Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Grave Peril - Dresen Files book 3 - by Jim Butcher

After finishing a long and not so entertaining non-fiction book, I like to read something that I know will pique my interest.  Jim Butcher’s Dresden Files comes through in spades again.  The action kicks in immediately and only slows down for one or two chapters.

This time, Harry Dresden, our erstwhile hero, has some new help in the person of Michael Carpenter.  Michael is known as the Fist of God and is a Knight with a strong Faith and a sweet sword. He watches Harry’s back and destroys evil wherever he finds it. The ghosts in Chicago are running rampant, and it’s up to them to find out who or what is causing that to happen. 

The Dresden files are starting to fit into a mold.  Something ugly goes bump in the night.  Only one person in Chicago is equipped to fight the bad guy, and it’s Harry Dresden.  He sets out to find out what’s going on, and things go from bad to worse to badder to worser in a hurry. I know, not remotely grammatically correct, but I think you get the idea.  Just when you think it is as bad as it gets, it isn’t.  This time, it gets so bad that Harry dies - for a minute.  How can he get out?

Butcher set me up again this time.  As I read through the first half of the book, I started wondering why Dresden didn’t just do some badass magic stuff and get it over with.  He always seems so weak.  Ask and you shall receive.  When things look bleakest, Harry Dresden finds a way to get through.  And he does it in spectacular fashion.

I love a book that causes me to feel some emotion.  As long as it isn’t irritation, it’s a good thing.  This book managed to make me laugh and cheer.  Although it was a familiar plot arc, I really didn’t care.  Butcher does it well and made it feel fresh. I think I’ll try and find out if he can continue to keep it going through the whole series.

Rating: 4 out of 5  (see the rating system)

Monday, March 30, 2009

Monday Erotica Review: Those Dangerous Times

Today is the review for the third novel in the Noah Ravenswood series by Christopher C. Newman, available at Dark Roast Press.

Those Dangerous Times  by Christopher C. Newman

There, standing completely nude in the pale dawn light, was Lisa. She was facing him and her body was quivering like she was having some sort of seizure. George watched in horror as a pair of dark gray arms emerged from her stomach– and the hands on the ends of those arms obscenely caressed Lisa’s ample chest. Blood ran down from the wounds that the arms had made in her stomach as those hands, pitch-black, clutched more like talons than fingers into the meat of the ex-barmaid’s bosom. Lisa’s eyes widened; they silently begged and pleaded with George to do something. A ragged rush of air passed between her clenched teeth as she found the strength to breathe. 

 

“George,” she softly cried as the color of her flesh became pallor with a sickening speed. 

 

“What the hell!” the big man spat, and he ran forward. As he approached, a creature’s face appeared over Lisa’s right shoulder.  

 

The long wild black hair framed a dark expanse that was twisted into a hateful sneer. The thing had no eyes, just twin wells of deep darkness on either side of its nose. It smoked; rolls of gray steam seemed to waft off of the thing’s body, creating a strange misty background to accent Lisa’s trembling, pale skin. Lisa’s body shook even harder and blood erupted from her lips, painting her chin a dreadful crimson.  

 

“Aaarrgggh,” the twenty-year old softly gurgled before slumping lifeless in the apparition’s hold.  

 

The phantom smiled; it was horrible to behold and made George’s blood run icily in his veins. It lifted up Lisa’s limp form and tossed her aside like the wadded up remains of a fast food meal.  

 

“George Dabrowski,” it hoarsely whispered with a chilling voice. “Do you remember me…?” 

 

“No!” he shouted at the figure creeping upon the ground towards him. “I-it can’t be! You’ve been dead for… t-twenty-four years!” 

 

“No, not dead,” it whispered in that terrible tone. “Just searching, searching and wandering until I could find those who murdered me. You will lead me to them all, George Dabrowski… I will have my revenge upon all of you!” 

 

“Piss off!” he screamed at the smoking gray spirit. “They’re my brothers! I’ll never help you kill us all!” 

 

George ran to the bike and jumped upon it. He fired it up with a roar and tore off down the road as if his ass was on fire. Behind him he could hear the creature laugh. It was one of the few sounds he would never forget. It was more of a coughing bark than a laugh, but a laugh it was all the same.

 My review: 

If you liked the first two books of the Ravenswood series, you’re going to love this one.   In my favorite of the series, Those Dangerous Times, the main characters really evolve.  You’ll get a glimpse into Noah’s past as a soldier, an insight into what makes him so gruff and jaded today.  If you liked Sarah, then this one is a must read, I won’t give anymore away about that, but the relationship between the two characters if finally defined completely. 

As for storyline, this novel is a real whodunit, with all the twists and turns we’ve come to expect from this author.  If you cross Agatha Christie and Stephen King what you get is Christopher Newman and Those Dangerous Times.  I can’t recommend it enough an give it 5 stars and two thumbs up!

Denim Dancing

So, I decided to make the AlterNation denim skirt - the big fluffy one.  I went to  Salvation Army and bought a bunch of foolishness, including two silk 

ties, three pair of jeans, one pair of seersucker pants, and one pair of very ugly plaid shorts.  

Identifying the right jeans took some time.  If you are going to have grayish blue jeans as your base - the pair that you use for the waistband and zipper - then all the rest of the jeans have to fall into the same basic color family.  At least for my taste, bright blue with a nearly purplish hue doesn’t go with grayish blue denim.  I was looking for three pair of jeans with a similar color base, all dark.  And then I found this embroidery, which made me happy.  

So, with two pair of jeans in, and the idea that I would use the seersucker as an insert - make it lighter, more appropriate for summer.  I got the white bag home and threw everything in the wash.  After everything came out of the dryer, I tried everything on.  One pair of jeans was between one and two sizes too big for me - good for a Sunday.  (Clearly, I’m fond of my Sunday wear.)  The seersucker - while huge - may be wearable in the summer.  As long as I’m ok with looking slightly offbeat.  The plaid shorts…  well, I’ll destroy them for use in something else.  I found an extra pair of jeans in the closet upstairs - dark enough to suit me - and added them to the pile.

So, following directions (I can do that some times, but never exactly as given) I started breaking down the jeans. It’s fairly simple - cut open the inside seams of the jeans that are going to be the ones at your waist.  Make sure they fit first…  Cut the curve on the crotch, front and back, preserving the thick seam, but not so far that you start messing with the zipper.  That thick seam is going to lay on top of the other side of the fabric, and you are going to sew the thick side over the thin, if you can sew in the existing stitching then your new stitches won’t be as noticeable.  

Cut the pant legs off of the spare jeans and use the widest part of them at the bottom to cut two triangles.  Those are going to be sewn into the front and the back  gaps that result from stitching the curve of the crotch over onto the leg of the skirt.  

If you want more fullness, start cutting the seams open and adding more triangles.  In theory, you can do this forever, though denim does get heavy.  Either hem it or leave it raw.  I got my embroidery into the corner of the skirt…

And so I got to wear the skirt today.  It came out exactly as advertised, and I’m happy enough with it.  

So… the review of the instructions: Simple enough.  Results as advertised.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Thief With No Shadow by Emily Gee

I brought Thief with No Shadow, partly because the book itself appealed to me, and partly because I felt an affinity with the author.  Emily Gee is a New Zealander who enjoys travelling, she has a degree in science (geology, not quite as good as chemistry!) and she is the daughter of Maurice Gee, whose children’s books I have fond memories of reading.  I am so glad I took a chance on this book!

Thief With No Shadow is a dark fantasy with a hint of romance, and has a very intimate scale.  The conflict is life or death for the four main characters, but no-one else will really care if they fail.  There are no kingdoms to topple or ends of the world to prevent, just four people, each trying in their own way to save their sibling and create some sort of future.

