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How the Story Behind Valentine’s Day Is Resonating With Modern-Day Audiences

Founding Members of The California Literary Society

Founding Members of The California Literary Society

The Legend of Valentine Book Cover

The Legend of Valentine Book Cover

Sheldon Collins, author and director of the award-nominated enhanced audiobook The Legend of Valentine.

Sheldon Collins' Author Photo

Book clubs across California revisit the Saint Valentine legend as The Legend of Valentine sparks debate on dating, faith, community, and culture today in 2026.

Modern audiences aren’t just learning the story behind Valentine’s Day — they’re recognizing themselves in it.”
— Sheldon Collins
LOS ANGELES, CA, UNITED STATES, February 5, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ -- As Valentine’s Day approaches, audiences across the globe are taking a closer look at the story behind Valentine’s Day and discovering that its origins speak powerfully to modern concerns about love, belief, and connection. Far from greeting cards and commercial romance, the Saint Valentine legend is increasingly being discussed in book clubs, libraries, and literary societies as a living story with contemporary relevance.

At the center of that conversation is The Legend of Valentine, the award-winning historical novel and audiobook by author-director Sheldon Collins. Through a sweeping narrative that traces how a third-century Roman martyr evolved into the enduring symbol behind Valentine’s Day, Collins’ work has become a catalyst for discussion among educators, librarians, and readers seeking deeper meaning beneath the holiday’s surface.

Rather than treating Valentine’s Day as a fixed tradition, modern audiences are examining how the legend accumulated meaning over time — shaped by faith, politics, culture, and the emotional needs of successive generations. That shift from consumption to contemplation has helped propel the story back into public discourse.

A LITERARY SOCIETY REVISITS AN ANCIENT LEGEND

That engagement was on full display this week at a gathering of the California Literary Society, one of the oldest book clubs in California. Comprised largely of teachers, librarians, and lifelong readers with a shared appreciation for classical storytelling, the Society has long been dedicated to examining how foundational stories continue to shape cultural thought.

During the discussion, members explored not only the historical origins of Valentine’s Day, but the striking relevance of its themes to modern-day conversations about dating culture, community bonds, faith under pressure, political authority, and the cost of personal conviction.

“What stood out to me was how urgently contemporary the discussion felt. Readers weren’t looking backward — they were using an ancient story to interrogate the world they’re living in now.”

Participants noted that the Valentine legend raised questions that feel especially timely: How do we define commitment in an era of endless choice? What happens to community when belief becomes purely individual? And what does love mean when it requires sacrifice rather than convenience?

A BOOK CLUB PHENOMENON ACROSS CALIFORNIA

The California Literary Society event is one of many recent invitations Collins has received from book clubs and literary groups across California. From public libraries to private reading circles, interest has surged as audiences seek context for Valentine’s Day that extends beyond surface-level romance.

According to Collins, what readers are responding to is an honest exploration of how the Valentine legend evolved over centuries. “There’s a real hunger right now for stories that feel grounded and consequential,” Collins explains. “People are craving narratives where love isn’t just performative, but costly — where belief actually matters.”

Members of multiple book clubs have echoed that sentiment, noting how the novel prompts debate about modern dating norms, the erosion of communal values, and the tension between personal conscience and institutional power — all through the lens of a story that began nearly 1,800 years ago.

THE LEGEND AS CUMULATIVE STORYTELLING

Historically, Saint Valentine is believed to have been a Christian priest executed in Rome around 268 AD. Yet the Valentine familiar to modern audiences did not emerge from history alone. His story expanded gradually, shaped by generations of storytellers responding to the needs of their time.
Collins sees himself as a contemporary steward of a cumulative storytelling tradition.

“I’m one voice in a very long conversation,” he says. “This story has survived because people kept adding to it — not to distort it, but to make sense of it for their era.”

That tradition includes literary figures who helped redefine Valentine’s meaning long before it became a holiday. In the 14th century, Geoffrey Chaucer linked Saint Valentine to romantic love, while centuries later William Shakespeare embedded Valentine imagery into the cultural imagination through themes of devotion, longing, and emotional vulnerability.

“Chaucer romanticized the timing, Shakespeare humanized the emotion,” Collins notes. “Each added a layer. I see my role as exploring why those layers mattered — and why we’re still adding to them today.”

WHY THE STORY BEHIND VALENTINE’S DAY MATTERS NOW

In an era dominated by dating apps, algorithmic matchmaking, and increasingly transactional relationships, readers are finding renewed resonance in a story rooted in conviction and sacrifice. Book club discussions sparked by The Legend of Valentine frequently return to questions of risk, loyalty, and the price of standing by one’s beliefs.

“Legends endure because they meet emotional needs facts alone can’t,” Collins says. “The Saint Valentine story survived because it addressed love under pressure — love that demanded courage.”

That emotional truth, readers argue, explains why the Valentine legend continues to inspire debate across educational, literary, and faith-based communities alike.

FROM PAGE TO AUDIO — AND A STORY STILL BEING WRITTEN

Produced and directed over 14 months by Sheldon Collins, and featuring more than 20 international voice actors, cinematic sound design, and an original score by Grammy-nominated composer Stephen Endelman, the audiobook edition of The Legend of Valentine has helped introduce the origins of Valentine’s Day to global audiences. The production has earned the Independent Press Award for Best Audiobook and two 2026 SOVAS Voice Arts Awards, including Outstanding Production.

As Valentine’s Day nears, Collins believes the growing interest reflects something larger than a single book: “It’s about a story that’s been trying to tell us something for centuries.”

For many readers, the renewed debate surrounding Valentine’s Day is a reminder that the most enduring stories are not preserved because they are perfect, but because they continue to ask questions we still need to answer.

AVAILABILITY FOR INTERVIEWS

Sheldon Collins is available for interviews discussing:
• The story behind Valentine’s Day and its modern relevance
• The Saint Valentine legend as a cumulative storytelling tradition
• Why book clubs and literary societies are revisiting ancient stories
• How The Legend of Valentine bridges history, myth, and modern life

Wes Seeley
PR By the Book
+1 512-501-4399 ext. 713
email us here

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