I have an interesting relationship with both Pope Leo and Pope Francis. Pope Francis died less than a week before I officially entered the Catholic church, and Pope Leo was elected the new pope less than two weeks after that. Oddly enough, I was confirmed into the Catholic church when it was popeless. Not hopeless, but popeless. Little Catholic humor for you. Is that Catholic humor? I guess I haven't been Catholic long enough to know. But I digress. When Pope Leo became...er, the pope...all my Protestant friends wanted to know what I thought about him. I did a very self-centered and human thing: I made all sorts of observations about him without actually knowing anything about him. I felt convicted about it, so I decided to read this book. I didn't learn anything about his theological leanings or political opinions, which kind of bothered me at first. What kind of pope is this guy going to be? I need to know how what he thinks about all the hot topics of 2025. But now that it's been a few months since I read the book, I'm glad it skipped over trying to predict what kind of pope Leo would be, and that the authors simply told his history without trying to present it in any particular light. The book also includes information how how a pope is elected and the reason why Catholics even have a pope. All in all, it was a good little read for a new Catholic and convicted me of my need to simply follow Pope Leo as the head of the church and stop trying to figure out where he stands politically.