Showing posts with label Dickens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dickens. Show all posts

Saturday, March 09, 2024

An Eclectic Assortment: The Latest Reading Review

The purposes for these book lists are to provide for myself accountability and motivation, to provide for my bookish friends a spur to their motivations regarding reading, and finally, to pass along, when appropriate, recommendations to those same friends.

I begin this brief note with the admission that my reading has been limited this first part of the year. Usually winter provides more time for reading and so my book totals are normally quite high during the months when temperatures are cold and snow is on the ground. But not so much this year -- there have been too many Vital Signs of responsibilities, sermon preparations, quick trips to Kansas and northwest Iowa, and so on. Nevertheless, however busy the schedule, I will always make some time for reading and so I now submit my 2024 list to date.

The most important among the group was a re-reading of Charles Dickens’ hefty novel, David Copperfield. And, no surprise, I still recommend it with a four-star rating. However, the only other four-star reads in these 10 weeks was a manuscript copy of Christy Anne Collins’ riveting account of her pro-life career. The tentative title of her book is From Prison Ministry to Prison. It was excellent and I will certainly let you know when it is published. And then there was this short but very enlightening and inspiring story of Tony McFadden, Redeemed: My Journey After Abortion.

And the others? Well, there was a re-read of Jules Verne’s 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea; a re-read of C.S. Forester’s The African Queen; and a re-read of David Karsner’s Silver Dollar: The Story of the Tabors which has had particular interest for Coloradans like myself. There were also a few “pure pleasure” reads as well: It’s Your Turn, Mr. Moto by John P. Marquand, Fear Is the Key by Alistair MacLean, A Man Lay Dead by Ngaio Marsh, and the highest quality of this lot, The Romantic Prince by Raphael Sabatini.

And finally, the most unusual book in my recent reading was a book by Nebraska’s former Attorney General, Don Stenberg. It is a book using a Screwtape Letters format. And although the formula is somewhat overused, and Mr. Stenberg’s writing isn’t exceptional, and the ending is heterodox (bizarre might be a better word), I still rate it three stars and recommend it for the important information he imparts, the calls to action he makes, and the moral courage he displays in seeking to make a difference for Christ in a darkened culture. That book? Eavesdropping on Lucifer.


Wednesday, January 03, 2024

The Reading Year in Review

It was an excellent year “between the covers.” Book covers, that is. My total number of books ended up at 71 with several sizable challenges among them. 

The highlights (almost all of them being re-reads) included the whole of the Sherlock Holmes canon; 3 Dickens novels and a couple of Sabatini’s; The Lord of the Rings trilogy (plus The Hobbit, of course); Lewis’ space trilogy and his Chronicles of Narnia; The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich; Ben-Hur; Cripple Creek Days; Seabiscuit; The Politically Incorrect Guide to Western Civilization; a couple of Paul Tournier’s works; Malcolm Muggeridge’s Confessions of a Twentieth Century Pilgrim; 4 of Shakespeare’s history plays; Fahrenheit 451; Killer Angels; Cal Thomas’ Watchman in the Night; 10 Books That Screwed Up the World: And 5 Others That Didn't Help; and the massive collection rightfully entitled, The Ultimate Christmas Collection.

And among the books specifically planned for the first quarter or so of this year? We Will Not Be Silenced by Erwin Lutzer; David Copperfield by Charles Dickens; No Little People: Sixteen Sermons for the 20th Century by Francis Schaeffer; Witness by Whittaker Chambers; What’s So Great about Christianity by Dinesh D’Souza; 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne; Jesus Is Risen: Paul and the Early Church by David Limbaugh; Heaven by Randy Alcorn; And in the End: The Last Days of The Beatles by Ken McNab; and Cold-Case Christianity: A Homicide Detective Investigates the Claims of the Gospels by J. Warner Wallace. 

Want to join me for any of these?

Postscript: The full reading list for 2023 is below with the highest recommendations shown by 4 asterisks. 

January
*** 1) A Study in Scarlet (Arthur Conan Doyle)
*** 2) The Sign of Four (Arthur Conan Doyle)
**** 3) The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (Arthur Conan Doyle)
**** 4) The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes (Arthur Conan Doyle)
**** 5) The Return of Sherlock Holmes (Arthur Conan Doyle)
**** 6) The Hound of the Baskervilles (Arthur Conan Doyle)
** 7) The Valley of Fear (Arthur Conan Doyle)
**** 8) His Last Bow (Arthur Conan Doyle)
*** 9) The Case Book of Sherlock Holmes (Arthur Conan Doyle)
*** 10) The Master of Ballantrae (Robert Louis Stevenson)
*** 11) R.U.R. (Karel Capek)
February
**** 12) Scaramouche (Rafael Sabatini)
**** 13) Henry VI Part One (William Shakespeare)
**** 14) Henry VI Part Two (William Shakespeare)
**** 15) Henry VI Part Three (William Shakespeare)
**** 16) Richard III (William Shakespeare)
March
**** 17) The Politically Incorrect Guide to Western Civilization (Anthony Esolen)
*** 18) The Legend of Sleepy Hollow (Washington Irving)
April
**** 19) Confessions of a Twentieth Century Pilgrim (Malcolm Muggeridge)
**** 20) The Old Curiosity Shop (Charles Dickens)
**** 21) The Hobbit (J.R.R. Tolkien)
**** 22) The Fellowship of the Ring (J.R.R. Tolkien)
**** 23) The Two Towers (J.R.R. Tolkien)
May
**** 24) The Return of the Ring (J.R.R. Tolkien)
**** 25) Holy Disorders (Edmund Crispin)
June
*** 26) Swan Song (Edmund Crispin)
*** 27) Out of the Silent Planet (C.S. Lewis)
*** 28) Perelandra (C.S. Lewis)
**** 29) That Hideous Strength (C.S. Lewis)
July
**** 30) The Seasons of Life (Paul Tournier)
**** 31) Fahrenheit 451 (Ray Bradbury)
**** 32) Submarine (Edward L. Beach)
**** 33) The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich (William Shirer)
August
*** 34) The Strong & the Weak (Paul Tournier)
*** 35) Gettysburg: The Confederate High Tide (Champ Clark)
**** 36) Killer Angels (Michael Shaara)
**** 37) The Stars in Their Courses (Shelby Foote)
*** 38) Watchman in the Night (Cal Thomas)
**** 39) The Snare (Rafael Sabatini)
**** 40) The Magician's Nephew (C.S. Lewis)
September & October
**** 41) The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe (C.S. Lewis)
*** 42) Fire Over England (A.E.W. Mason)
**** 43) Shaken (Tim Tebow)
**** 44) Ben-Hur (General Lew Wallace)
** 45) The White Company (Arthur Conan Doyle)
**** 46) 10 Books That Screwed Up the World: And 5 Others That Didn't Help (Benjamin Wiker)
**** 47) The Horse and His Boy (C.S. Lewis)
**** 48) Prince Caspian: The Return to Narnia (C.S. Lewis)
**** 49) Nicholas Nickelby (Charles Dickens)
*** 50) The Johnstown Flood (David McCullough)
*** 51) The Voyage of the Dawn Treader (C.S. Lewis)
*** 52) The Shepherd of the Hills (Harold Bell Wright)
November
**** 53) Bleak House (Charles Dickens)
**** 54) Seabiscuit (Lauren Hillenbrand) 
** 55) The Wolves of Willoughby Chase (Joan Aiken)
** 56) The Beast In Me and Other Animals (James Thurber)
57) Cripple Creek Days (Mabel Barbee Lee) 
December
From The Ultimate Christmas Collection:
**** 58) Christmas story collection (Louisa May Alcott) 
*** 59) Christmas story collection (Henry van Dyke, Ellis Parker Butler, O Henry, et al)
** 60) The Nutcracker and the Mouse King (ETA Hoffmann)
*** 61) Christmas story collection (Self Lagerlof, Washington Irving,William Dean Howells, et al)
** 62) The Nutcracker & the Mouse King (E.T.A. Hoffman)
**** 63) Christmas story collection (Lucy Maud Montgomery)
*** 64) Christmas story collection (Damon Runyan, Frank Stockton, Harriet Beecher Stowe, et al)
**** 65) Christmas at Thompson Hall & Other Stories (Anthony Trollope)
*** 66) Beasley's Christmas Party (Booth Tarkington)
**** 67) The Birds' Christmas Carol & Other Stories (Kate Douglas Wiggin)
**** 68) The Silver Chair (C.S. Lewis)
**** 69) The Last Battle (C.S. Lewis)
* 70) Letter to the American Church (Eric Metaxas)
** 71) The Golden Ring (John Snyder)