Melke and her brother, Hantje, are wraiths, they can turn invisible at will.  When Hantje  is caught foolishly trying to steal from a den of salamanders, Melke agrees to steal a necklace in return for his life.

However, the necklace belongs to a psaaron (a sea creature) and was stolen from it a century ago by a member of the sal Vere family.  Cursed by the psaaron,  Bastian and his sister, Liana, are the last members of a once proud and wealthy family now reduced to poverty.  They need to return the necklace to break the curse.

All the characters except for Liana are broken in some way, and face horrible choices.  Bastian was my favourite, he is so filled with rage and despair, and tries so hard to hate Melke, but underneath he is a good and decent man, and this keeps breaking though.

Thief With No Shadow does have some flaws but I could not put the book down - when I was very close to the end there was a power cut and I had to finish reading by torchlight!  There was no way I was going to be able to wait for morning to find out what happened. 

I can  hardly wait for Emily Gee’s next book, The Laurentine Spy to be released on 5 May.  (There are quite a few books I want that are released in the first week of May.  Personally, I think it’s the authors’ way of wishing me Happy Birthday!)

Review of "Cornelius Van Til: Reformed Apologist and Churchman"

Cornelius Van Til: Reformed Apologist and Churchman, by John R. Muether, Phillipsburg, PA: P&R, 2008.

Any biographer of a man like Cornelius Van Til needs to assume certain things.  First, Van Til’s thought, though brilliant, is not always easy to divine.  Second, that this is made more  problematical by the coming together of at least two different obstacles: a. Van Til’s sometimes awkward way of putting things, and, b. the difficulty many of us have with obeying the injunction to “bring every thought into captivity to Christ” (2 Cor. 10:5).  Third, one who would write about Van Til must keep in mind that owing in no small part to the foregoing points, the famed Westminster apologist is often not closely or sympathetically read by his opponents, who content themselves too much with the misrepresentations of him which have been handed down as unquestioned truths over the years.  Fourthly, these characterizations help serve the agendas of those conservative Christians who like to flirt with wayward evangelicals who enjoy rubbing shoulders with non-evangelical intellectuals like Barth, Balthasar or Ricoeur.  It is for reasons such as these that the uncompromising thrust of Van Til’s thinking, and its conscious antithetical attitude towards unbiblical opinions must be explained if his important work is to be appreciated, especially by readers who may desire to be introduced to the man and to understand his influence.

A life of Van Til authored by a librarian and Church History professor at Westminster Seminary would be a good place to go to get such a balanced, friendly, though not uncritical treatment of this important thinker.  John Muether has given the Church his take on one whom he calls “this truly great man” (11).  And he has been concerned to connect Van Til with his Dutch Reformed roots and his Presbyterian (OPC) commitments.  These indeed come across to the reader very clearly throughout the book.  Muether charts the “protective isolationism” of his subject’s “Dutch-American upbringing” (38), his reading of Kuyper and Bavinck, and the way this led to his enthusiasm for maintaining the antithesis between saved and unsaved ways of thinking.

Muether recounts the emotional wrench of the young Van Til’s decision to leave the familiar surroundings of Grand Rapids for Princeton; a decision which, however wise, would always be felt by both Van Til and his future wife.  He did well at Princeton, winning two academic prizes and completing “four degrees in five years,” receiving his PhD from the University in 1927 (52).  Even at this early part of his life, it appears that the lineaments of his thought were pretty well cast.  And Muether notices the looming influence of Bavinck on his subject, “the evidence for which grows as Bavinck’s dogmatics is translated into English.” (56).  Anyone who studies Bavinck’s “Prolegomena” (Volume 1) can read statements which would sit comfortably within one of the syllabii of Cornelius Van Til (Cf. Muether’s comment about him refining Bavinck’s basic approach - 116).

A most interesting feature is the record of how J. Gresham Machen eventually lured Van Til away from his rural pastorate in Spring Lake, MI. to join the newly formed Westminster Seminary in 1929.  It is made clear that Machen went to extraordinary lengths to secure Van Til’s services for the new Seminary, and how, after Machen’s untimely death in 1937, he found himself taking on much of the responsibility for the work that his mentor had left behind (85).

The author also cleverly introduces us to those critics (e.g. Buswell, Daane) who would often misrepresent Van Til’s views, and who would be the cause of misconceptions about Van Til which survive him into the present day.

And here (Chapter 4) we enter one of the best parts of the book.  Rejecting John Frame’s opinion of the Clark-Van Til Controversy as a low point in the lives of both men (see 106-107), the author tells how Clark’s rationalistic theology, among other things, tended to make mere assent the basis of faith instead of the embrace of the truth by the whole man (e.g. 102), and that “Clark’s  failure to acknowledge the qualitative difference” between Divine and human knowledge, “collapsed (in the`words of the Complaint) the Creator-creature distinction that lay at the heart of a biblical doctrine of creation.”  (104).

What is significant about this chapter is how Muether shows that the supporters of Gordon H. Clark had an agenda which included broadening the OPC membership and making it fit more comfortably within mainline evangelicalism.  He also shows that even though Van Til signed the Complaint against the ordination of Clark he did not take a leading role in the controversy (104), and the language in which the Complaint was written, although borrowing from Van Til’s terminology, was not his.  Indeed, Muether suggests that it could more accurately be termed “the Clark-Murray debate” (105) since the esteemed John Murray was one of the main protagonists involved in the dispute.

Despite the toll the episode took on their relationship, it is gratifying to read that Van Til always held Clark in high regard (101).  All who still carry a torch for Clark would be well advised to read this part of the biography.

After this the author moves on to deal with Karl Barth.  He notes that Louis Berkhof praised The New Modernism, Van Til’s warning to evangelicals against the deceptive terminology of the Basel theologian.  For instance Muether writes, “For Barth,…the resurrection happened in a time of pure presence; it was not an event in the past (Historie) but a present manifestation of Christ’s supreme sovereignty (Geschichte).” (123).    Evangelicals have been and continue to be drawn to Barth’s dynamic theology through reading him as an evangelical absentee rather than as a neo-orthodox thinker (Cf. esp. 128).  In doing so they lightly throw off Van Til’s thorough acquaintance with the early and latter Barth and trot out well-worn but too often unsubstantiated criticisms of Van Til’s engagements with Barth, even attacking Van Til’s scholarship so as to protect Barth from his censure.  It is doubtful whether a search of the bookshelves of these evangelical defenders of Karl Barth would uncover carefully marked up and annotated editions of the Church Dogmatics in the German! (134).  Van Til was both a brilliant theologian and philosopher (although Muether is right to say that he should not be viewed as a Christian philosopher - 154), and those who take aim at his assessment of Barth should perhaps pause for a little more self-assessment before giving their opinions.

But Van Til has always attracted criticism.  And certainly some of it is justified.  He tended to generalize, his choice of words was annoyingly confusing, and he was sometimes given to overstatement.  These traits, when coupled with his unflinching orthodoxy and his presuppositional apologetic approach will guarantee a continuous line-up of left-leaning evangelicals, evidentialists and fence-sitting philosophers to take pot shots at his work.

The sixth chapter retells his spats with the progressive wing at Calvin Seminary, including his former teacher W.H. Jellema, whose pursuance of common ground between Christian and non-Christian systems of thought was thought by Van Til to compromise the antithesis between “covenant keepers and covenant breakers.”  The historical attention given to the eventual disagreements between himself and Herman Dooyeweerd (175-177) is well done; likewise with Francis Schaeffer (197-199), and his isolation from the next generation of evangelicals (Henry, Carnell, and even Edmund Clowney - see 222) is documented.  It is also nice to read a clearly articulated denial that Van Til was a closet Theonomist, for all his influence on certain aspects of their work (216-219).

