We have plenty of Catholic theological, economic, political, cultural, and social commentary in books and periodicals, print and online. We have plenty of sources that talk about art from a Catholic perspective. What we don’t have is good Catholic art about which to talk! Why is that? Every so often, someone whines that there are no good Catholic writers any more—no Graham Greenes, no Flannery O’Conners. That’s not true. What’s missing is venue. Those few Catholic publishers who risk publishing fiction or poetry at all are too fearful of work that does not adhere to the commercial formulae for paper-back “Christian literature,” the kind of escapist or recreational stuff we see in check-out lines at supermarkets and discount stores, often called “young adult fiction”. There’s nothing wrong with that kind of entertaining and innocuous writing, but it’s not the stuff of Flannery or Graham. It doesn’t pretend to be.

Only a very tiny handful of Catholic publishers are willing to consider fiction at all; nearly all of them confine their publications to non-fiction, with little or no poetry. Non-fiction consists of information and opinions, and we have plenty of excellent writers who opine and inform very well. But that’s not the purpose of art. Art isn’t interested in facts or opinions; it’s interested in truth. Truth can’t be formed or shaped, dictated or fashioned by a concern about image, about public relations, or about how Catholicism might be “seen.” It can’t be judged or evaluated, accepted rejected, on the same bases that are applied to commentary. And that’s why there are no good Catholic writers these days. Those few we do have are published only by secular publishing houses—Catholic publishers are too fearful, too self-conscious.

Dappled Things is the only Catholic literary magazine there is in actual, hold-in-your-hand print. It is our literary magazine, the only one we have—even if we don’t often read fiction or poetry. Catholic publications are an endangered species in the first place, but Catholic literature is next to extinction. We have only one literary publication left that is written and published by Catholic writers and editors. This is it. Arthur Powers, gifted writer and supporter of DT, provides more information in the link below.

http://us2.campaign-archive2.com/?u=675a31a4bf325da62acb25fbc&id=dda9016bac&e=b37c570550