Tuesday, December 26, 2023

The Very Best of Christmas Reading

4 Star Christmas Reading (And a Few Honorable Mentions)

With no time in this hectic (but happy) holiday season to give individual reviews, I am merely going to list my favorite Christmas reading in hopes that you will find it of value when you’re looking for literature that is high quality, wholesome, inspirational, and satisfyingly Christmassy. You’ll find in my list a wide range of genres including classic novels and short stories, theology, poetry, and history.  

So here to start are (in no particular order) my 4 Star Recommendations.

* Shepherds Abiding (Jan Karon)

* A Christmas Longing (Joni Eareckson-Tada)

* A Christmas Carol, Cricket on the Hearth, The Chimes, The Battle of Life, The Ghost’s Bargain, and The Haunted Man (Charles Dickens)

* Spirit of Christmas: Stories, Poems, Essays (G. K. Chesterton)

* "The Tailor of Gloucester" (Beatrix Potter)

* The Christmas Room (Denny Hartford)

* The Quiet Little Woman, Tilly’s Christmas, Rosa’s Tale, The Abbott’s Ghost, A Merry Christmas, and A Country Christmas, and more (Louisa May Alcott)

* O Little Town (Don Reid)

* Christmas Every Day (William Dean Howells)

* Joy Born at Bethlehem: 19 Christmas Sermons
(Charles Spurgeon)

* Christmas at Thompson Hall (Anthony Trollope)

* God With Us (John MacArthur)

* Snow (Calvin Miller)

* A Treasury of Christmas Stories (Including "The Other Wise Man") (Henry Van Dyke)

* "The Gift of the Magi" and Other Christmas Stories (O. Henry)

* The Freedom Train Christmas, The Winter in the Woods, and Christmas of the Talking Animals (Denny Hartford)

* "The Tailor of Gloucester" (Beatrix Potter)

* Beasley’s Christmas Party (Booth Tarkington)


* "The Beggar Boy at Christ’s Christmas Tree" (Fyodor Dostoevsky)

* Old Christmas (Washington Irving)

* The Bird’s Christmas Carol (Kate Douglas Wiggin)

* Dakota Christmas (Joseph Bottum)

* Christmas Sermons (Dietrich Bonhoeffer)

* "A Christmas Inspiration" and Other Christmas Stories (Lucy Maud Montgomery)

* A Child’s Christmas in Wales (Dylan Thomas)

Honorable Mention

* Letters from Father Christmas (J. R. R. Tolkien)

* Hercule Poirot’s Christmas (Agatha Christie)

* Christmas Stories (Selma Lagerlof)

* The Drum Goes Dead (Bess Streeter Aldrich)

* The Nutcracker & the Mouse King (E.T.A. Hoffmann)

* Good Tidings of Great Joy (Sarah Palin)

* Finding Noel (Richard Paul Evans)

* The Golden Ring: A Christmas Story (John Snyder)

* Silent Night: The Story of the World War I Christmas Truce (Stanley Weintraub)

* The Christmas Train (David Baldacci)

* "The Little Match Girl" (Hans Christian Anderson)

* Miracle on 34th Street (Valentine Davies)

* "The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle" (Arthur Conan Doyle)

* From Babylon to Bethlehem, The Original Christmas Carol, and The Chronicles of Christmas (Pastor Stephen Davey) 

* Home for Christmas (Lloyd C. Douglas)

* A Christmas Most Foul: A Collection of Holiday Mysteries (A variety of mystery’s Golden Age authors)

* Gifts for a Joyous Christmas (Fr. Val J. Peter)

* The Twenty-four Days Before Christmas (Madeleine L’Engle)

* The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus (L. Frank Baum)

 And don’t forget, of course, the exquisite Christmas-themed poetry of G.K. Chesterton, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Dylan Thomas, Leslie Norris, Edgar Guest, T.S. Eliot, Christina Rossetti, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Norman Nicholson, Leslie Norris, and many more. 

Also, there are several books I love in which Christmas plays but a part. Still, because of the tender, memorable scenes of Christmas they depict therein, I’ll mention a few of my favorites: The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame; Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens; Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte; Little Women by Louis May Alcott; The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by C. S. Lewis; The Long Winter by Laura Ingalls Wilder; Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery; Great Expectations by Charles Dickens; and Persuasion by Jane Austen.

Merry Christmas reading!

Tuesday, November 21, 2023

An Article for Fellow Book Lovers: 10 Books That Made Us…And 5 Others That Also Helped (Denny & Claire Hartford)

As I mentioned in a recent Book Den post (October 31), I finished a most enlightening and relevant book entitled 10 Books that Screwed Up the World: And 5 Others That Didn’t Help by Benjamin Wiker. That book easily makes my Top 10 for the year and I couldn’t recommend it more highly for those who want to know more about why Western Civilization has so tragically “devolved” in the last century. I truly hope many of you will take the challenge and read it yourself.

But reading that book also prompted Claire and me to think about the books that had actually made the world better -- at least, our world. We decided to make it a project, one that would cause us to look back, remember, and evaluate the books that had most shaped our lives for the better. It proved to be a very worthwhile exercise for us both and we have decided to share it. We hope you find our answers of interest even as we suggest that you consider pondering a similar experiment. So, let’s go. Aside from the Bible itself, we are going to tell you the 10 Books That Made Us…And 5 Others That Also Helped. 

You'll find that piece on the Vital Signs Ministries website right here.

Saturday, November 11, 2023

The Incomparable Charles Dickens

I finished my latest Charles Dickens novel last night -- a rereading of one of his longest and, in other ways too, an especially challenging book, Bleak House. But was I wowed once again? Most certainly. Remarkable characters. Captivating plot. The keenest and ever-relevant observations of human nature. And writing skills that are truly unmatched. 

Even amid the corruptive injustice of Jarndyce and Jarndyce (the complex court case which pervades the pages of the novel), I found my journey through Bleak House immensely rewarding.