Criticisms

Having then surveyed parts of the book, is there anything else to do but to join those reviewers who have already given it a ringing endorsement?  I think there is.  For despite its success in providing a more detailed canvass against which to view Van Til’s life, and despite its clarifications of important disputes (especially with Gordon Clark and the Calvin Forum), I came away feeling disappointed with the book as a biography of Cornelius Van Til the thinker.

I will not belabor the point, but there were several things about the biography that were disappointing.  Firstly, Van Til’s thought is the reason for his importance, as well as for the controversy which surrounds him.  But his thought is nowhere clearly spelled out and explained (perhaps the closest the author comes is on pages 114-116, but this is far too little to go on).  It is everywhere taken for granted.  Some brief initiation into the world of Van Til’s profound insights would have made more sense of his criticisms of Clark and Buswell and Jellema and Carnell, to say nothing of Barth.  The criticisms Van Til himself received from men like Ronald Nash and Carl Henry cannot be assessed because the newcomer to Van Til is given nothing to weigh them against.  Van Til’s differences with Dooyeweerd are not explored (other than a quick note on page 176 to the effect that the Amsterdam polymath rejected inerrancy and an historical Adam), even though these would have thrown light on the contrasts between him and Francis Schaeffer and his followers, like Os Guinness, or Nancey Pearcey.  Just what is “Van Til’s transcendental approach”? (199. My emphasis).  We are not told.  And why is his response to Dooyeweerd in Jerusalem and Athens seemingly characterized as “less effective”? (202).

Van Til’s The Defense of the Faith is mentioned (170-171), but its contents is not disclosed.  And this lack of substance is even more pronounced with Christianity and Barthianism, which Muether calls “his magnum opus” (230) .  We are told that Carl Henry thought it did not reconsider Barth in light of “Barth’s modifications of his system” (189), but we are not told whether this judgment could be sustained (I believe it can not be without abandoning a biblically founded epistemology).

Again, why does the author express doubts as to the Van Tilian grounding of Jay Adams’ Nouthetic Counseling  approach?  Or the cultural analysis of Harvie Conn, or the work of John Frame? (223).  Surely each of these men believed themselves to be powerfully influenced by Van Til?  And what is “Van Til’s novelty”? (234).

Muether seems to have a penchant for anulling affirmative passages.  Several times a positive evaluation of his subject is inverted with a negative opinion of a critic, named or unnamed.  In fact, as the book came to its close the anticipation of a clearly drawn overall assessment was predictably frustrated.  Muether skillfully shows us Van Til the Churchman, and Van Til the gentleman.  What we hardly see is Van Til the thinker.

Friday, March 27, 2009

Breaking Dawn (Twilight Saga Book) - Review

Author : Stephanie Myers

Website : www.stepheniemeyer.com

Plot : To be irrevocably in love with a vampire is both fantasy and nightmare woven into a dangerously heightened reality for Bella Swan. Pulled in one direction by her intense passion for Edward Cullen, and in another by her profound connection to werewolf Jacob Black, she has endured a tumultuous year of temptation, loss and strife to reach the ultimate turning point. Her imminent choice to either join the dark but seductive world of immortals or pursue a fully human life has become the thread from which the fate of two tribes hangs. Now that Bella has made her decision, a startling chain of unprecedented events is about to unfold with potentially devastating and unfathomable consequences.

Review : I dont want to say too much about what happens, so I dont kill it for anyone who wants to read it so I will try my best not to say too much.

After enjoying the previous three books, I had to purchase and read this one as I was drawn in to the whole story. This has to be the best out of the 4 books, it has a lot more detail and story and also continues to keep the same feel throughout.

At the start of the book something major happens, which causes a massive chain reaction through out the book. This was a big shock as you didnt expect it to happen, and this is a reason that you are so drawn into the book as you want to know what will happen next.

I have to admit, when I got to the end I was very disappointed as i know there isnt going to be a 5th book…well at least not in the near future.

Overall I really enjoyed this, as it developed a lot of the characters story lines, it had more action, more story, more drama. If you have read the previous books, I would recomend you continue and read this as you wont be dissapointed and you wont want to put the book down.

I really hope more sequels follow, as its very well written and you instantly connect with each character and the story is great!

My Rating : 8 out of 10

"The Secret" by Beverly Lewis: this is what a "Christian novel" should be

Here’s my review: I loved this book.

I had read the blurb, so I knew a little of what would develop in Beverly Lewis’s latest Amish novel, The Secret, due out in April. But having this foreknowledge or not, I’d have kept reading. The action in the book was pretty low key, but that’s what you’d expect, since the plot features an Amish family in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Yet the story was sweet without being saccharine, a tale of a culture — personified by Grace Byler, the main character — that values community, good food, hearty work, and decent living.

I couldn’t put it down. Despite the rather strict rules in this community, you recognize the complexity of the relationships and the depths of the people’s feelings. And yes, you also see the difficulty these rules put the folk in, when their teaching against being preoccupied with “self” collides with a genuine crisis where they need, most of all, to be comforted.

You become truly interested in the members of the Byler family, wondering how they will cope with the crisis that strikes them, centred on their mother’s secret, and how they’ll choose their futures. The Amish way of life is presented not so much as “old fashioned” as it is simpler, more willing to share others’ joys and burdens than the one we readers come from. Reading about this community, you never feel condescending toward it. There might even be a little envy.

The book follows two plotlines: the main one, with Grace and her Amish family, and another featuring Heather, a young woman from the “outside” world, who faces a troubling medical diagnosis. At first these plots seem completely unrelated (apart from interesting parental parallels). But the stories finally begin to intersect near the end of the book, and you realize that they are going to intertwine more and more deeply.

But not in this book, not yet. Because I discovered, at the end, that this is only the first in a new series for Lewis: the “Seasons of Grace.” It’s a measure of her accomplishment that when I realized that the story will continue into other books, my first thought was, “Oh no, we have to wait to find out what happens now??”

I already can’t wait for the next book in this series. And having discovered Beverly Lewis and her novels, I want to read more. Although Lewis is a Christian novelist, the Christianity, in The Secret at least, was not preachy or in your face. The story of the people themselves was first and foremost, and never used as an excuse to sermonize or condemn.

Meanwhile, I have “a secret” of my own: my Mennonite ancestors moved up to Canada a century or so ago — from Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. The way this lovely region and its people were presented in the story made me feel the way Heather feels: that some day I must spend some time there, even if it’s just to walk and breathe.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

A 7th New Review by DavidB

Memoirs of Pontius Pilate by James Mills

California Senator Mills has written a brilliant piece of fiction!  This is no glib statement.  His penchant for historical scrutiny, attention to detail & accuracy combined to make a seamless presentation, so lifelike as to defy the imagination.  One truly feels they are reading this man’s actual reflections on the pivotal event of his life - the judgment & execution of Jesus Christ. I have heartily recommended books before, yet I truly adjure every person to consider reading this mini-tome!! It is quickly paced and absorbing, yet finely-tuned & discerning.  Whether you are God-fearing, or a spiritual skeptic, you will not be able to come away from this book unaffected. Under the premise that this historical character wanted to give a dispassionate account of a man that millions now worship, the author reveals extraordinary facts about the Jewish culture at the time, Rome’s military & political will, the power structures within Judaism, and how they all interacted. This book challenged my faith!  I am a born-again believer in Christ, and I believe that my God brought this book into my life to help me better understand what I truly believe.  To that end, I am happy to say that the book left my beliefs validated - through faith - yet they were sorely tested in the process.  There was also precious little clue as to the author’s personal bent on the matter until the very last paragraph of the very last page. Even then, he left it up to the reader to decide. This is why I think everyone should read it, no matter their current outlook.  As an analytical fellow, I feel you will be challenged.  You may feel tested as I did, affirmed, and even persuaded to change your outlook.  In any case, I believe you will come away more informed than you might imagine





Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Book Review: Nova Swing by M John Harrison

This review took a long time to get to because my reading time has pretty much been eclipsed by writing time, but the end result is no less sweet for having been stretched out. Marcher was almost bad enough to turn me off the written word forever, but Nova Swing has restored my faith.

