://beverlystowemcclure.blogspot.com/2012/02/priest-and-peaches-virtual-book-tour.html

August 29, 2012

Review from Giveaway Blogdom

Peterson has an extremely unique writing style that I enjoyed very much. There are not many authors that can successfully blend tragedy and comedy (although those two concepts are supposed to be very close to one another), and The Priest and the Peaches treaded the line between drama and humor extremely well.

http://giveawayblogdom.com/2012/03/the-priest-and-the-peaches-by-larry-peterson-book-review/

August 28, 2012

Review from A Shower of Roses

I would recommend this book for teens who are capable of dealing with the harsh realities of children who are suddenly orphaned.

http://ashowerofroses.blogspot.com/2012/03/priest-and-peaches-book-review.html

August 27, 2012

Review from Book Lovin' Mamas

I challenged myself to read outside of my "Normal" Genre...and now I can't wait to dig deeper into this kind of Genre again and also read even more books from Larry Peterson.

http://booklovinmamas.blogspot.com/2012/03/review-priest-and-peaches-by-larry.html

August 26, 2012

The Reverse Rage of Madame Maureen Dowd

I just happened to read  Ms. Maureen Dowd's column in the Tampa Bay Times (reprinted from the New York Times on 8/22/12) in which she informs the proletariat (you know, all the un-Ivy-Leagued) that Congressman Paul Ryan is not who we thought he was. No sirreee, in fact she has gotten her information from none other than Tom Morello. This has to be factual and intelligent information because this guy is a Grammy winner, a guitarist, a member of the metal rap band, "Rage Against the Machine" and  the ultimate proof of his being part of the creme de la creme, he is a Harvard graduate.

Before I read Madame Dowd's column I had this whacked out notion that Paul Ryan, a man who might become our Vice-president, was a 42 year old married man, with three small kids, was a practicing catholic, and still lived in the town where he was born, Janesville, Wisconsin. It seems that every Thursday, after work as a Congressman, he heads home to Wisconsin to be with his family. (That should have given me a clue that something was up, right? He does not hang around D.C.) He is also (from what I was informed by the mundane media) very smart and wants to fix Medicare for FUTURE generations. Mr. Morello, through Madame Dowd, has set me straight. There is another person hiding out in Paul Ryan's body.  Here it is. Better get ready.

Seems our friend Mr. Morello wrote an essay for Rolling Stone Magazine and told us the "truth" about Paul Ryan. Since Madame Dowd has this ongoing need to find her own personal gospel writers, she has now included Tom Morello on her list of chosen writers of ex-cathedra doctrinaires. Mr. Morello advises us that "Paul Ryan is the embodiment of the machine that our music has been raging about for two decades. I  CLEARLY SEE, Morello writes,  that Ryan has a whole lotta 'rage' in him. A rage against women. A rage against immigrants, a rage against workers, a rage against gays, a rage against the poor, a rage against the environment. The only thing he is not raging against is the priviliged elite he's groveling in front of for campaign contributions."  WHEW !!!! Maybe his wife should consider having a restraining order issued against him. According to these folks, he is one "raging dude".

Well, I had no idea. I never suspected that Paul Ryan was such a scary person. Madame Dowd's final sentence in her column reads, "Beyond the even-keeled Ryan mien lurks full-tilt virulence. A moderate demeanor is not a sign of a moderate view of the world". "Full-tilt VIRULENCE"??  That means being venomously hostile or causing disease. WHATEVER, Madame Dowd, whatever. I will not even touch on the other parts in the column about Nicaragua and Angola and the idiot in Missouri, Akin, who stuck his foot so far down his throat you could hear the gagging from coast to coast, or the shot at the Catholic bishops  or quoting the Jesuits to disparage Ryan or his parish priest suggesting that he might allow kids to starve to death.

Thank God Cardinal Dolan is coming to the Republican Convention. Maybe he can get hold of his friend Ryan, bring him in a room, and do an excorcism on him before the rage in him causes him to self-immolate.

August 22, 2012

Review from Everything Has a Purpose

Larry Peterson's novel brings the tough questions to light. When your world tumbles down, what should you do first? What should you not touch at all? Will everything ever be alright again?

http://teaandinspiration.blogspot.com/2012/02/priest-and-peaches-by-larry-peterson.html

August 20, 2012

The "Vacuous Virtuous" Need to Stay Out of Our Churches

I am a blue-collar guy who has, based on my date of birth, become a "senior citizen". That qualifies me for lots of discounts. No big deal because most of those start kicking in at age 55 and I passed that mark a while back. Now I qualify for Medicare. I am also, and this is most important, a Catholic. Okay, to the point.