And how do you follow Dickens? Well, you certainly don’t go to another novel, that’s for sure. So, I’ve opted instead for a re-reading of an inspiring, thoroughly enjoyable book of history, Laura Hillebrand’s classic, Seabiscuit.


Tuesday, October 31, 2023

What Recent Reads Earned 5 Stars?


The reading of late has been absolutely exceptional with most of the books of the last couple of months earning the whole 5 stars possible.  Let’s run down the list.

Fire Over England, written by A.E.W. Mason, is an adventure story set against the imminent invasion of England by the Spanish Armada. It is full of page-turning action. There are intriguing parallels drawn between the England of the 16th Century and the England of the 1930s which is facing the threats to its existence from the Nazi ascendancy in Europe. I have read Fire Over England a couple of times before and I enjoyed it once again. Make it a 4-star novel.

Claire agrees with me that Tim Tebow’s Shaken: Discovering Your True Identity in the Midst of Life’s Storms is definitely 5-star book. There is plenty of insight, encouragement, challenge, and wise counsel.  Tebow illustrates in various ways his theme that you know “who you are” by knowing “Whose you are.” He also speaks movingly about the necessity of having a tight “circle of trust” for accountability and motivation, about learning the lessons from disappointment that can bring you closer to God, and much more. Claire and I both recommend it highly.

Rereading Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ by General Lew Wallace was another re-reading project that both Claire and I undertook this last quarter. My, what a story! What detailed and fascinating history! What spiritual inspiration! Sure, you’ve seen the movies -- 1907, 1925 (MGM’s version that was the most expensive silent film ever), 1959 (with Charlton Heston and Stephen Boyd as the lead actors) 2003, and 2016 – but you’re missing most of the treasure if you don’t read the book. 5 stars? Of course.

I found Arthur Conan Doyle’s 14th century military adventure, The White Company, not quite as enjoyable as my first reading many years ago. So, I’m leaving it in the 3-star category.

Next up is another compelling 5-star read, 10 Books That Screwed Up the World: And 5 Others That Didn't Help by Benjamin Wiker. It’s a wow, no doubt about it. I spent profound hours carefully reading this excellent and extremely important book. I particularly endorse it as a resource for Christians who desire to know the “whats” and “whys” regarding the de-volution of Western civilization…as well as learning the “hows” of reclaiming some of the authority and relevance the Church has so pitifully surrendered in the last century.

We have taken advantage of travel time in recent months to “read” five of C.S. Lewis’ Chronicles of Narnia via the superb radio adaptations done by Focus on the Family produced between 1999 and 2002.  On our way to Colorado and back in August, we listened to The Magician’s Nephew and The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. Then in October, as we drove to Wichita, then Branson, and back to Omaha, we listened with great delight to The Horse and His Boy, Prince Caspian: The Return to Narnia, and The Voyage of the Dawn Treader.

These productions, by the way, are excellent adaptations with almost all of the text of the original books kept intact. In addition, they utilize the voices of such distinguished actors as Paul Scofield and David Suchet, a fantastic musical score, realistic sound effects, and more. For fans of Narnia, these productions are wonderful. In fact, we suggest you consider putting the series on your Christmas shopping list, perhaps a used CD set. And ratings? 5-star ratings go to all of the above titles except the Dawn Treader. For though there is marvelous stuff in that book, I’m afraid the chapters about the Island of the Voices, the Dufflepuds, and the Dark Island drop the book to a 4-star for me.

My favorite Charles Dickens novel seems always to be the one I’m reading at the time. But it is certainly true that Nicholas Nickleby stands a bit taller than most. I thoroughly enjoyed evenings at our condo down in Branson with Nicholas, Madeline, Smike, Newman Noggs, John Browdie, the Cheeryble brothers and even the despicable villains Ralph Nickleby, Arthur Gride, and Wackford and Mrs. Squeers. Nicholas Nickleby easily earns 5 stars and then some.

At a discount bookstore in Branson, I came across a new edition of David McCullough’s first published book, The Johnstown Flood. It was an extremely interesting, well-written history about one of America’s horrific and most publicized tragedies. It’s a solid 4-star history.

The last title in this Book Den reading update is the classic novel of the Ozark hills and valleys, Harold Bell Wright’s The Shepherd of the Hills. It made for a particularly appropriate re-read for our Branson getaway but, alas, I didn’t actually begin it until our very last night there and finishing it soon after returning to Nebraska. Not to worry, even sitting in my own living room, Wright’s imagination and literary skills made me feel like I was still down in an Ozark “holler” dodging the Baldknobbers with young Matt, Sammy, Pete, and Dad Howitt. The Shepherd of the Hills is an easy, pleasurable read with action, mystery, and inspiration aplenty that earns 5 stars.

On the list for the next few weeks? Well, the current plan includes: re-reads of Bleak House (Charles Dickens), Heaven (Randy Alcorn), A Christmas Carol (Charles Dickens), and the last two books in C.S. Lewis’ Chronicles of Narnia. And first time readings of We Will Not Be Silenced (Erwin Lutzer), Jesus Is Risen: Paul and the Early Church (David Limbaugh), and No Little People: Sixteen Sermons for the 20th Century (Francis Schaeffer).


Saturday, August 19, 2023

A Reading Wrap-Up...and an Invitation

As summer nears its end, I find my year’s reading list down from my average number. But then, when I look over the list and realize how many of the books read thus far in 2023 have been particularly hefty -- over 600 pages in Charles Dickens’ The Old Curiosity Shop, the entire canon of Sherlock Holmes which goes over 600 pages, the nearly 1300 pages of The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, and the over 1500 pages of the JRR Tolkien saga -- I may be actually higher than my normal page count. So that’s an encouragement -- as is keeping a list in the first place. And, let’s face it, maintaining a successful “reading life” needs every bit of encouragement, accountability, good recommendations, and whatever other motivations we can get.

My most recent reading has all been of exceptional quality. I finally got through (for the third or fourth time in my life) William Shirer’s epic The Rise and the Fall of the Third Reich. Then there was Paul Tournier’s The Strong and the Weak. Tournier is a Swiss psychiatrist who wrote in the 1940s into the 1970s with insights and wise counsel derived from his Christian worldview. He is one of the “old friends” in my library as I’ve been reading his books since my very early days as a Christian. This particular book was a challenging study of how a Christian properly responds to his natural personality and tendencies. (By the way, I shared a few stimulating quotes from that book a few days ago in this post.)

Next up? After watching a couple of extremely interesting interviews with novelist and Civil War historian Shelby Foote, I was prompted to spend a little time in the War Between the States -- more specifically, in the 3-day Battle of Gettysburg which was the beginning of the end for the Confederacy. That trip started with Gettysburg: The Confederate High Tide by Champ Clark; then I went on to Michael Shaara’s highly-acclaimed novel, Killer Angels (my 3rd or 4th time through); and finally, I took up Shelby Foote’s Stars in Their Courses, his very detailed history of the battle’s prelude, action, and aftermath.

But now it’s time to move on. First, I’ll be finishing Cal Thomas’ Watchman in the Night and Raphael Sabatini's novel set in Portugal during the Napoleonic wars, The Snare. But what of my reading plans for late summer and fall? Well, they include David Limbaugh’s Jesus Is Risen: Paul and the Early Church; Tim Tebow’s Shaken (which is the book to be discussed at the next Vital Signs Book Brunch at our place on Saturday, September 23 at 10:30); and re-readings of Randy Alcorn’s Heaven, Lauren Hillenbrand’s Seabiscuit, General Lew Wallace’s Ben-Hur, and the C.S. Lewis series, The Chronicles of Narnia. 