Yeah. That cover pretty much sums it up. But I’ll elaborate past the cut.

Nova Swing is a 50’s noir transported into the far future. We open in a bar on a backwater planet where Vic Serotonin, a jazz-loving mook, is about to meet a tourist.

What’s so wikkid about tourism?

See, there’s a massive stretch of space-time-randomness floating above this planet like a scar in space, and when some dumb space-jockey flew into the scar a few decades back a chunk fell planet-side and blew a small hole in reality. Now half of Moneytown is taken up by the event-site where the chunk landed: a heavily guarded wasteland of twisting physics where the streets overlap, rain flows upwards, and the sound of children singing seems to come from around every corner. Naturally, people want to sneak in and see what all the fuss is about. But getting in isn’t half as difficult as getting back out, and if you ever want to escape you need a tour guide. Enter Vic Serotonin.

There’s enough in here already for a story. But when you add in the embittered gumshoe trying to track down Vic as his last, greatest bust, and the fact that Vic has been sneaking artefacts out of the event site to sell to the mob - artefacts that may or may not be alive depending on how you look at them - you have all the ingredients for a brilliant future-noir.

Harrison isn’t the world’s greatest writer, but he’s consistently solid with moments of brilliance. His characterisation is sharp and vivid:

“(Liv Hula) wasn’t one to complain. She was one of those women that draw in on themselves after their fortieth year, short, thin, with brush-cut grey hair, a couple of smart tattoos on her muscular forearms, an expression as if she was always thinking of something else.”

“She was a black haired woman, with wide blunt hips, who blushed up quickly under her olive skin… in those days Edith was both pretty and talented. She had clever feet. She learned to play the accordion early, dance a table while she squeezed. Her energy was endless…”

Dang! Harrison’s world is equally vivid. Moneytown is a dirty neon mob-run mess of gene-shops and legalised street-corner gladiatorial battles, where fighters have surgery to be more like animal like, more deadly.

“The fighters moved with studied, looming, fuck-off grace, speech reduced by careful tuning of their onboard hormonal patches to the amused, confident, inarticulate growl of those who are invincible at what they do, and will never be less than what they are, and will always be more than you. The light fell on their strutting cockerel legs, clawed and brazen-scaled. It showed you suddenly the weird articulations at knee and hip, the vast perpetually erect cock bursting from the leather britches, the second thumb a brass spur too… Tourists loved it.”

But the star of the city is the event site, where shoes fly about in huge flocks, buildings grow smaller as you approach and the things that once were people have become parasitic chunks of code that latch on to visitors and consume them from the inside. There’s a lot of dread involved in every visit into the event site, but also a lot of wonder; Harrison very neatly balances the apprehension of stepping past the gates and the need of the reader to find what hides inside.

If it sounds like the perfect novel then I’ll have to burst the bubble now. There’s a lot that doesn’t quite come off the way you want it to, and in the end the story is vaguely unsatisfying. Some major plot-lines just peter out, or get wrapped up in a single page of exposition. Some major characters fade out in favour of people you would have considered minor. But can this be forgiven? I certainly can.

Harrison is brilliant. Nova Swing is somewhat less than brilliant, but it’s still a solid 4/5 shiny Ruzkin stars. If you like a great noir atmosphere, vivid (if sometimes easy to predict) characters, and some real narrative subtlety, grab a copy.

A Minority Opinion -- Shack Attack

Within the past week I have received four different emails regarding William Young’s, The Shack.  The attention this book receives is interesting to me, and I posted a review in May 2008 that voices a minority opinion — while I observe a widespread, gushing adoration for the book, I found it to be a poor book at best.  In response to those asking for the review to be made available again, I am posting it here.

Periodically, I will share some reflections from my reading journal — which I keep in hope that by writing about what I read, I will somehow retain and remember things that would otherwise disappear in a short period of time.  Often, books are released that become very popular, very quickly, and I am often asked my opinion (for what it’s worth…)  Here are my notes on William P. Young’s, The Shack.

When I was eight years old I liked nothing better than the sugary treat of a Hostess Twinkie.  Soft, sweet yellow cake with an even sweeter creamy filling – no thought of nutritional value or long term health consequences, just simple enjoyment of something that tasted so good.  Left to my own devices, I would have made a steady diet of Twinkies – which in no way would have been good for me.

The Shack is a spiritual Twinkie – sugary sweet with little or no nutritional value.  The fantasy tale is very unevenly told, but framed as a might-have-happened second-person narrative (Mack is the narrator/protagonist; Willie is the narrator/author), the spiritually naïve and immature might find this to be a deeply satisfying treat.  Without a sound theological basis or the application of even the most basic critical thinking skills, a reader might mistake this as more than just a fairy tale.

There are a few specific things I find disturbing and potentially dangerous to newbies to the Christian faith.  First, it is deeply rooted in the “me-and-my-buddy-God” privatized spirituality of 21st century USA.  Traditional church is both demonized and discarded – as long as the individual is in relationship to God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit, then a real Christian community is expendable.  To have a faith-based network in which to test and explore the faith, to have a sacramental life, to have a history and tradition, and to have grounding in rituals and practices – these are dispensable options, not deeply important to the faith.  It is what many people mean when they say they are “spiritual, but not religious.”

Second, God’s thinking and teaching is an expression of the rampant “pick’n’choosism” of today’s culture.  The author/narrator shares the revealed truths of “Papa,” Jesus, and the Spirit – a scattershot selection of feel-good ideas more redolent of New Age spirituality than a biblically or theologically grounded Christianity.  Oh, there are wisps and tatters of scripture crow-barred into the story, but they are manipulated in service to the author’s neo-Christian philosophizing.

Third, the appalling narcissism and arrogance cause the story to constantly bog down.  The author/narrator deconstructs the Trinity (actually, represented as four persons…) as rather unremarkable human manifestations that are easily accepted and understood.  It would not be in any way unusual to pop into the local diner to find Mack shooting the breeze and having coffee with his ol’ buddies Pappy, Junior, and Spooky.  The author tries to tell us how special these three figures are, but then paints them in very two-dimensional, unimpressive colors.

The narcissism continues in a very distressing and hurtful way when the murder of an innocent child is used to make an observation about God and faith that is deeply offensive to anyone suffering such awful tragedy.  The whole purpose of this visitation is not to help Mack and the family to honestly cope with the tragedy, but merely to feel better about it.  God tells Mack that his little girl was fine with what happened to her because Jesus and Holy Spirit were with her so he can let go of the thought that she might have been scared, traumatized, or in pain.  The bottom line message offered to Mack is, ‘you can feel better about this because it really wasn’t so bad.’  This is a horrible scene in the book and an insult to a deep, abiding faith.  Many “contemporary” Christian churches follow this simplistic and puerile path – don’t deal with the realities of a broken world, merely chant how much Jesus loves you and how everything is really okay.  No personal responsibility, just blessed assurance.

Fourth, its lack of substance and depth make it an easy target for the Sam Harris’, Richard Dawkins’, and Christopher Hitchens’, who delight in mocking the ignorant, irrational, and inconsistent beliefs of the spiritually immature.  When a prominent or popular voice produces a piece like The Shack, it is truly a gift to these people who anxiously await the next harvest of low hanging fruit provided by those promoting an insupportable, childish vision of the Christian faith.

