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Christian Poetry in America Since 1940 (2022, Paraclete Press, Incorporated, Iron Pen) 1 star

Review of 'Christian Poetry in America Since 1940' on 'Goodreads'

1 star

I've flipped and read in this volume a lot now looking for poetry that is Christian rather than just employing language that sounds vaguely spiritual — there are maybe a handful or fewer in the whole volume. For every three poems by William Baer responding to Scripture, there are countless that pray to Eve as if she were divine instead of to God, or that try to reshape God into the image of the Native American "Great Spirit" and ascribe sin and failure to Him in the process, or that elevate human behaviors (even sinful ones) to the status of being holy somehow rather than signs of sin's curse.

There is in most of this less meter or form or skill or semblance of Christianity and more streams-of-consciousness new-age syncretism and pantheism and straight-up secularism.

This reads a bit like what an unbelieving academic who's never encountered Christianity might think …

Mountain in the Sea (2022, Farrar, Straus & Giroux) 4 stars

Humankind discovers intelligent life in an octopus species with its own language and culture, and …

Review of 'Mountain in the Sea' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

It does the thing all good sci-fi should do: use the sci-fi setting.to examine and interrogate questions of ethics and society.

The narrative is fairly engaging, even if the characters' dialogue leaves them with very little in the way of distinct voices — perhaps for reasons that are maybe explained in-world.

Overall, it's a fun summer read that raises a lot of interesting ideas about what it means to be a person and how our actions impact those around us.

For parents of sci-fi readers, there's enough casual (but not really described in detail, thankfully) sex in the book that it's probably not one to hand to teenagers — so be aware of that.

Letters from the Mountain (2021, Rabbit Room Press) 5 stars

Review of 'Letters from the Mountain' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Insightful, well-written, and relentlessly focused on the glory of God and the diligent use of skill towards that end.

If Goodreads had half-stars, this would be 4.5 stars: there are times where he makes two contrary generalized prescriptions in a single chapter, without enough clarity to know where the balance lies, particularly in the last few chapters.

This is a small knock, though, for how good the rest of the book is, so it's worth rounding up rather than down.

Review of 'Everlasting Is the Past' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

The author is too much in love with his own cleverness of style, I think, as the structure of the book often becomes incoherent streams of consciousness that muddy the waters of the stories he tells.

At other times, he makes some truly puzzling snap judgments, ironically while describing how well he learned to love this inner-city body of Christ.

In the end, it seems that he's not learned that much except how to blend in to a different community from the one where he grew up, and then how to become fiercely and harshly dismissive of those outside in the name supposedly of defending those whom he thinks need him as their shield.

He revels in threatening the city council with a hostile newspaper column, and weeps in repentance of preaching Jesus's unconditional redeeming love too...fiercely, I suppose, to a woman on her deathbed who in the end, doubted …

Courage to Stand (2020, B&H Publishing Group) 4 stars

Review of 'Courage to Stand' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

An excellent book, with much that is needed for thoughtful, honest Christian life against a backdrop of confusion about what it means to be a Christian, especially against the backdrop of pervasive "means-to-an-end" Christianity - Moore points back to the reality that our lives are the means, and the end is Christ Jesus...not the other way around.

The one weakness of this book is its persistent attachment to the framing device of Elijah at Mount Horeb -- while that's a good reference point for some of the principles in this book, others leave an impression of being squeezed into the suitcase of this story, jammed just a bit noticeably out of shape to fit in there.

Emotionally Healthy Spirituality (Hardcover, 2017, Zondervan) 1 star

Review of 'Emotionally Healthy Spirituality' on 'Goodreads'

1 star

For Scazzero, the highest marks of spiritual maturity are getting in touch with your passions and emotions, letting them guide you, and throwing off the awfulness that must inevitably exist in your family upbringing and anyone who might not affirm you you wholeheartedly as you follow your dreams.

The worst things you could do conversely, are to turn out like your parents in any way, to question whether your emotions at any point are in line with the truth of Scripture, or to get too attached to other people to the point that you care what they think. Or to work in a job that you sometimes don't find enjoyable or rewarding (because, in Scazzero's view, that isn't God's will for your life, since otherwise it would line up with the "seeds of goodness" -- things you enjoy -- that God put in you).

