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    Interact: Archive for March, 2009

    Down to the Bone

    March 18th, 2009 | Bookshelf | Add Your Comment »

    I recently received this email: “I’m a Latina lesbian author who was thrown out of a Catholic high school due to a love letter written to me by my first love. My new book, Down to the Bone, (nominated for ALA Best YA Book 2009, Rainbow List, received a starred Booklist review, and was submitted for consideration to the National Book Award and Lambda Literary Awards) was inspired by true-to-life experiences. My book brings up important Christian/Catholic issues that I strongly believe will interest you.”

    About the author: Mayra Lazara Dole is an author who has also been a drummer, dancer, landscape designer, chef, hairdresser and library assistant.  She was born in Cuba and now lives in Miami with her partner, Damarys.

    Mayra Lazara Dole is the author of Down to the Bone, a novel set in Cuban Miami, about Laura, a girl who gets kicked out of her house and expelled from school when it’s discovered she is a tortillera–a girl who likes girls. downbone-hc-c

    “At 14, my first love and I were thrown out of a Miami Catholic high school due to a love letter she sent me about our first time making love.”

    “The math teacher snatched the letter from my hand and gave it to Mother Superior. The math teacher had a bad rap among the girls for being a tortillera/disgusting dyke. They read the letter to my mom who’d been dragged from one of her factory jobs to attend the infamous finger-pointing experience (finding out her little girl was a total homo) – Mami was so shocked she punished me harshly: I could never again see or speak to my beloved.”

    “The loss of my first love was grave–at the time, she was the love of my life. My best friend’s mom never let her speak to me again.  I was allowed to finish the last two months at school, where I was ostracized and treated like a leper. My neighbors–they’d been family to me–forbade me to enter their homes. I felt hopeless, lonely, unwanted and even thought about suicide  until, unexpectedly, straight-looking guys started befriending me. My family had no clue they were homos. My close friend Willy and I acted like a straight couple. We went to gay clubs on weekends and won every dance contests.  We became club kids in Miami’s gay scene.”

    Notes on the book: 17-year-old Laura has fallen in love with Marlena. They have been involved in a committed relationship for two years, however, neither of their families know. That all changes when Laura is caught reading a love letter from Marlena by one of the nuns at her Catholic high school. Not only does the nun retrieve the letter, she reads it to the entire class. Immediately Laura becomes an outcast in the eyes of her friends. When she goes home she discovers gthat her mother was notified and she is immediately cast from her home.

    Laura goes to live with her friend, Soli, and her mother, Viva, who are more open-minded and loving but she never stops yearning to go home. Laura is unable to tell anyone that she is a lesbian, so for most of he novel she lives a closeted lifestyle. The reader is allowed to feel Laura’s pain as she loses the people in her life and also her joy as she matures.

    Dole does a good job in allowing readers a peek into the Cuban, gay and lesbian teen culture, and also provides a clear view of the pain these teens go through to be themselves.

     

    God’s Spy

    March 2nd, 2009 | Bookshelf | Add Your Comment »

    About the author: Juan Gomez-Jurado, 31, is an award-winning journalist, best selling author and screen writer. He currently lives in Madrid, Spain.

    Notes on the book: In the days following Pope John Paul II’s death, a cardinal is found brutally murdered in a chapel in Rome, his eyes gouged and his hands cut off. Called in for the grisly case, police inspector Paola Dicanti learns that another cardinal was recently found dead; he had also been tortured. gods-spy

    Desperate to find the killer before another victim dies, Dicanti’s investigation is soon joined by Father Anthony Fowler, an American priest and former Army intelligence officer examining sexual abuse in the Church, who knows far more about the killer than Dicanti can possibly imagine.

    As Inspector Dicanti and Fr. Fowler struggle through a maze of tantalizing clues, they begin to question whether someone in the Vatican is aiding their cause or abetting a murderer. And when evidence leads them to powerful figures within the church hierarchy, their own pursuit of the truth may make them the next pawns to be sacrificed in a terrifying and deadly game.

     

    The Sexual Person: Toward a Renewed Catholic Anthropology

    March 2nd, 2009 | Bookshelf | Add Your Comment »

    About the authors: Todd A. Salzman and Michael G. Lawler are professors at Creighton University in Omaha, Nebraska. They have both written extensively  on sexual ethics and have a thorough knowledge of current theological debates. They stand firmly within the Catholic tradition even as they argue for significant change.

    Notes on the book: Two principles capture the essense of the official Catholic position on the morality of sexuality: first, that any human genital act must occur within the framework of marriage; second, each and every marriage act must remain open to the transmission of life. the-sexual-person

    In this comprehensive overview of Catholicism and sexuality, theologians Salzman and Lawler examine and challenge these principles.

    The authors, both theologians, compare the Catholic hierarchy’s willingness to adjust and adapt its teachings on social issues with its refusal to do the same with its teachings on sexual ethics.

    The main contribution of the book is its clear articulation of a person-centered natural-law ethic that offers Catholics an authentic way to think about sex in relation to their faith.

    Although the authors embrace reasoning from natural law, they argue it is impossible to gain knowledge of nature. We can only reflect on our limited human experience of nature, aknowledging that it is always partial, evolving and in need of application. Thus, traditional assertions about the unnaturalness of certain sexual acts are flawed.

    The authors posit that making good sexual decisions means discerning whether or not actions contribute to human flourishing. Sexual acts that are “truly human” must be loving, just and able to meet the test of “holistic complementarity.” Complementarity is defined in relation to sexual orientation. For persons with a homosexual orientation, sexual relationships with a person of the same sex are complementary and can be loving, just and moral.

    The book points the way to a thorough revision of Church teaching on birth control, premarital sex and homosexuality.