Fifth, I was personally offended by the feeble attempt to pander to modern multiculturalism – Papa is a black woman, Jesus a ruddy Middle Easterner, the Holy Spirit is Asian, and Wisdom/Sophia is Hispanic/Latino.  In each case, the representation was pedestrian and trite.  In an age of deep need coupled with intellectual sophistication, such depictions of “little gods” are not helpful.  If we must anthropomorphize God, then at least make the depictions real and not embarrassingly plastic caricatures.  When God – in whatever form – is nothing more than a meddling nanny spouting simplistic aphorisms and clichés, we are in bad shape.

All surface, no substance; all breadth, no depth; all sugar, no nutrition – that’s what The Shack was for me.  In a culture where many Christians get their spiritual education from the likes of Joan of Arcadia, Touched By An Angel, The Passion of the Christ, the 700 Club, and the Left Behind series, this is not merely a poor book, but a potentially dangerous book – able to further obfuscate the Christian faith and teach people that a personalized, privatized, comfortably customized, and arbitrary relationship with God is what religion is really all about.  Sadly, The Shack doesn’t even meet the lowest faith standard of our modern culture (”I’m spiritual, but not religious”) – it is neither deeply spiritual, nor religious in any meaningful way.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

new milestones, I guess

Nate has been doing really well finally, at least as far as his milestones go.  Lately, he walks around the house more than he crawls, although he will crawl once in awhile. And I swear, when I point something out to himand say the name of the thing that I’m pointing out, he makes an attempt to say it.  The other day, I showed him the crocuses that are beginning to poke their heads out near our house and I said “flower” and his response: pointing and saying “owa”.  I kid you not.

Over the last week or two, and perhaps for the foreseeable future also, I have been having a difficult time balancing my work and my non-work life. I feel like I’m straddling two worlds, where I’m not completely in any world and, as a result, I feel like I’m missing everything everywhere. I have generally been pretty good about leaving work at work, but lately I haven’t been as sucessful. I’ve been having the stress dreams again - the ones that plagued my law school years and my bar review months.  Any ideas? Yoga doesn’t seem to be working (and neither is the wine!).

On a more positive note:

I have read another book in my quest to attain 100 books read this year. I will do it I swear! The latest books is:

The review that I wrote is here. Enjoy!

And yet another gratuitous cute kid pic:

Monday, March 23, 2009

Literary Blog of the Week 23/3/09

 

My recommendation is Powell’s Book Blog. This is full of book reviews and bibliographical information. It is available @ : http://www.powells.com/blog/

The Lagoon by Lilli Carre

Reviewed by John Pistelli

Rain Taxi

Lilli Carré’s The Lagoon opens as bookish young Zoey listens to her grandfather recall the irresistible song of the creature that lives in the black lagoon near their house. Zoey is immune to the creature’s call (she says it sounds like “a cat in a bathtub”), but her uneasily married parents are not, and her mother’s nocturnal sojourn to the lagoon ends in disaster. By the end, Zoey, now living alone with her grandfather, grows older and becomes impatient with the old man’s reminiscences and obsessions. The book fades to black over a silent sequence of eleven pages as a fire the lagoon-creature’s errant cigarette has started in the family’s woodpile sputters out.

The Lagoon’s artisanal craftsmanship and child’s-eye ironies reflect the baffled wisdom of a heroine too young to be foolish. The unfaithful mother and hapless father, while portrayed with some sympathy, nevertheless abandon their child to their own self-involvement, while Zoey, like the nostalgic family-album-style production design of the book itself, represents a fragile redoubt of incorruption………………..

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Would Shakespeare Tweet?

You knew this was coming… we had to examine the prospect of social networking in terms of authors and publishers in today’s landscape.

As you know, we have dedicated an independent page to social-networking sites which are author-specific. Unfortunately, we find that authors tend to sign on to sites where people who are already familiar with their work are also signed. In addition, trying to get an author to buy another author’s work is like pulling teeth… you can try…

There are varied classifications of author-specific social networking sites. Some will showcase biographies and book covers with corresponding amazon-dotcom sales links. Some are for posted interviews, tour schedule posting and reservation management. Some are for reader interaction with virtual bookshelves of books to review and discuss. Some sites are for niche markets and some allow book video trailer uploads. Again, most of these sites are hybrids of feature sets.

As for publishers, the way is not so pre-ordained, as it were. They want catalog engagement, brand engagement and increased readership – but other than outright media buys – where to aim?  Should they build a back-end network to their own website for the benefit of readership they already have? Should they troll through endless bookmarking networks (i.e. mixx, stumbleupon) to bookmark their catalog?

We did see one major House use social networking as a tool for streamlining their new author discovery process. An author joins the network, (s)he loads individual chapters of their book to the service; then gets critiqued by fellow authors. As their book’s popularity(rank) increases, the author has a chance of being read and considered for publishing by the House. This is an interesting concept; except that trying to find a gem with mass appeal in a sea of elitist authors who all want their own book to be on top is not as simple as it sounds.  This does, however,show the innovation of further adaptation of the social web interface to distribution and consumption of books.

We notice that many authors and Houses are on twitter. Are they tweeting with regularity? To whom are they tweeting? The trade? Potential consumers? People who have already befriended them on five million other networks?   How many of the new wiki apps for these networks have to be downloaded in order to take full advantage of their services? Almost every service has a toolbar, a mobile app and a multi-account login wiki to download. Does writing or publishing a book now require an excel chart for social logins?

If Shakespeare was on twitter, for example, what would he tweet?

Alas, I weep – for ’twas foretold that the very villainous web would usurp my sweet utterances and companion markings



There are an increasing number of video and podcasting options for authors and publishers to explore, as well. For smaller Houses, the question is: what is the video strategy for the catalog? Is there a video budget for each book? Is youtube the end of the uploading strategy?

Above and beyond – how many hours can an active author or publishing House expect to dedicate to execution of a complete social-networking agenda?

We believe that as options expand, the case for success in the social networking environment for authors and publishers will expand, in kind. We believe that the key to that success will be the degree to which the author, or the House, examines why they have chosen one service or the other to exploit – rather than connecting to everything in sight – with logins and passwords flailing in the air akin to the arms of an octopus.            

Technorati Profile

Jesus and the God of Israel (TOC)

Jesus and the God of Israel: God Crucified and Other Studies on the New Testament’s Christology of Divine Identity

  • Author: Richard Bauckham
  • Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0802845592
  • ISBN-13: 978-0802845597

    .
  • Amazon
  • Westminster Bookstore
  • Eisenbrauns

    .

    With thanks to Lara Sissell at Eerdmans for this review copy!

  • Part 1: Chapter 1

    Part 2: Chapters 2 - 3

    Part 3: Chapters 4 - 5

    Part 4: Chapters 6 - 7

    Part 5: Chapter 8 - Conclusion

    B”H

    Tuesday, March 17, 2009

    Boy Meets Girl by Meg Cabot

    Boy Meets Girl by Meg Cabot fits into the romance fiction genre and was published in 2004. It is recommended for adult readers.

    Boy Meets Girl is the second book in the Boy series but it is nothing like the first. For one thing it does not, as you would expect from books in a series, continue with the same characters. They main characters are casually mentioned as the book progresses but that is all. In this book we follow some of the lesser explored of the first book. We are also introduced to Kate Mackenzie who is an employee of the New York Journal’s Human Resources Division. She works under Amy Jenkins (the HR devil we were introduced to in the first novel) whom Kate has aptly nicknamed the T.O.D, short for Tyrannical Office Despot. The T.O.D. is making Kate fire Ida Lopez, the highly popular dessert lady for the senior staff dining room, because Ida refused to give the T.O.D.’s boyfriend, Stuart Hertzog (a lawyer for the firm that represents the Journal), a piece of pie. Kate tries to convince the T.O.D. that this was an unreasonable reason to fire someone and tried to get her to pass it of as a warning but the T.O.D. would not be persuaded. Thus, in order to not lose her job, Kate fires Ida only to be sued later for wrongful termination. During the deposition Kate is met with quite a surprise in the form of Mitch Hertzog, brother to the aforementioned Stuart and the lawyer in charge of representing the case for Kate and the Journal. What follows can only be labeled as drama, drama, drama, and not in a good way. Kate feels bad about firing Ida and stresses about it constantly, that and the fact that she likes Mitch but thinks he is only a scummy lawyer. Mitch and Stuart get into it over random family troubles and also a disagreement over the Ida Lopez case. All the various minor characters seem to be having issues of their own that Cabot feels the need to go into ad nauseum. This coupled with a ridiculous tendency toward using foul language makes this my least favorite Cabot book ever.