Want to join me with any of these terrific books? Just let me know.

Saturday, July 22, 2023

A Quarterly Reading Report (Plus a Few Thoughts About Re-Reading)

Claire and I find it very helpful to do some of our planning on a quarterly system. It helps with motivation, organization, evaluation, and even the promotion of certain events and services to others. For instance, we try to schedule the Vital Signs Ministries Book Brunch and the letter-writing parties by quarters as well as the the dinner meetings of the ministry’s governing board. And, on a more personal level, we do quarterly evaluations of how we’re doing on our New Year Resolutions: taking honest stock, giving ourselves grades on our performance, making alterations when necessary, comparing our notes with one another, and making fresh prayers re-dedications regarding the quarter to come.

And this brings me to the subject of reading. Because that’s one of my areas of ongoing resolution, I take a little time at the end of every quarter (or somewhere near there) to review, remember, evaluate, and recommend my recent reading. Here is how I wrote up my “reading report card” for the 2nd quarter.

Grade -- B+. Books read -- 16. “Yes, our schedule seems to be busier than ever, but I can’t let that be the full explanation for my book numbers being a little lower than normal. I need to do better at avoiding distractions; to work on creating a comfortable atmosphere more conducive to reading; to set more time aside for living room reading with Claire; to continue encouraging others to read (including reading the same books as me); and to spend a bit more time on posts for The Book Den blog. Above all, do not let the spirit of the age (a “cancel culture” that dumbs down one’s reading skills, attention span, and appreciation of the crucial importance of reading quality books) make any more inroads into my life.

Of the 16 books read this quarter, 13 books were titles I had read before. Some of them, many times before. But I certainly don’t apologize for that. Indeed, I’m in excellent company with this practice. For example, C.S. Lewis wrote in On Stories: And Other Essays on Literature, “An unliterary man may be defined as one who reads books once only…We do not enjoy a story fully at the first reading. Not till the curiosity, the sheer narrative lust, has been given its sop and laid asleep, are we at leisure to savour the real beauties. Till then, it is like wasting great wine on a ravenous natural thirst which merely wants cold wetness.”

And in An Experiment in Criticism, Lewis explained his convictions this way, “The majority never read anything twice. The sure mark of an unliterary man is that he considers ‘I’ve read it already’ to be a conclusive argument against reading a work…Those who read great works, on the other hand, will read the same work ten, twenty or thirty times during the course of their life.”

Similar observations were made by Francois Mauriac --“Tell me what you read and I’ll tell you who you are’ is true enough, but I’d know you better if you told me what you re-read.”  And by Vladimir Nabokov, “Curiously enough, one cannot read a book; one can only re-read it. A good reader, a major reader, and active and creative reader is a re-reader.”  

With that perspective explained, here’s the reading list.

* I closed March’s reading while we were still in Branson with Washington Irving’s The Legend of Sleepy Hollow. A fine story. (A re-read.)

* April’s reading (all 5 were re-reads) were all 4-star titles. Confessions of a Twentieth Century Pilgrim (Malcolm Muggeridge); The Old Curiosity Shop (Charles Dickens); The Hobbit (J.R.R. Tolkien); The Fellowship of the Ring (J.R.R. Tolkien); and The Two Towers (J.R.R. Tolkien).

* May was an extremely busy month and I only got in two books. I finished the series by enjoying The Return of the Ring by J.R.R. Tolkien and then spent a pleasant evening with a Golden Age mystery, Holy Disorders by Edmund Crispin.

* June’s reading included another Edmund Crispin mystery, Swan Song (not quite as good as the earlier one of his); Edmund Crispin) and a re-read of C.S. Lewis trilogy -- Out of the Silent Planet, Perelandra, and That Hideous Strength.

* And now so far in July, there have been two “old friends,” The Seasons of Life by Paul Tournier and Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury. And a new read from a longtime favorite, Edward L. Beach. That book was Submarine.

* And so that makes only 15 books. What’s #16? Well, that would be one the reasons I haven’t finished more titles this quarter because, along the way, I have carefully been making my way through William L. Shirer’s classic history, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. This book too is a re-read but one with so much information (startling, detailed, and spiritually challenging information) that it is taking me awhile to move through its more than 1,200 pages.

So, there you go – a quick quarterly reading review written, at least in part, as an encouragement for you to join me in beating back the lethargy and the lure of the television by reading more. Indeed, I close this post with a snappy (and very quick) video apologetic on the matter.  


Monday, April 17, 2023

Let the Adventure Begin...Again

Earlier tonight I finished re-reading Charles Dickens extremely moving novel (“moving” in more ways than one), The Old Curiosity Shop, and was delighted to see that I enjoyed it, admired it, and appreciated it as much as previous readings. It’s a terrific read.

And so I had to decide what was next. That meant several anticipatory minutes browsing through my library shelves. Would it be Dumas? Sabatini? Chesterton? A history book? 

And then as I passed by the shelves where my best “old friends” await my attentions, I remembered it was April, the month in which Bilbo Baggins unwontedly hosts Gandalf and his dwarf friends for breakfast. Aha! 

And so I’m off again on one of my favorite adventures as I read The Hobbit, always followed immediately afterward by reading The Lord of the Rings trilogy.

Do you remember the beginning? Bilbo, so reluctant to even consider being in “an adventure,” begins to reconsider after hearing the dwarves telling their stories. “Then something Took-ish woke up inside him, and he wished to go and see the great mountains, and hear the pine-trees and the waterfalls, and explore the caves, and wear a sword instead of a walking-stick.”

Well, I’m feeling pretty Took-ish myself now and so I’m “all in” for the adventure too. Wanna’ join us? 

Friday, March 17, 2023

Heroes in My Library

My library is a special place to me, in part, because it is a place where many of my heroes await meeting with me.  You remember heroes, don’t you?  Those men and women who bravely fought for great causes, sacrificed for lofty ideals, and otherwise broke the bonds of compromising commonality to achieve noble aims.  In addition to my faith in Jesus Christ and my dependence on the Holy Spirit, in addition to my zeal to study the Bible and carefully learn its revelations and precepts, I’ve joyously accepted the gifts God has given me in mortal heroes. And I've cherished the inspiration they have brought me throughout my life -- heroes whose exemplary character and deeds of physical and moral valor compel me to dream bigger, reach further, and relish more the adventures of life.

My library resounds with the presence of these heroes and, even after decades of friendship, I still appreciate my every encounter with them. They include the apostles, Luke the physician, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Christopher Columbus, Ronald Reagan, Francis & Edith Schaeffer, Ulysses S. Grant, St. Patrick, Clarence Thomas, G.K. Chesterton, Old Testament heroes like Joseph and Kings Hezekiah and Josiah, Thor Heyerdahl, Edith Cavell, C.S. Lewis, Audie Murphy, Joni Eareckson-Tada, Malcolm Muggeridge, Paul Tournier, Florence Nightingale, Samuel Eliot Morison, William Wilberforce. The list goes on.

