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A Focus on True Love and Joy during Lent and
Easter
An Author Interview with Antoinette Bosco,
Lent: An Uncommon Love Story
By Lisa M. Hendey
My favorite Lenten
resources and devotions focus on the occasions for joy and the emphasis on
love and service during this season of preparation for Easter and the
glory of Jesus’ resurrection. This Lent, I’ve added a new resource to my
devotional library.
Lent: An Uncommon Love Story (Pauline Books
and Media, January 2005, paperback, 128 pages) is a wonderful Lenten
reflection by noted Catholic author Antoinette Bosco. This simple yet
profound look at Lent focuses upon the story of Christ’s love for us. In
moments of despair and pain, Bosco points her reader to the opportunity
for a deepening relationship with God.
Bosco, mother of
seven and prolific author, writes about transcending suffering from an
informed perspective. In this book, she freely shares her own family’s
sometimes tragic experiences, as well as her personal Lenten journey. In
addition to
Lent: An Uncommon Love Story, Bosco is also the author
of the award winning children’s book
The Jesus Garden: An Easter Legend (Pauline Books and Media, February 2004, hardcover, 44 pages).
As we enjoy the
culmination of our Lenten devotions and enter into the glorious season of
Easter, I took the opportunity to speak with Antoinette Bosco about her
writing.
Q: Antoinette
Bosco, author of the newly released
Lent: An Uncommon Love Story,
would you please start off by telling our readers a bit about yourself?
A: It is always
difficult to say a few words about oneself because we become
self-consciously nervous about putting too much in, or leaving something
important out. I was very fortunate to be the daughter of Italian
immigrants, who gave me my Catholic faith and my values at a very early
age. I am the mother of seven, three deceased, was fortunate to have had
a college education so I could support my children when I became a single
parent in 1967. My work has always been in media, as a magazine writer, a
book author, a reporter and an editor, both for the Catholic and secular
press. Since I was very young, I also worked for social justice, even
serving for many years as a Human Rights Commissioner on Long Island,
N.Y. My son John and his wife Nancy were murdered by an 18-year old in
1993, and ever since then I have worked to end the death penalty in our
country. My alma mater, the College of St. Rose in Albany, N.Y. awarded
me an honorary doctoral degree in 1996; my book “Choosing Mercy, A
Mother of Murder Victims Pleads to End the Death Penalty,” was give
both a Christopher Award and a Pax Christi Award. To date I have written
14 books.
Q: I have to say
that I was deeply touched by your book,
Lent: An Uncommon Love Story
- would you please tell our readers what message you were trying to convey
through this book?
A: I was asked to
write a book about Lent by Sister Madonna, the acquisitions editor at
Pauline Books & Media, at the very time my son Sterling was hospitalized
with a failing heart. He was a devout Catholic, and when I told him about
the request, saying I just couldn’t write a book right now, he was the one
who made me change my mind. We talked about how Lent is the time that
assures us we are never alone in our sufferings, losses or hardships. We
are there, in the desert with Jesus, who could have said “no” to his
Father, knowing the pain, rejection and death that would be ahead for
him. But Jesus said “Yes,” and then left the desert and worked full time
for the next three years doing nothing but loving us. Jesus lived a love
story for us that began in his Lenten days in the desert. The week I
finished the book, my son Sterling died, but he left me with his
affirmation that Lent is a love story that he wanted me to underscore.
Q: You shared so
deeply and so personally in the book about your own Lenten journey that I
came to feel a closeness to you through your words. I know that your
family has endured many hardships, and that their cumulative effect makes
you the person you are today. Is it difficult or cathartic to share your
life's challenges with such openness and sincerity?
A: I have written
several books in which I share some of the difficult experiences of my
life—like the suicide of my youngest son Peter, who suffered from a
bi-polar mental disorder and the murders of my beloved John and Nancy.
But I wrote these books not as the sad story of my life, but as an
affirmation of faith, which gives us strength, hope, vision, power, grace,
empathy, compassion for others, and after a hard journey, the joy of
Christ, who pioneered all the difficult paths we face so as to show us
we have never been alone. The response I have received from people who
have read my books or heard me speak has assured me any difficult I have
faced in sharing my stories is worth it.
Q: What meaning
does Lent hold for you at this stage in your life?
A: At this stage of
my life, Lent is a very special time. I always remember the early days of
my single parenting, when I worked day and night, little sleep, many
hardships. I was angry at the Lord at times, and I remember crying one
night that I live in Lent, that I am lost and locked in the desert. It
was as if I heard a voice asking, “Then why do you stay?” Without a
thought, spontaneously I whispered, “because I love my children.” And I
was given to know that’s why Jesus stayed in the desert, because he loved
his children. Every Lent, I focus on this incredible love of the Lord for
us, and it helps me not get lost in the cutting paths I still must
sometimes travel.
Q: I am also a
major fan of your wonderful children's book,
The Jesus Garden: An Easter Legend, also published by Pauline Books and Media. Could you
please share about the creation of this book?
A: “The
Jesus Garden” is my surprise book. It contains stories that I wrote and
told my children when they were small. A few years ago, after a lovely
meeting with Sister Madonna, I thanked her by sending her a copy of these
stories for her to enjoy. To my surprise, sometime later I got a call
from the Pauline Sisters that they wanted to hire an artist and publish my
stories as “an Easter fantasy.” I was delighted and my children were
soaring. We love the book, which has just received a Silver Angel Award
from Excellence in Media!
Q: I loved the book
for your ability to make Christ's passion, death and resurrection into
something that was not "scary" for children, but rather a reflection of
his great love for each of us as individuals. How can parents share with
their children the true joy of the Easter message?
A: The best way
that parents can share the true joy of the Easter message is to be joyful
and believing themselves. There’s an old saying that “What you are shouts
so loud I can’t hear what you say.” All parents should remember that.
Q: Do you have any
future projects in the works?
A: Right now I am
working very hard speaking mainly to young people in high school and
college about the need for reform of our criminal justice system and the
immorality of the death penalty. I’ve written 14 books in my years of
being in the media, with a recent one that contains much of my life
learning called “One Day he Beckoned, One Woman’s Story of the
Difference Jesus Made,” (Ave Maria Press), followed by “Miracles
Abound, When We Open Our Hearts to God,” (Twenty-Third Publications).
With
Lent: An Uncommon Love Story,
I am taking a bit of a break, to catch my breath!
CatholicMom.com
Recommends:
Lent: An Uncommon Love Story
The Jesus Garden: An Easter Legend
Also
available through the Catholic Company - Click Here
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