Vatican City, May 11, 2021 / 06:00 am (CNA). The Vatican has corrected a problem on its website that meant it displayed at least two different editions of the Catechism of the Catholic Church in English. When using an online search engine, internet users could land on two different editions of the Catechism of the Catholic Church in English, one of which was an earlier edition. Matteo Bruni, director of the Holy See Press Office, told CNA last week that “it is one of those cases where the system updates are incompletely coordinated, so one page had the older version and the other the more recent one.”
There are perks to spending all weekend gently shivering in a friend’s garden Credit: william87 /iStockphoto This Christmas, I was given the best present I have ever received. A plain-looking black and red gilet with a subtle button on the breast, which controls electric heating rods that run up the front and back. It’s magical. In the months since, I have spent cold evenings on park benches and in pub gardens smugly watching my friends shiver, while I feel as though I’m sitting in a warm bath. But little did I know, my freezing friends might have had something up on me: sitting outside in the cold can have health benefits – great news for a Bank Holiday weekend that comes with a mild-to-chilly weather forecast. Read on to learn about the wins you can get from spending all weekend gently shivering in a friend’s garden. It might make you feel warmer – at least, on the inside.
Isle of Wight Radio 6:00pm - Midnight Live and Local Podcast - Supporting Live Local Music On The Isle Of Wight Five new books to read this week Curl up with a dark family drama, or keep things light with a judo-loving guinea pig… Fiction 1. The Therapist by BA Paris is published in hardback by HQ, priced £12.99 (ebook £7.99). Available now When Alice and Leo move into an exclusive gated community called The Circle, the house initially seems perfect. But as Alice gets to know her neighbours, she discovers a gruesome secret about the house’s past and becomes obsessed with trying to piece together what really happened two years ago. This dark family drama will have readers racing through the pages, and is the kind of book you devour in one sitting. There is a palpable sense of tension that builds to a devastating conclusion. A truly emotive read about a house that holds a shocking secret, and those who will go to extreme lengths to keep it hidden.
Article bookmarked Don t show me this message again✕ Curl up with a dark family drama, or keep things light with a judo-loving guinea pig… Fiction 1. The Therapist by BA Paris is published in hardback by HQ, priced £12.99 (ebook £7.99). Available now When Alice and Leo move into an exclusive gated community called The Circle, the house initially seems perfect. But as Alice gets to know her neighbours, she discovers a gruesome secret about the house’s past and becomes obsessed with trying to piece together what really happened two years ago. This dark family drama will have readers racing through the pages, and is the kind of book you devour in one sitting. There is a palpable sense of tension that builds to a devastating conclusion. A truly emotive read about a house that holds a shocking secret, and those who will go to extreme lengths to keep it hidden.9/10(Review by Megan Baynes)
Thriller: A Prince and a Spy by Rory Clements Zaffre, 480 pages, hardcover €12.99; e-book £7.19 It’s 1942 and Irish-American Cambridge University history professor Tom Wilde is on a train home from London, having been seconded to America’s newly formed intelligence operation, the OSS. A distraught young man in a military uniform addresses him by his title. He recognises the soldier as a former student, Peter Cazanove. Cazanove confesses to having betrayed his country and that a bigger betrayal has just happened. With that, Wilde is thrown headlong into an intelligence conspiracy involving the British royal family and some of the most connected and powerful men in Britain and Nazi Germany.