Even the fictional heroes in my library are trusted friends: Sherlock Holmes, Sydney Carton, the Count of Monte Cristo, Robin Hood, Fr. Brown, Richard Hannay, Robinson Crusoe, Badger and Ratty, D’Artagnan and the Musketeers, Mr. Pickwick, the Scarlet Pimpernel, Fr. Tim Kavanagh, Elwin Ransom, Ivanhoe, Horatio Hornblower, Frodo and Sam, the converted Ebeneezer Scrooge, Sir Wilfred of Ivanhoe, and so many others. The Lord uses even these “invented heroes” to yet provide real-life inspiration and direction.

Heroes have shaped my life in ways too numerous and deep to ever fully realize. They have daringly challenged me to venture outside my comfort zones and narrow self-interests and instead embrace the adventurous opportunities life provides for character, integrity, courage, and religious faith.

Where would I be without heroes? I don’t want to even imagine.

Saturday, December 31, 2022

Ending 2022’s Reading: A Review, Recommendations, and Resolutions

The year 2022 was not a record year for my reading – there was too much time taken up with vertigo recovery, our care for Carol Coppi, our involvement with my little sister in Wichita, and the ever-busy tasks of Vital Signs Ministries. And, alas, my reading took a pretty big hit with the ending of the Notting Hill Napoleons, our remarkably stimulating book club of 30 years. However, I still managed to slip in 6 dozen. 

As usual, many of these books were re-reads as I thoroughly enjoyed checking in again with such dear, lifelong friends as Alexander Dumas, Rafael Sabatini, Samuel Eliot Morison, C.S. Lewis, Robert Louis Stevenson, Jan Karon, G.K. Chesterton, John Buchan, William Shakespeare, Michael Ende, Edna Ferber, Owen Wister, Joni Eareckson Tada, Bess Streeter Aldrich, and Charles Dickens. 

But I made some new friends in 2022 too. Hunting the Nazi Bomb by Damien Lewis, Your Time Is Now by Jonathan Evans, Seven Men of Gascony by R.F. Delderfield, The Admirals by Walter Borneman, Created Equal (Clarence Thomas in His Own Words) edited by Pack and Paoletta, Johnny Tremain by Esther Forbes, The Apostate by Mark Christian, and The Book of Signs by David Jeremiah. All of the above titles made 4 stars in my ratings and are therefore enthusiastically recommended to you all. 

So there you have a very brief review plus a few recommendations. How about the resolutions then? Well, even now I have begun re-reading the several books connected to a seminar I’m presenting at the Rochester L’Abri’s annual conference on February 17 & 18. That presentation is entitled Beware the Mad Scientist: Divine Warnings Against “Playing God” from Classic Literature and it will cover Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, The Island of Dr. Moreau and The Invisible Man by H.G. Wells, 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson, and Dr. Faustus by Christopher Marlowe.  

Beyond that project, my reading will most likely continue along regular routes. I will spend most of my reading time with those authors near and dear to me while occasionally investigating others.  Of course, I do have a few specific projects in mind (besides the L’Abri responsibilities) for 2023. They include my bi-annual reading of Heaven by Randy Alcorn; a few classic commentaries on books of the Bible by men like Harry Ironside; more Dickens and Shakespeare; a first time read of Robert Bork’s book The Tempting of America and George Gilder’s Men and Marriage; and jumping back into the stirring adventures of Sherlock Holmes, The Lord of the Rings, and The Chronicles of Narnia

Want to come along?

Tuesday, November 23, 2021

5 Star Christmas Reading (And a Few Runners Up)

With no time in this busy but beloved holiday season to give individual reviews of the books I’m going to list, you will simply have to do with my placing them in 3 categories. The first is the 5 Star Recommendations which means they are among my ultimate favorites for Christmas reading. Indeed, several of these occupy some of our Yuletide hours almost every year. They cover a wide range of genres: theological, classic novels, juvenilia, modern inspirational, short stories, even history. 

However, I do not list here those readings which should be considered mandatory for Christmas; namely, the historical accounts of gospels Matthew and Luke as well as the classic Christmas poetry from the likes of G.K. Chesterton, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Dylan Thomas, Leslie Norris, Edgar Guest, T.S. Eliot, Christina Rossetti, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and many more.

The books in the second category earn 4 Stars in my reckoning as they too rate high regard. I guess that’s true of even those in the third category which I’ll simply call “Honorable Mention.” I’d recommend them all. After all, the purpose of this exercise is to provide a bit of stimulation and assistance for friends who desire to make reading an important part of their Christmas joys. So, here we go.

5 Star Recommendations

* Shepherds Abiding (Jan Karon)

* A Christmas Longing (Joni Eareckson-Tada)

* A Christmas Carol, Cricket on the Hearth, The Chimes, The Battle of Life, The Ghost’s Bargain, and The Haunted Man (Charles Dickens)

* Spirit of Christmas: Stories, Poems, Essays (G. K. Chesterton)

* The Christmas Room (Denny Hartford)

* God With Us (John MacArthur)

* Snow (Calvin Miller)

* A Treasury of Christmas Stories (Including The Other Wise Man) (Henry Van Dyke)

* The Gift of the Magi (O. Henry)

* The Freedom Train Christmas, The Winter in the Woods, and Christmas of the Talking Animals (Denny Hartford)

* Beasley’s Christmas Party (Booth Tarkington)

* Joy Born at Bethlehem: 19 Christmas Sermons (Charles Spurgeon)

4 Star Recommendations

* Letters from Father Christmas (J. R. R. Tolkien)

* Hercule Poirot’s Christmas (Agatha Christie)

* O Little Town (Don Reid)

* Christmas Every Day (William Dean Howells)

* Christmas at Thompson Hall (Anthony Trollope)

* The Drum Goes Dead (Bess Streeter Aldrich)

* The Quiet Little Woman, Tilly’s Christmas, Rosa’s Tale, The Abbott’s Ghost, A Merry Christmas, and A Country Christmas (Louisa May Alcott)

* Old Christmas (Washington Irving)

* Nutcracker (E.T.A. Hoffmann with illustrations by Maurice Sendak)

* The Bird’s Christmas Carol (Kate Douglas Wiggin)

* Dakota Christmas (Joseph Bottum)

* Christmas Sermons (Dietrich Bonhoeffer)

* Good Tidings of Great Joy (Sarah Palin)

“Honorable Mention”

* Finding Noel (Richard Paul Evans)

* The Golden Ring: A Christmas Story (John Snyder)

* The Tailor of Gloucester (Beatrix Potter)

* Silent Night: The Story of the World War I Christmas Truce (Stanley Weintraub)

* The Christmas Train (David Baldacci)

* The Beggar Boy at Christ’s Christmas Tree (Fyodor Dostoevsky)

* The Little Match Girl (Hans Christian Anderson)

* Miracle on 34th Street (Valentine Davies)

* The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle (Arthur Conan Doyle)

* An English Murder (Cyril Hare)

* A Christmas Most Foul: A Collection of Holiday Mysteries (A variety of mystery’s Golden Age authors)

* The Twenty-four Days Before Christmas (Madeleine L’Engle)

* Big Book of Christmas Mysteries (A variety of well-known authors)

* A Christmas Inspiration (Lucy Maud Montgomery)

* The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus (L. Frank Baum)

And two more items before I close. First of all, there are several books I love in which Christmas plays but a part. Still, because of the tender, memorable scenes of Christmas they depict therein, I’ll mention a few of my favorites: The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame, Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens, Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte, Little Women by Louis May Alcott, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by C. S. Lewis, The Long Winter by Laura Ingalls Wilder, Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery, Great Expectations by Charles Dickens, and Persuasion by Jane Austen.