After all, as Scazzero says, "Jesus …

The New Reformation (Paperback, 2021, Moody Publishers) 5 stars

Review of 'The New Reformation' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

If the title had you thinking, "yet another book on race", then, friend, I couldn't recommend this book more: yes, it's about race (or really, ethnicity), and Christianity, but it's really about Christlikeness, and ethnic unity is a symptom of what getting that right would look like, if we could do it.

Similarly, if it sounds like a book that will "lay waste" to the errors in the modern American church, then I'd recommend this book to you: rather than an assault on all that's wrong with American Christians (you know, those ones over there), it gives instead a diagnosis and treatment for how we as individual Christians can grow in Christlikeness (and yes, that includes overcoming the tendency to look and think like our surrounding culture).

Shai writes with a clear, instructive style, soaked in Scripture at every turn, that avoids both didactic condescension and trite obviousness. He challenges …

The Woman Who Smashed Codes: A True Story of Love, Spies, and the Unlikely Heroine Who Outwitted America's Enemies (2017, HarperCollins) 3 stars

Review of "The Woman Who Smashed Codes: A True Story of Love, Spies, and the Unlikely Heroine Who Outwitted America's Enemies" on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

A fair and interesting account of the two figures who laid the groundwork for wartime cryptanalysis and cryptography in America: Elizebeth and William Friedman. Without these two unusual characters, for all their own personal flaws, both World Wars likely would have ended quite differently....though the NSA also might not have been founded. A mixed legacy to be sure, fitting the somewhat mixed lives they led.

It's an interesting story full of intrigue, but unfortunately the author of this book occasionally seems to forget that, feeling the need to try to artificially inject interest by reaching for bizarre metaphors (comparing the act of decryption as opposed to simple literary analysis as reaching in and ripping words apart, leaving your "hands red and bloodied with the letters, in one example).

Still, it's a fascinating read, and a case of finally giving credit where it's properly due, despite the long-successful efforts of others …

Blue like jazz 4 stars

Blue Like Jazz is the second book by Donald Miller. This semi-autobiographical work, subtitled "Non-Religious …

Review of 'Blue like jazz' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

There's a lot of good stuff in here that is especially timely for issues the American church is facing. There are also quite a few examples of Miller getting in his own way, adding unnecessary tangents to otherwise-good points that seem to be there primarily to shock the reader -- there's a blurry line in this book between humble honesty about Miller's own faults and borderline-pride at being different from other Christians by not being so strict about things like the appropriateness of joking about sex or swearing.

Much of what's in here could and should convict American Christians who are steeped in "sanitized church culture": the need to actually go out into the world and show the love of Christ to the "unlovables" of the world who need His redemption most ("My friend Andrew the Protestor believes things. Andrew goes to protests where he gets pepper-sprayed, and he does …

Review of 'Passion for Ignorance' on 'Goodreads'

1 star

Picked it up, read a a chapter or so (there are only 7 chapters in the entire book), and was thoroughly unimpressed. It reads like a middle-schooler hastily putting together a "research paper" comprised of all the various quotes and anecdotes they googled the night before that seemed tangentially related to the assigned subject, but not particularly related to one another.

I bounced ahead to the other chapters, reading a bit to see if there were signs of improvement as the book progressed. There were not.

No real conclusions are drawn, and no real insight is offered. Just a loose collection of anecdotes, some mutually-conflicting, from which no inference or connection is even attempted.

It might make an okay addition to the local "little free library", if I thought it was worth anyone's time to read.

Review of 'Leaf by Niggle' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Tolkien, deep in the midst of creating his now-famous (and now-complete) masterpiece, the Lord of the Rings, wrote this short-form, lighter fiction as a way of working through the difficulty of such long, detailed, and seemingly interminable labor to produce some art that would meet his desired expectations.

Along the way, he re-examines what constitutes art, and how beauty is made not just by the painter with canvas, but by the gardener with soil, and by extension, any who apply their God-given talents and practice-refined skills towards creating beauty in the world around them, beauty that reflects in small part the illustrious handiwork of our own Maker.

I highly recommend this short story, especially to those who may feel overwhelmed by a project, or to those who feel themselves "not artistically talented like those other people".