    Monday, March 16, 2009

    The Return of Depression Economics

    This book is a newly revised and updated version of Mr. Krugman’s 1999 book “The Return of Depression Economics.”

    On the last page of this newly updated book, Mr. Krugman says, “The quintessential economic sentence is supposed to be ‘There is no free lunch’: it says that there are limited resources, that to have more of one thing, you have to accept less of another.” He goes on to say that “depression economics is the study of situations where there is a free lunch.”

    He talks about economic crisis that have hit Mexico, Asia, Argentina, and elsewhere over the past 30 years and how they got out of it.

    In the closing chapters, he explains how this new financial crisis is similar to, and different from, all those that have come before it and how, in his opinion, that another Great Depression isn’t likely, and how similar methods of getting out of previous slumps can help propel us out of this one.

    In my opinion, this book is extremely readable by someone who doesn’t have much experience in matters of economy. Mr. Krugman explains large economic problems using simple, easy to visualize examples, most of which use a DC-area babysitting co-op.

    Mr. Krugman was the 2008 winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics for his work in New Trade Theory.

    Official Book Website

    Sunday, March 15, 2009

    Girls: Customs in the Levant

    Missed Opportunities.  Note: As a serie on customs in the Levant I decided to publish an article by late Mai Ghoussoub     It took me a long time to understand why my mother loved to tell the story of the doctor who delivered me. Whenever there was a willing audience, she would tell it. I must have heard it a thousand times.For her story to make sense, you need to know that I am the second female born to my parents and that my sister and I are their only progeny.’When Dr Razook left the delivery room, his face was tense and he walked past your father without looking at him. Your father was waiting anxiously for the baby to be delivered so that he could join me. (In those days, husbands were never allowed to witness the birth of their child). The attitude of the doctor terrified your father, who thought that something terrible must have happened to me and to our baby. When he knew that I had given birth to a healthy baby girl, he was delighted. Dr Razook did not like to deliver girls, especially if the parents were his friends, and he felt his reputation as a gynaecologist was perturbed by every female he brought into the world. As for your dad and me, we did not care one way or the other, boy or girl’.

    The story of my birth as told by my mother is a perfect metaphor for my country of origin. It is the story of juxtaposed values and contradictions. Yes, it is OK to be born a girl but the story never ends here. There is a ‘but’, a Mediterranean ‘but’ and a westernized OK that have to coexist, and modernized citizens somehow have to juggle and survive within the spaces of this coexistence. And they have to do it with grace and honour, My parents are from the generation of Middle Easterners who lived at the time of transition from the traditional values of large families to the westernized nuclear family with a maximum of two children, raised and educated in the best schools you could afford. They dreamt of bringing up free, responsible individuals - individuals who were nonetheless constantly reminded that they were the custodians of their family’s honour, especially if they stood on the female side of the gender border; individuals who had to watch constantly for ‘what the neighbours say’ about them and their parents, their uncles, cousins and other relatives.

    My story, the way I tried to live my life, is a desperate, not always unhappy, effort to reconcile at least two epochs, two modes of behaviour, two value systems that prevailed simultaneously and very concretely in pre-war Lebanon.

    Let me come back to my mother. A clever woman, she was considered very marriageable thanks to her good looks and was consequently withdrawn from school, in the late 1940s, by her parents at the age of sixteen. She had loved her school and treasured the knowledge she had acquired there, mainly in the sciences. She had no say about her parents’ decision and anyway she had fallen in love with my father. My father, a modern young man, cared very little about the difference in their religious confessions and courted her openly because he had ‘good intentions’. They felt madly in love and married when she was seventeen and he twenty years old. They despised marriages of convenience or calculation, believed in true love and had the Hollywood movies, already triumphant over the screens of Beirut, to confirm the rightness of their romantic choice. There were a few couples like them in Lebanon in those days, but they were not the rule. Nine months after their wedding, they brought my older sister into this world. They were delighted; they adored her. One only has to look at the infinite number of pictures they took of her, and at the journal my mother kept, in which are recorded every smile, every tooth that appeared on the baby girl’s face. It occurred to me once that the same Dr Razook had delivered my sister, and that he may have been as disappointed by his deed as he was when it was my turn to show up. But, for some unexplained reason, it was only my appearance that seemed to be a worthy story for my mother to narrate. The reason should have been obvious to me. It may not matter to the parents if the newborn is male or female, but in the wider society there is nothing to boast about when you bring only girls into this Middle Eastern world. You have to be very keen on bringing up a small, well-cared-for family to stop after the second child and not try for the special one that will perpetuate your name and speak for the virility of the father and the blessing of the mother.

    Garçon manqué was the term I kept having about me. Tomboy. The French expression is more revealing. A boy missed. An opportunity missed. But the values that the post-industrial societies had introduced in our Levantine reality were tangible enough and no third child was to be expected. So my story meets that of my society. I am female, accepted as such but unconsciously or very silently wished different. The context in which I was born, the Lebanon of the 1950s, was a paradigm of this dichotomy. Some named the two poles in this combination modern and traditional, others used the labels east and west, now the term post-modern is frequently used.

    I can think of a perfect metaphor: un garçon manqué, a missed boy, and une opportunité manquée, a missed opportunity. A country that has missed its democratic and tolerant potentialities. A happy alternative. But …

    To go back to my gender and its implications: like any child who finds him/herself at the centre of attention, I started to play the role that made me successful among the members of my family and their friends. I started to behave as a tomboy. I wrote to Father Christmas asking him for a cowboy outfit. When I played with my dolls I did so discreetly, for the pleasure of mothering or dressing them was hampered by a sharp feeling of guilt and the fear of disappointing the grown-ups. I joined the boys in the courtyard after school to play football and all was free and fun until Sit Zalfa, an imposing old neighbour, saw me fighting physically over the score with one of the boys. She used to terrify us with her severe chignon and her Turkish and Italian vocabulary. ‘Pronto,’ she screamed, pointing her stick at me and then in the direction of my home. She visited my parents and told them that it was not ‘right’ for a nine year-old girl m mix with the boys of the neighbourhood. That was the end of my street life. What the neighbours said proved more powerful than the cute image of a garçon manqué. The neighbours’ opinion had a decisive influence on my parents, who still insisted that it did not matter to them if I were a girl or a boy. We were already in the early 1960s, and Lebanon enjoyed the rule of a functioning parliament; a coop d’état had been defeated and my mother as well as my aunts dressed in the latest Parisian fashion. My mixed school was preparing to separate the girls from the boys: yes, even the French Lycée adapted its rules to the Arab Mediterranean reality of Lebanese society. Religion and religious teaching were not allowed inside the secular institution, but girls who were approaching puberty had to be separated from boys. A garçon manqué in a girls’ school did not make much sense. A segregated secular Lycée would have been an anomaly in France, but we were not in France, even though we spoke French and believed, in the values of the Enlightenment.