Finally, I’m hoping that there will be some new favorites in books I have recently ordered. Those include 3 Bible studies from Pastor Stephen Davey (From Babylon to Bethlehem, The Original Christmas Carol, and  The Chronicles of Christmas); Dasher: How a Brave Little Doe Changed Christmas Forever by Matt Tavares; Twelve Nights by Urs Faes; Afterward: A Ghost Story for Christmas by Edith Wharton; The Night Before Christmas by Nikolai Gogol; and Home for Christmas by Lloyd C. Douglas. I’ll let you know which ones of these (if any) make the grade. 

Merry Christmas reading!

Friday, January 01, 2021

The Year in Reading

Despite the horrors and pressures of the year 2020, there were plenty of opportunities for intercession, for love and good deeds performed in the Holy Spirit, for fellowship among the “forever family” of God, for study of and conversation about the Bible, and yes, for reading other books as  well.

In this last category, 2020 was an exceptional year for me, just under a hundred books. My reading adventures covered the usual genres: history, novels, mystery and adventure books, Christian themes, even a bit of poetry this year as Claire and I started a project of recording our reading of poems aloud. We did this for the residents of senior living facilities as an extra gift besides the 9-page activity packets we have been providing every week since the quarantines locked us out from presenting our “When Swing Was King” shows. We sent DVD copies of our poetry reading to the activity directors and also uploaded them onto You Tube. (You can, by the way, avail yourself of those activity packets -- all 43 of them so far -- by going to this specific page in the Vital Signs Ministries website. If you are a senior or a boomer or know people who are in those age categories, these can be a great source for entertainment, encouragement, even inspiration.)

But back to the books. Before I get to those that rated 4 Stars, I'll mention some of the authors of adventures and mysteries I've read (or, in many cases, re-read) for simple entertainment that I would recommend: Dorothy Sayers, Ellery Queen, Alistair MacLean, Patricia Wentworth. 

And now the 4 Star reads. I list them by category (though some overlap categories) and you'll note that the titles that are underlined are re-reads. Indeed, some of them are old and very dear friends. After the listing, I add a quick note about the surprises and biggest blessings of the years in books.

Bible study and Christian living:

**** Christmas Sermons (Dietrich Bonhoeffer) 

**** True Spirituality (Francis Schaeffer)

**** Jesus On Trial (David Limbaugh)

**** Pilgrim's Progress (John Bunyan)

**** Everlasting: God's Faithfulness to Israel (Stuart Cunliffe)

**** The Meaning of Persons (Paul Tournier)

**** Worry Less, Live More: God's Prescription for a Better Life (Robert J. Morgan)

History:

**** Grant Moves South (Bruce Catton)

**** To Wake the Giant: A Novel of Pearl Harbor (Jeff Shaara)

**** A Hobbit, a Wardrobe, and a Great War (Joseph Loconte)

**** The Swamp Fox: How Francis Marion Saved the American Revolution (John Oller)

Novels:

**** Pickwick Papers (Charles Dickens)

**** Wake of the Perdido Star (Gene Hackman & Daniel Lenihan)

**** The Hunt for Red October (Tom Clancy)

**** The Hobbit (JRR Tolkien)

**** The Fellowship of the Ring (JRR Tolkien)

**** The Two Towers (JRR Tolkien)

**** The Return of the King (JRR Tolkien)

**** Alice Adams (Booth Tarkington)

**** Home to Holly Springs (Jan Karon)

**** In the Company of Others (Jan Karon)

**** Oliver Twist (by Charles Dickens)

**** Out of the Silent Planet (C.S. Lewis)

**** Perelandra (C.S. Lewis)

**** That Hideous Strength (C. S. Lewis)

**** Dream Days (A.A. Milne)

**** The Never-ending Story (Michael Ende)

**** Somewhere Safe with Somebody Good (Jan Karon) 

**** Robinson Crusoe (Daniel Defoe)

**** The Mysterious Island (Jules Verne)

**** The Wind in the Willows (Kenneth Grahame)

**** Barnaby Rudge (Charles Dickens)

**** The Black Tulip (Alexandre Dumas)

**** A Lantern In Her Hand (Bess Streeter Aldrich)

Okay, about the surprises and special blessings. I was profoundly moved by Everlasting: God's Faithfulness to Israel written by a pro-life colleague in Great Britain, Stuart Cunliffe. I was greatly encouraged and helped by Robert J. Morgan's Worry Less, Live More: God's Prescription for a Better Life. That book came as a gift because we support the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association and I came very close to putting it aside. But I ended up taking it on our two-week working vacation in the Ozarks and I am so glad I did. 

I liked A Hobbit, a Wardrobe, and a Great War by Joseph Loconte so much I bought several copies and sent them to friends. It was terrific. 

In the novel category, most of the books are among those old and dear friends I mentioned. But A Lantern In Her Hand by Bess Streeter Aldrich was a new read for me and I really loved it. So did our book club, the Notting Hill Napoleons. However, Jan Karon is becoming an even more important author to me (she has been for Claire for many years) and I find her Fr. Tim Kavanaugh a source of great stimulation and influence. Indeed, I wrote an appreciative essay about the Mitford novels which compared them to G.K.Chesterton and Francis & Edith Schaeffer. You'll find that essay here.

Friday, March 06, 2020

A Great Start to 2020 Reading

Though our Vital Signs Ministries schedule is more packed than ever, I have had an exceptional start to my reading year. The reasons for this are as follows: 1) my ever-deepening resolve to keep my "screen time" to a bare minimum -- both television and computer screen; 2) our efforts to create an even more comfortable, conducive atmosphere for reading, particularly, converting our fireplace to gas (instant ambience and completely effortless and clean) and bring our phonograph into the living room so that "easy listening" music provides a relaxing background; and 3) praying that the Lord helps me to "number my days" and "redeem the time" concerning my reading hours as in all other matters of life.

This last point doesn't mean, by the way, that I only read the Bible or study theology; nor does it mean reading for pleasure (entertainment) is a waste. No, it simply means that I'm working on the right balance between genres of literature, purposes, and eras that best fits my ministry responsibilities, personal interests, and season of life.

And so, I'm pleased to repeat that these first couple of months of 2020 has seen an "exceptional start to my reading year."

Looking through the list, I see that there have been 21 books read thus far and two books that I'm currently in the process of reading. Those two are True Spirituality by Francis Schaeffer (a re-read) and Joy Born at Bethlehem: 19 Christmas Sermons by Charles Spurgeon. I'm reading these two carefully and a bit at a time in order to more fully understand and apply their lessons. Both will certainly make my 4 Star recommendation list.

But what of the others? Remarkably, more than half the titles earned that 4 Star rating. Some of them were re-reads (as I've mentioned often before, most of my re-reading involves books I've already once, twice, or more) and some were new to me. The 4 Star re-reads? 5 were novels -- Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens; The Hunt for Red October by Tom Clancy; and the classic 4 by JRR Tolkien (The Hobbit, The Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers, The Return of the King). Two more of the 4 Star novels were my first readings -- Wake of the Perdido Star by Gene Hackman & Daniel Lenihan (a sea swashbuckler of sorts, very entertaining) and a Pulitzer Prize winner from early in the 20th Century, Alice Adams by a fellow who has become one of my favorite authors, Booth Tarkington.

