
Maureen Kelly
Author of CliffsNotes on Golding's Lord of the Flies
Works by Maureen Kelly
Associated Works
Growing Up Catholic: An Infinitely Funny Guide for the Faithful, the Fallen, and Everyone In-Between (1985) 409 copies, 4 reviews
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Kelly, Maureen
- Gender
- female
Members
Reviews
Correlation is not causation.... This book by Maureen Kelly maps out many connections between Medicine Buddha and reiki practise. In 2000, it was a significant book that made connections between Tibetan Buddhist practise and Reiki. Much of the material does try too hard, but it was important in the moment. There are stretches on both sides (reiki and buddhist practise) but it was important before books like Hosak's Big Book of Reiki Symbols. I'm not sure that Kelly was as imbued in buddhism show more as later authors were, so her connections are a bit surfacey. show less
Fun little book with pictures of nuns doing things that we wouldn't necessarily associate them with such as playing basketball, roller skating or riding amusement park rides. Captions were funny, generally some type of play on words. such as what happens in vegas stays in vegas with nuns playing the slot machines or sisters on the dock of the bay with a group of them fishing from a pier. just a nice way to pass the time and maybe giggle
I expected irreverent pictures of nuns in compromising situations. What I got was a book that showed nuns having fun in ways not usually associated with nuns. The captions were humorous, often plays on words, but nothing that I think would be offensive except to the most conservative Catholics. I think this made nuns more accessible, showing them to be real people who like to try new things like roller-skating, playing ball with kids, and joining carnival games. The book had pictures of nuns show more having fun at conferences or other gatherings with nuns from other monastics; you can tell by the different habits they wore. I had no idea how many different types of habits and how diverse and elaborate they can be. There was an diagram explaining he different parts of the habit and illustrations depicting a few unusual ones complete with the order that wears each. The photos were interspersed with humorous asides but again nothing I found sacrilegious. For example there was a list (with photos) of famous nuns in film and TV; a list of famous powerful women who would make good nuns for their stalwart attitudes and factoids and statistics about things such as numbers of nuns now compared with a few decades ago and how that compares to the number of Catholics, and the order of nuns that has grown exponentially. All in all I was pleasantly surprised, especially since I learned something! show less
I expected irreverent pictures of nuns in compromising situations. What I got was a book that showed nuns having fun in ways not usually associated with nuns. The captions were humorous, often plays on words, but nothing that I think would be offensive except to the most conservative Catholics. I think this made nuns more accessible, showing them to be real people who like to try new things like roller-skating, playing ball with kids, and joining carnival games. The book had pictures of nuns show more having fun at conferences or other gatherings with nuns from other monastics; you can tell by the different habits they wore. I had no idea how many different types of habits and how diverse and elaborate they can be. There was an diagram explaining he different parts of the habit and illustrations depicting a few unusual ones complete with the order that wears each. The photos were interspersed with humorous asides but again nothing I found sacrilegious. For example there was a list (with photos) of famous nuns in film and TV; a list of famous powerful women who would make good nuns for their stalwart attitudes and factoids and statistics about things such as numbers of nuns now compared with a few decades ago and how that compares to the number of Catholics, and the order of nuns that has grown exponentially. All in all I was pleasantly surprised, especially since I learned something! show less
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 12
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 396
- Popularity
- #61,230
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 5
- ISBNs
- 24
- Languages
- 1