    I had heard my parents calling me a tomboy, and now I started hearing my mother asserting that I was very good in the sciences, the objective ones. Accordingly I became good at mathematics and physics. My grades in French literature, a subject I adored, did not impress my mother, whereas her face would beam with joy whenever she saw me resolving some geometry or calculus problem. This was a safer way of replacing the boy that was never to be born; safer than playing and fighting with the boys over a football kick. For sciences do not jeopardize virtue or reputation. At school, when I was not yet fourteen years old, I read The Mandarins by Simone de Beauvoir and heard of free love, but a concert by Johnny Halliday, the French pop star, was cancelled by the Minister of interior, the ‘progressive’ Kamal Jumblatt, who believed that ‘western degenerate images’ did not suit our moral values and might be harmful to our youth. Along with all the citizens of the Lebanon in the 1960s, I learned to live with these conflicting attitudes and values. jugglers we became: with more or less graciousness, sometimes over some broken eggs, we wove our way through mini skirts and scarves, chanting anti imperialist slogans as well as the Beatles. The kitsch singer Taroub sang for an Arab public, while her sister Mayada set Arabic words to western pop songs. When a dance called the Hully Gully invaded the night-clubs of Lebanon, the famous Diva Sabah sang Hully Dabke Yaba Of:

    Hully Gully est connu chez tous les occidentaux,

    Hully Dabke Yaba Of est connu chez les Orientaux, presque le même et tout le monde l’aime.

    Neither we nor Sabbath could have guessed that the Occident and the Orient were going to sing to totally different tunes. From Radio Cairo the mesmerizing voice of Umm Kulsum was asking for a rifle - A’tini Bunduqiya’ - a rifle to liberate Arab land. We were reading Jean-Paul Sartre and starting to demonstrate for the liberation of Palestine.

    By the early 1970s l was studying mathematics and French literature. Male and female subjects. Feminism was on the agenda: George Tarabishi translated Sheila Rowbotham, Germaine Greer’s The Female Eunuch was available in the bookshops and Sonia Beiruti, a TV broadcaster, invited a few of us to her TV show to debate women’s emancipation. Two scenes from that period keep recurring in my memory. First scene: on this Tv show, I said I wanted to be a free woman and to be independent, to work so that I would not live off my father’ or a future husband’s money. My father, who was watching the programme, felt deeply humiliated. He took the words as an insult to his honour. Second scene: during a student demonstration, a few women jumped on the shoulders of their colleagues to lead and chant revolutionary slogans. Everybody in this demonstration had seen the pictures of May 1968 in France and the dynamic images of the women lifted above the crowds by their co-objectors. ‘Scandalous,’ screamed some passers by, as well as a few demonstrators. The women were put down very quickly. We may have been influenced by May 1968 but we were not in the Latin Quarter of Paris; we were still on the shores of the Mediterranean.

    We were a parliamentary democracy we had no kings and no army generals ruling over us, but many of our politicians were the sons of landowners or sons of other politicians. They all spoke of democracy and we called for our right to independence as women while armed militias were being formed and operations to restore women’s virginity were easily available. Somehow, I see a parallel between my studying mathematics at the American University and French literature at the Lebanese National University, between my gender that held me responsible for the family’s reputation on one hand and my county’s coexisting contradictions on the other.

    Feminism was an obvious route to follow for somebody like me - a woman who had believed that men’s spaces were not totally impermeable, not mysterious or difficult to handle. You play with boys, enter their classrooms, obtain better grade than many of them and then you are asked to obey them or accept an inequality that places them above you? This was very difficult to swallow, especially if Simone de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex has been widely read among your French educated friends and her assertion that ‘on ne naît pas une femme, on la devient’ (one is not born a woman, one becomes so) is a cool slogan to raise. Old feminism, that of the pioneers such as Hoda Shatrawi or the active lawyer Laure Meghayzel, felt inadequate to our youthful impatience We did not want only equality, the right to be professional while ensuring that we were first and foremost ‘good mothers’: we wanted to claim loudly and shamelessly that nothing could stop us from realizing our wishes and that our bodies belonged to us.

    Engels, Reich and Alexandra Kollontai’s teachings gave a social dimension to our belief that ‘all is possible’. The country itself believed that its rise as the financial-tourism heaven of the Middle East and its enriched Gulf region was unstoppable, that the Palestinian resistance fighters were the local expression of the Vietnamese freedom fighters. We spoke out loudly against the hypocrisy of our society. We were getting more radicalized in our beliefs, and so were the contradictions and the conflicts in Lebanon.

    A time came when, in the middle of the bloody and cruel sequences of the civil war, I started to miss the so-called hypocrisy of pre-war times. The feeling that ‘I want everything and I want it now’ dissipated. I looked with different eyes on the liberalism of my parents who had to bite on their Mediterranean wound and let me be. They tolerated my freedom of movement, even though my tomboy image was long dead and buried under the powerful influence of Sitt Zalfa and her ilk.

    I moved to the other side of the Green Line, where I thought people would be free from the prejudices of my own milieu. There I found a reversed mirror detonating with the same kind of intolerance. What we called hypocrisy before the war was the best form of compromise people had found for living together. The taboo preventing one from spelling out one’s dislike for the other had been a good discipline. Look around you and see how ugly it all becomes when people feel no inhibition in their intolerance. I am not calling for censorship, far from it. People have the right to express their feelings, however despicable we may think them, but this should not discourage us from doing all we can to relate hatred for the other’s colour, race or sexual choice to the notion of bad, uncivilized and immoral and to link the violent expression of this hatred to legal judgment and action.

    Yes, it took me a long time to realize why my mother loved to tell the story of Dr Razook and my birth. It took me longer to realize that the contradictions my parents had to live through opened great new spaces for me. And if they had not hoped for me to jump over the limiting fences my gender imposed on me, I may have been confined to living, all my life, on one side of the border(s) and I would have never learnt that we were all as human or as bad as ‘the other’ during the ugly years of our civil war. If my mother had not told this story, would I have had the confidence, some eighteen years ago, to face the London bank manager who was reluctant to deal with me as one of the directors of Saqi Books and ‘would rather see my male boss’? Would I have had the courage to bend the long aluminium rod that holds my sculptures, would I have been capable to be ‘the other’, to integrate among the others without pain and often with plenty of fun? I may have been a missed opportunity for Dr Razook and others like him; I still believe that I am better off missing the narrowness of the choice that would have been my secure lot and instead taking the risk of following my individual routes.

    Mai Ghoussoub

    Writer and artist who has written widely on culture and Middle Easter issues. Her latest publications include Leaving Beirut and Imagined Masculinities (co-edited with Emma Sinclair Webb).

    Not eating?

    Lately, Nate hasn’t been that much into eating.  I’m assuming that it’s because he’s just not feeling well and apparently, bronchiolitis leads to decreased appetite. But it’s frustrating and terrifying at the same time.  It leads me to flash back to when I gave birth to him and he lost so much weight that he was down to five pounds 6 ounces before he started gaining it back.  I was a sleep deprived new mom, who had just given birth via c-section days before, and I was just so helpless. I don’t want nate to have to suffer that again and I don’t want people to look at me and think  “Damn lady you a crappy mom.”  Yes, I’m selfish that way. I’ve started trying to do many little meals and snacks instead of a few bigger meals and sneaking in water and ice pops when I can to keep him hydrated. And that seems to be working. We do have a follow up with the pediatrician on Tuesday and I’m hoping to address these issues then.

    Today was a beautiful day weather wise and a fantastic day work wise.  It was sunny and relatively warm - 50 degrees is warm here when you’ve been dealing with snow storm after snow storm and just plain frigid weather. We went for a walk, Izzy and Nate went food shopping and I cleaned the whole first floor of the house - I mopped, vacuumed and made sure that things were put away. And I even got a lot of laundry done. The house really needed it and I needed it too. I find that my anxiety levels just shoot up if things are too cluttered. I can deal with a little bit but not a whole lot and it was getting out of control.