The remaining 4 Star books of so far in 2020 have been Christmas Sermons by Dietrich Bonhoeffer and two excellent histories, Grant Moves South by acclaimed Civil War historian Bruce Catton and a study of Dwight Eisenhower by Fox television broadcaster Bret Baier entitled Three Days in January. 

The rest of the list included two very old mysteries by Louis Tracy which I downloaded on my Kindle for free (The Unknown Wife and A Mysterious Disappearance); two mysteries from the superb Dorothy Sayers (The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club and Have His Carcase); and four others from the "golden age" of the mystery novel (On Christmas Day in the Morning by Margery Allingham, Thou Shell of Death by Nicholas Blake, There Came Both Mist and Snow by Michael Innes, and The Siamese Twins Mystery by Ellery Queen.

The last two books were not very good. One was a WW II history Iron Spy by Ethan Quinn and the other was Tarzan of the Apes by Edgar Rice Burroughs. That last book I had never read (not even in my boyhood) and I was almost astonished at how bad it was. I mean, an adventure novel that is, at the same time, wildly unbelievable and still boring?

Anyhow, that's it for the latest catch-up post for The Book Den. Feel free to send along your reading lists as well. I'd love to get your reactions to what you're reading and perhaps find a few gems I might otherwise miss.

Monday, January 27, 2020

A Quick End-of-Year Review (In Reading)

It turned out that 2019 was a pretty good year in my reading. I hit 100 books just at the close but, even more important, my booklist included quite a lot of 5-Star reads. Yes, there were several books that had value and were pleasures to read (the Horatio Hornblower series, a couple of James Thurber, Evil Obsession by Nellie Snyder Yost, a couple of "lesser" Chesterton works, a few adventure novels, etc.), but it is only those that reached the 5-Star level that I pass along here.

In the history category:

* Wright Brothers (David McCulloch)
* Lonely Vigil (Walter Lord)
* August 1914 and  November 1916 (Alexander Solzhenitsyn). Yes, these are both novels but the material is so well researched and presented in such context that I'll go ahead and list them in this category.
* Valley Forge: George Washington and the Crucible of Victory (Newt Gingrich, William R. Forstchen, Albert S. Hanser). This too could be described in the same way as the two just above; namely, a historical novel that qualifies for this category.
* The Lion’s Gate: On the Front Lines of the Six Day War (Steven Pressfield)
* Broadway Babies Say Goodnight: Musicals Then & Now (Mark Steyn)
* Mission to Moscow (Malcolm Muggeridge)

In the fiction category:

* The Mysterious Island (Jules Verne)
* You Can’t Take It With You (George S. Kaufman & Moss Hart)
* That Printer of Udell’s (Harold Bell Wright)
* The Good Shepherd (C.S. Forester)
* Between Shades of Gray (Ruta Sepetys)
* Gone for Soldiers (Jeff Shaara)
* The Chronicles or Narnia -- the whole series (C.S. Lewis)
* The Little Minister (J.M. Barrie)
* Light from Heaven (Jan Karon)
* At Home in Mitford (Jan Karon)
* The Rim of the Prairie (Bess Streeter Aldrich)
* Mr. Beasley's Christmas Party (Booth Tarkington)
* Seventeen (Booth Tarkington)
* Great Expectations (Charles Dickens)
* Hard Times (Charles Dickens)
* Christmas Stories (Charles Dickens)
* A Christmas Carol (Charles Dickens)
* The Haunted Man (Charles Dickens)

In the theology/culture category:

* Death in the City (Francis Schaeffer)
* L’Abri (Edith Schaeffer)
* Ship of Fools (Tucker Carlson)
* Mere Churchianity (John Hampton)
* The Seasons of Life (Paul Tournier)
* Pollution & the Death of Man (Francis Schaeffer)
* Heaven: Your Real Home (Joni Eareckson Tada)
* The Great Good Thing (Andrew Klavan)
* The Life of Elijah (A.W. Pink)

Monday, January 06, 2020

Dickens on Religious "Pretence" vs the Real Thing

"Lest there should be any well-intentioned persons who do not perceive the difference... between religion and the cant of religion, piety and the pretence of piety, a humble reverence for the great truths of Scripture and an audacious and offensive obtrusion of its letter and not its spirit in the commonest dissensions and meanest affairs of life, to the extraordinary confusion of ignorant minds, let them understand that it is always the latter, and never the former, which is satirized here.

Further, that the latter is here satirized as being, according to all experience, inconsistent with the former, impossible of union with it, and one of the most evil and mischievous falsehoods existent in society -- whether it establish its headquarters, for the time being, in Exeter Hall, or Ebenezer Chapel, or both.

It may appear unnecessary to offer a word of observation on so plain a head. But it is never out of season to protest against that coarse familiarity with sacred things which is busy on the lip, and idle in the heart; or against the confounding of Christianity with any class of persons who, in the words of Swift have just enough religion to make them hate, and not enough to make them love, one another." (Charles Dickens, from the Third Preface to The Pickwick Papers)

Thursday, June 13, 2019

Here We Go Again: Another Trip to Narnia!

Here is the note we just sent out to those from our church who are participating in our Chronicles of Narnia summer reading challenge. I print it here on The Book Den to perhaps scatter a little interest among others of you who might want to join in the project.

Dear friends,

The Narnia reading challenge of Grace Bible Church is underway and we thank you for being a part of it.  Though just announced a little over a week ago, there are already 13 adults and 6 younger readers on board with what looks like several more just getting ready to “open the wardrobe” and join us in the grand adventure.  That’s terrific.

Now the primary purpose of this note is to remind you that the reading challenge is just that – an invitation for you to include in your summer activities the reading of the 7 acclaimed novels of C.S. Lewis that make up The Chronicles of Narnia.  There are no exams or book reports involved here.  No grades.  No competition whatsoever.  You read the novels (or listen to audio versions) at your own pace and for your own pleasure and spiritual edification.

However, the purposes we hope to serve by doing this reading challenge as a group are several.  1) On several levels, reading is a beneficial activity so we are all for anything that helps increase the motivation and accountability to read quality literature.

2) Reading The Chronicles of Narnia offers special benefits not only for a believer’s spiritual reflection and application but also, because of the immense popularity of the books and the movies they inspired, for effective conversion starters with others.

3) As you know, the biblical definition of fellowship is “things held in common.” Therefore, when church members share wholesome and profitable things (be it prayer, Bible studies, service projects, giving, or yes, even reading books together), they are encouraged and built up in the Faith, not to mention being better equipped to shine their lights in the surrounding culture.

4) The Narnia books are also unusually helpful in sparking intergenerational connections and anything that helps Christians of varying ages find avenues of fellowship is super.

And, finally, 5) A reading project of this sort provides a great excuse for a party!  In this case, it will be a barbecue with burgers and dogs, cookies and Narnia cake, samples of authentic Turkish Delight, prizes, and more.  We’re looking at dates in mid to late August for this celebration.

So, I hope this answers a few questions and serves as both an encouragement and a thank you for your participation in the Narnia reading challenge.  We also hope you find opportunities to share your responses to the novels with other Narnia travelers as we go through the summer.  To aid in that latter activity, you might find helpful a set of discussion question posted on The Book Den which cover each of the Narnia novels.  (https://thebookden.blogspot.com/ Just use the word Narnia in the search engine at that blog to locate those specific pages.) Also, we will soon be providing nifty Narnia “tags” that will help you identify your fellow Narnians in this adventure.