I am tired folks. Not because of my age or bad back but because I am worn out from being slapped upside my head because I am Catholic. There are supposedly 77 million Catholics in the United States. That makes me one little pea in a great big pod. And this pea is pee-ode. I am sick and tired of hearing my faith denigrated and mocked by a secular world where the slightest hint of a moral boundary professed or defended is scorned and/or ridiculed by these secularists, many of whom claim to be "catholic". God forbid anyone (especially someone like Cardinal Dolan of NY and the head of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops)  attempts to defend his faith and his flock by saying "NO" to someone of modern virtue who has their own ideas as to what the Catholic faith should be. The Cardinal and his peers, including Pope Benedict himself, are deemed "out-of-touch", "radical", or "outside the mainstream". Here's the deal; there is no such thing as "progressive" catholicism.  The basic tenets of the faith have been around for centuries.

My three priorities have always been God, Family and Country---in that order. But you see, no one ever bothered me about that. No one ever bothered you either, right? God bless the framers of the Constitution. Were they SMART. Freedom of Religion--the very first amendment. They knew what kind of lid had to be placed on the pressure cooker of diversity that was to be America. They knew that religion transcended man made law. They knew that a sense of right and wrong was an inborn gift. Religion spelled it out. It provided a moral compass. Therefore, they left it alone and reinforced it with the First Amendment. But then a few hundred years went by and somehow "yes and no" became not only archaic but anathema to so many of our sophisticated and secular 21st century intelligentsia. I would like to dub them the "vacuous virtuous". Their sense of great smartness has laid waste to any sense of humility they may have once possessed. The result---noxious fumes.

As a Catholic Christian I am supposed to try and live my faith 24/7. We Catholics can go to Mass and Communion every single day of the week if we so choose. There are still many of us, including me, that do. We go for spiritual reinforcement and nourishment so, when we leave the church and confront the world OUTSIDE, we are prepared to live up to out beliefs. We have to work at it, are quiet about it and just do the best we can with what God has given us. Sometimes we succeed, some times we don't. After all, we are imperfect beings.

Now, unprecedented in American History, an administration in power is telling us that when we go OUTSIDE our church we must violate our beliefs under penalty of breaking the law, facing fine or even imprisonment. They have even suggested that we (as Catholics) have declared "war on women" because we are refusing to give women contraception and abortifacient drugs. Have they lost their minds? Not hardly. They know full well that Title X was signed into law by President Nixon in 1970 and that contraception has been available to all women in this country ever since. The problem with religion, and not just the Catholic religion, is that it sets boundaries and rules and says "NO". The nerve to tell us we CANNOT do something or have our way. Who in hell do they think they are? Government is the "Great Benefactor". So,  let's kick down their doors and take charge.

The powers that "are" think that they have found the "weak link" in the suit of armor. How foolish they are.The Catholic Church has been around for two thousand years. It has survived onslaughts by the "vacuous virtuous" many times and it will again. It will also be around long after all of us here today are not. As for me, I just want them to leave me alone.

August 16, 2012

Review from Reading Challenged

One thing you do not see much of nowadays is books written for young adults that can be described as “heart-warming”. Right now, dark and intense are in style. So it is refreshing to see an ultimately uplifting book.

http://readingchallenged.blogspot.com/2012/02/priest-and-peaches.html

August 14, 2012

Review from Romancing the Book

This story had me hooked from the beginning. The writing style drew me in and I felt like I was there with the characters as they suffered tremendous loss and adversity.

http://romancing-the-book.com/2012/02/review-priest-and-peaches-by-larry.html

August 13, 2012

Review from Simple Clockwork

It reminds me of something I learned from working in a non-government organization: that all children are entitled to proper care, nutrition, encouragement, education, and opportunity.

http://www.nancycudis.com/2012/02/book-review-priest-and-peaches-by-larry.html

August 9, 2012

Review from My Tower of Books

And the Peach kids stumble into plenty of trouble and whatnot throughout the course of this book. Like moths to a flame :)

http://mytowerofbooks.blogspot.com/2012/02/blog-tour-review-priest-and-peaches-by.html

August 7, 2012

Review from Reading in the Mountains

I loved this book. Even through difficult times they were still able to find the humor in most situations. I like that because that's what I do.

http://readinginthemountains.blogspot.com/2012/02/priest-and-peaches-by-james-peterson.html

August 6, 2012

Review from Write Panic Live

I dare you to look inside yourself and really think about whether you might misjudge a character in your life like Peach children were misjudged.

http://writepaniclive.blogspot.com/2012/02/priest-and-peaches.html

August 2, 2012

Review from Compulsively Writing Reviews

Written in a reminiscing style, it felt as if the author was speaking of his own family and neighborhood. Each character was written with care, and their deep feelings came out through their journey.

http://katepolicanisreviews.wordpress.com/2012/02/09/the-priest-and-the-peaches-by-larry-peterson/

August 1, 2012

Review from Minding Spot

The death of a parent is a hard and life-changing experience and Peterson does it with sensitivity and brings a beacon of light to the devasted Peach kids.

http://mindingspot.blogspot.com/2012/02/priest-and-peaches-by-larry-peterson.html