Children's Resources

What is the importance of children's literature?

In the mid ‘80s, when I first read Father Quay’s The Christian Meaning of Human Sexuality, I was so taken with the beauty, wisdom and reverence of his message that I wrote to him and asked some questions. I wanted to know: Who was your mother and what did she do to have a son like you? And, What programs are you aware of that could help young people toward an understanding of human sexuality as described in your book? (I was still mistakenly thinking that I might locate the perfect program for education in human sexuality that I could then offer to the Catholic grade school that my children then attended. I have since learned that no such program exists, nor could exist.)

Father Quay replied. He did not say anything about his mother, and he was not aware of any “programs” to recommend, but he did say that he attributed much of his own youthful formation to the reading of good literature. He provided a few examples: first, the Scriptures, next, the Arthurian Legends, and third, the works of James Fenimore Cooper. He concluded with, “In short, anything that tells the truth about what it is to be a man, and what it is to be a woman.”

Ever since then, I have been on the lookout for literature that meets this standard. In addition to this standard, I have also collected titles that possess another characteristic of good literature; and this characteristic flows directly from the concepts elucidated in The Christian Meaning of Human Sexuality, namely, the ability to convey the notion that the physical world is never an end in itself, but is always a means of leading us to connection with a greater meaning and reality that lies beyond the visible. Most of these are titles I have shared with my own children and grandchildren. Some are out of print. Others are newly published.

This list will continually be expanded as I find time to post additional titles. Recommendations are always welcome.

J.M. Fogassy