Okay, that’s it.  Enjoy your reading. And remember…take courage, dear friends, for Aslan is on the move!

Monday, December 31, 2018

The Year in Books

It was another banner year for reading.

My booklist for 2018 finished this afternoon at 115 but that includes everything, including quickly-read mysteries and adventure novels. But along with the list itself I always keep a record of my responses. Those rating 4 stars are terrific books (many of them old friends) that I enthusiastically recommend to others. Those winning 3 stars are books of enjoyment and value that I would recommend in some circumstances and which might well merit a re-read at some time. The 2 star books are ones that I managed to finish but will probably never pick up again. And the 1 star books — well, actually, there are no 1 star books because if they’re that dull or offensive or annoying, I don’t bother to finish them and, therefore, they don't make the list. 

With all that said, though, 2018 was  a splendid year and I list below (by genre) all of my 4 star picks. (By the way, the ones with an asterisk are books that I had already enjoyed…at least once before. And, as you'll plainly see, with my advanced age and particular literary standards, I do a lot of re-reading!)

Novels:
* Ivanhoe (Walter Scott)
* The Hunt for Red October (Tom Clancy)
Before We Were Yours (Lisa Wingate)
* The Book of the Dun Cow (Walter Wangerin)
The Cruel Sea (Nicholas Monsarrat)
* Huntingtower (John Buchan)
* Killer Angels (Michael Shaara)
Fire Over England (A.E.W. Mason)
* The Man Who Was Thursday (G. K. Chesterton)
* The Magnificent Ambersons (Booth Tarkington)
Seventeen (Booth Tarkington)
* Little Dorrit (Charles Dickens)
* The Haunted Man (Charles Dickens)
* A Christmas Carol (Charles Dickens)
Emma (Jane Austen)
* The Wind in the Willows (Kenneth Grahame)
* The Christmas Room (Denny Hartford)
4 novels from Jan Karon’s delightfully engaging Mitford series, Out to Canaan, A New Song, In This Mountain, and Shepherds Abiding (Jan Karon)

Plays: 
* Our Town (Thornton Wilder), 
* Dr. Faustus (Christopher Marlowe)
* Cyrano de Bergerac (Edmund Rostand)
* The Love Girl & the Innocent (Alexander Solzhenitsyn)

Collections of Short Stories:
* King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table (Antonia Fraser)
* The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (Arthur Conan Doyle)
* The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes (Arthur Conan Doyle)
* The Return of Sherlock Holmes (Arthur Conan Doyle)
* His Last Bow (Arthur Conan Doyle)
* The Casebook of Sherlock Holmes (Arthur Conan Doyle)
* Grimm’s Fairy Stories (The Brothers Grimm)

History: 
* The two volumes of Memoirs (Ulysses S. Grant)
Deadly Times: The 1910 Bombing of the Los Angeles Times and America's Forgotten Decade of Terror (Lew Irwin)
* Seabiscuit (Laura Hillenbrand)
The Quartet: Orchestrating the Second American Revolution, 1783-1789 (Joseph Ellis)

Christian Life/Culture:
* The Holy Bible (both a read-through AND a listen-through with Alexander Scourby’s narration)
* No Little People (Francis Schaeffer)
Happiness (Randy Alcorn)
* The Adventure of Living (Paul Tournier)
Creed or Chaos (Dorothy Sayers)
The Treasure Principle (Randy Alcorn)
The Best Is Yet to Come (Tony Evans)
* Heaven, Your Real Home (Joni Eareckson Tada)
The Crisis in the Arts (Andrew Klavan)

Friday, December 29, 2017

The Year in Review (In Reading, That Is)

2017 is almost in the books -- pun intended, I suppose -- and so a quick review of this year’s reading is appropriate. I finish the year a little above my average number of books read. That's good. Several of those were lively, entertaining reads with little ongoing relevance like a couple of Alistair MacLean thrillers, Bill Buckley's Blackford Oakes series, and Donald Hamilton’s Matt Helm series that I re-read early in the year (for the umpteenth time) and then gave away to get them out of the house for good. Kinda’ like eating all the cookies before going on a diet!

One of my reading resolutions for the year was to stage a substantial return to Shakespeare with an ambitious schedule of one a month. But, alas Poor Yorick, I only got in 8. I read about the same number of G.A. Henry novels as well. He is almost always a delightful read and I like learning the history he packs into his adventure novels. A couple of Jeff Shaara novels came along in the Notting Hill Napoleons selections: The Frozen Hours and The Fateful Lightning. 

I re-read a lot of C.S. Lewis this year: Letters to Malcolm: Chiefly on Prayer, The Abolition of Man, The Pilgrim’s Regress, Mere Christianity, The Great Divorce (finished in the shadow of the 14, 265 ft. Mt. Quandary which I climbed earlier in the day), and The Screwtape Letters. Great stuff.

I re-read Boris Pasternak’s Dr. Zhivago this year and, surprisingly, found it rather disappointing. Oh well, tastes change; readers change. Much more satisfying in fiction explorations were Ice Palace by Edna Ferber, Little Women by Louisa May Alcott, Valley Forge: George Washington and the Crucible of Victory by Newt Gingrich & William R. Forstchen, The Innocence of Fr. Brown by G.K. Chesterton, and the lengthy Japanese epic Musashi by Eiji Yoshikawa.

Other fiction of superb quality came this year from Charles Dickens: The Chimes, Cricket on the Hearth, A Christmas Carol and an assortment of shorter Christmas-themed stories. And the highlight of the Notting Hill Napoleons’ year (for me, anyhow) was our November reading of Dickens’ wonderful novel, Dombey & Son.

But I’m not quite done with the fiction favorites. I read the first 4 novels in Jan Karon’s Mitford series this year and loved each one: At Home in Mitford, A Light in the Window, These High, Green Hills, and Out to Canaan. I also returned to Middle Earth late in the year with spellbinding reads of J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Hobbit, The Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers, and The Return of the King. Terrific!

And there were a couple of exceptionally fun Christmastime reads -- The Big Book of Christmas Mysteries edited by Otto Penzler and 101 Dalmatians by Dodie Smith.

The year’s best non-fiction reading involved, as it always does for me, theology, history, and culture. Besides the C.S. Lewis stuff there was Kingdom Man by Tony Evans, A Torch Kept Lit by William F. Buckley, Who Built That: Awe-Inspiring Stories of American Tinkerpreneurs by Michelle Malkin, Thomas Jefferson and the Tripoli Pirates by Brian Kilmeade & Don Yaeger, Holiness in Hidden Places by Joni Eareckson Tada, and Happiness by Randy Alcorn.

And what would be the tops in my recommendations to others? That's too tough to call but these (in alphabetical order) would certainly be the finalists.

A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens.
* Dombey & Son by Charles Dickens.
* Happiness by Randy Alcorn.
Holiness in Hidden Places by Joni Eareckson Tada.
Little Women by Louisa May Alcott.
* Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis.
* The Middle Earth books by J.R.R. Tolkien.
* The Mitford books by Jan Karon.
* Musashi by Eiji Yoshikawa.
* The Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis.