Showing posts with label Regina Doman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Regina Doman. Show all posts
Friday, February 15, 2013

Habemus Papam!: Pope Benedict XVI by Regina Doman, Illustrated by Sean Lam


Goodreads: Habemus Papam!
Series: None
Published: 2012
Source: Borrowed

Summary: Growing up in Bavaria, Josef Ratzinger finds his faith tested daily as the Nazis shut down schools, force the young men into the army, and persecute Christians and Jews.  However, he places his trust in God and fulfills his dream of becoming a priest.  Josef enjoys his new life teaching and longs to spend his days as a scholar, but God still calls and His plan is larger than anything Josef could have imagined.

Review: Doman and Lam’s manga presents a biography of the pope in a manner both fun and accessible.  Benedict  XVI, or, as he was known before receiving the call to lead the Catholic Church as the Vicar of Christ, Josef Ratzinger, comes to life on the page, no distant figure waving from a balcony, but a flesh-and-blood man who faced terrible opposition in  his journey to become a priest but never lost his faith.  Readers will not only learn interesting facts about the pope (for instance, he loves cats) but will also feel themselves inspired by the example of man who placed all his trust in God, even when he feared the road God might set him on.

I have never read manga before, so I can only judge Habemus Papam! on its own merits.  I thought the illustrations were very well done.  Some beautiful Catholic architecture made appearances and the level of detail (for example, a glimpse of the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel) gave the story a sense of realism.  The range of emotion exhibited by the characters also helped draw me into the story.  I especially enjoyed the young Josef—there is an adorable picture of him sitting with his teddy bear—and found myself marveling that the pope was ever a child who got into trouble and fought with his siblings.  The fact that the pope likes cats became a sort of recurring theme, so it was fun to pick out all the cats in the pictures. 

Enjoyable as the illustrations were, however, I never felt that they were integral to the telling of the story.  I got the impression that the creators of the book designed it more as a marketing tool to reach young people and make the faith seem cool.  Doman conceivably could have written the same story, fleshed out with some description, and made it into a short biography.  Enough action and suspense occurs that readers will keep the pages turning.  

Despite this criticism, I do not mean to suggest that the book seems didactic.  Rather, it presents itself a a loving portrayal of a man whose dedication to God and desire to spread His message cannot fail to move readers.  The struggles he faces as he tries to accept God's will for him make him seem so delightfully human, but the fearlessness he exhibits as he searches out truth makes him seem like the obvious pick to lead the Church in the modern era.  Readers should close the book with one message: those who seek the truth will always find it.
Friday, June 1, 2012

The Shadow of the Bear by Regina Doman


Series: Fairy Tale Novels #1
Published: 1997
Source: Borrowed

Summary: Years ago a priest was murdered and the Church vessels he collected were stolen.  The story passed into rumor and few remembered what had really happened that night.  When eighteen-year-old Blanche and her younger sister Rose welcome a stranger into their home, however, they unwittingly allow the past to enter, as well.  Known only as Bear, the young man has a dark history and a secret he refuses to share.  The girls learn to trust him, but his friendship may cost them their lives.  A retelling of “Snow White and Rose Red”.

Review: The Shadow of the Bear speaks to a type of reader often ignored in contemporary young adult literature—one who does not relate to the students at preppy boarding schools, does not condone a fast and loose lifestyle, does not feel represented by all the protagonists who treat chastity like a disease.  It offers heroes and heroines actively concerned with leading good and holy lives even though they remain flawed and presents a picture of teenage life that some might find unbelievable, but that reflects the realities of many young Catholics.  Lovers of books and beauty will relate to the protagonists who discuss literature, faith, and philosophy all while trying to figure out how these topics fit into their day-to-day experiences. 

Doman seamlessly incorporates the themes discussed by the characters into her plot, thus revealing how the extraordinary and the ordinary often intertwine.  She clearly agrees with the philosophy of G. K. Chesterton who argued that fairy tales reflect the true reality beyond what we can see.  The dragons her characters face, however, are not mythological, but ones many readers struggle with themselves: drugs, death, date rape, and temptation.  The recognition of the characters that they are engaged in a battle that is more than physical imparts to the story its power.

The Shadow of the Bear combines the magic of a fairy tale with real life and, in the process, reminds readers that every day is full of wonder.  It provides a refreshing alternative to the “edgy” contemporary young adult books currently on the market and reminds readers that they are not alone in valuing purity or in seeking beauty.  The sympathetic characters combined with the hint of mystery make this a worthy addition to the bookshelf of any lover of retold fairy tales.