I spent yesterday either playing with my grandchildren or listening to the static on AM radio waiting for the new pope to be announced after white smoke issued from the Sistine Chapel chimney. Not much to say! Instead how about two pictures of Saint Peter from the National Gallery of Art. Both are from the [...]
Author: catholicfictioncatholicscience
Children and other living things in Art
When I was four or five years old I lived near the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC, at a time when you could still park on the mall on a Sunday afternoon, and walk to the museum in hot summer sunshine. My black patent leather Mary Janes slid on the cool floors of [...]
Mothers and May
My mother was an incredible seamstress. I had no idea how good she was when I was little. She could make a dress in a day, but since no-one else around us seemed to even use a sewing machine, I had no way to process this achievement and compare it to others. I do now. [...]
It only took a year…
This photo is from the Photo Booth and is incredibly blurred. All the same, I finished lining this vestment over the weekend and on Monday, and it took all my time. I am very excited. Next, stole.
The fall of De Broglie
The Society of Catholic Scientists has a list of Catholic scientists with short biographies attached. They state that their list is specifically about scientists who "made important contributions or breakthroughs" to some branch of science (or, I assume, mathematics). I've worked on lists like this for twenty-five years so I was fascinated to look through [...]