    I have finished book 10 of this challenge:

    And I have blogged my review of it here. Enjoy!

    Saturday, March 14, 2009

    Men of the Otherworld by Kelley Armstrong

    Kelley Armstrong has written nine books in her Women of the Otherworld series, beginning with Bitten, the tale of Elena, the only female werewolf in the world.   The short stories and novellas in Men of the Otherworld focus on the male werewolves.

    Infusion is the tale of the conception and birth of Jeremy, the current alpha, and explains a lot about his relationship with his father.

    Savage is about Clay, Elena’s lover.  He was bitten and turned into a werewolf as a child and was living feral in a swamp when Jeremy rescued him.  Acsension is about the fight for pack alpha between Jeremy and his father.  These two novellas give a lot of background into the complex pack politics and increased my understanding of both Clay and Jeremy’s personalities.  (I want to go back and reread Bitten with my new insights)

    Kitsunegari finally gives some answers to Jeremy’s mysterious heritage.

    All the stories except Kitsunegari were previously available as free fiction on Kelley Armstrong’s website.  From the Introduction:

    All of my proceeds from these volumes are going to World Literacy of Canada… The stories were originally intended as a gift to readers and now they’ll be “regifted” to a worthy cause.

    A second volume, Tales of the Otherworld, will be published in 2010.

    Friday, March 13, 2009

    Book Review: Why Socrates Died

    Financial Times, March 9, 2009

    Review by Jonathan Gibbs

    Why Socrates Died by Robin Waterfield

    We may be used to understanding the trial and execution of Socrates as the martyrdom of an innocent hero. We may even dismiss the charges - of impiety, and corrupting the city’s youth - as trumped-up and unfair. Robin Waterfield’s scholarly book seeks to sweep away these preconceptions by finding a deeper political resonance to those charges.

    He finds this resonance in the trauma of Athens’ recent history - the disastrous Peloponnesian war against Sparta, and then the civil war that saw “30 Tyrants” briefly rule the city. Read the rest of the story.

    Thursday, March 12, 2009

    Quick Take - Arcade of Cruelty by Joseph Larkin

    If you’re easily offended, I suggest you stay far, far away from Joseph Larkin’s Arcade of Cruelty.  In fact, I’d say that moderate-to-difficult  to offend people should think twice before picking up this bizarre book.  The book is a graphic memoir of sorts, a look back at the life of the recently deceased Larkin, who is still alive and well.  Arcade collects work from throughout the life of the author, from early scribblings in his high school yearbook, to sketches and comics, to “beat-off binders”, which are pages of cutouts from magazines and underwear catalogs.  Given the fact that the author of this memorial book is still alive, it is hard to say if these pieces are actually from Larkin’s childhood or created solely for this book.  Either way, the book is frequently hilarious.  The production of the book is top notch - the cover notes the book is part of “Joseph’s Book Club”, the copyright page includes a drinking game based on the book  (and notes “all rights reserved, all suckers served”), and the classification on the back cover is “Queer Studies / Occult”).  As I mentioned above, the book is wholly offensive.  A large section of the interior - called “Always never forgetting” - is dedicated to satirical comics about 9/11.  The defaced pages of Larkin’s high school yearbook are juvenile and offensive (and, again, quite funny in a juvenile way).  The masturbatory “beat-off binders” are all captioned “This is deeply disturbing”, and it really is.  Either Larkin is a deeply disturbed comic wunderkind, or the pages in this book are a put-on on the level of the greatest of performance artists.  If you like filthy and off-color humor, you owe yourself at least a look at this ridiculous book.  If you want to see an entirely new take on the “graphic memoir”, give Arcade of Cruelty a try.  On the other hand, if any of the above ideas sound like the furthest thing from funny to you, I’d suggest moving on.  Quickly.

    Arcade of Cruelty, by Joseph Larkin - 18.00 - Paperback - ISBN 9780615217994 - Also-Ran Press

    Wednesday, March 11, 2009

    Review on Rich Dad, poor Dad

    So you ask, what is so special about this book?

    All I can say for myself after reading this book is that it was an inspiration, something that really shook me up.

    The book got my adrenaline pumping, couldn’t wait each day to continue reading it, not that I never heard about it, I just couldn’t be bothered to read it like most of you, but my reading habits changed that day, I truly understood the true meaning of knowledge.

    This book gives you an insight about someone that tries to break the barrier, the cycle, getting out of the rat-race, a rat-race is a race that you can never win in, and that’s the race that most of us are in.

    It makes you think outside the box, I’m not saying if you read the book, you are entitled to wake up from your slumbers straight away or become the smartest person right away, but it does give you an insight of being caught up in the rat-race, what it takes to break the barrier.

    It makes you see things from different perspectives. It acts as a stepping stone into the world of freedom and self-actualisation, breaking you free from the chains of limitation.

    But, as much as I like this book, there are some points which I totally disagree with, that’s why we all have to make up our minds, the books we all read are beliefs, opinions of different individuals, trying to give us an alternative, an option, the opportunity to see things from their point of view, the same thing I am trying to achieve here, but at the end of the day, you will have to make your conclusion.

    Back to the book, He includes many vague stories about buying real estate properties for cheap with little or no money down and flipping them for great profits.

    Don’t for one second; believe that because you read a good book, or you woke up inspired, with your adrenaline pumping, it makes everything easier, or you can just read a book and become rich the next month, it takes more than that.

    Education is a good thing, and you have to just see if education is for you or not.

    You need to work for your money before it works for you; even though he makes it sound way easy to become a millionaire.

    I’d recommend this book as an excellent way to challenge your thinking about work and money,

    Even though most of his points he points across, comes out vague, what do you suppose he say, he needs to make everything look easy so that we all can buy his books, but at the end of the day, the book does inspires us in some way and at the end of the day, we did buy his book, even though it was criticised or loved.

    I wouldn’t advise people that want to learn about finances to read the book, or think deeply into it, not saying that when he says things like you should buy assets, not liabilities. Assets, such as real estate (especially real estate), stocks, and bonds, make you money. Liabilities, such as your house, car, gadgets, take away your money is useless, but look elsewhere for advices on financial literacy

    What do you think of the book; let me know your views?

    Till next time

    Fasting and Feasting

    UKCBD > Christian Book Reviews > Seasonal > Lent & Easter > Fasting and Feasting

    Fasting and Feasting 

    Daily Bible Readings from Ash Wednesday to Easter Day

    Gordon Giles 

    ISBN 9781841015699 (1841015695) 

    BRF (Bible Reading Fellowship), 2008 

    £7.99

    Category: Seasonal 

    Subcategory: Lent & Easter 

    Reviewed by: Jody Stowell

    The theme of ‘fasting and feasting’ seems perfectly at home in the season of Lent. But Gordon Giles brings a fresh look at what these things might actually mean to us, taking us through the Old and New Testament meanings and challenging us to a deeper understanding of this season which will refresh our discipleship.

    Giles begins by rooting Lent in the practice of confession and absolution, pointing out that Shrove Tuesday is less about feasting on pancakes, or even about using up the luxuries of our kitchen cupboards, and more about the meaning of ’shrive’: Shrove Tuesday, drawn from the word ’shrive’, literally means to be forgiven. This is the day when we prepare for the fast of Lent, when we present ourselves for absolution, when we turn ourselves to God in repentance. This is an excellent place to start our journey over the following six weeks.

    Over the six weeks Giles uses the topic of ‘food’ to draw on a wide variety of themes. From the literal starvation and obesity that plagues our world, through the provision of God, to the spiritual food that must sustain through all things, and which is found in turning to the Lord for all our needs.

    It is amazing how ‘food’ is continuously found in Scripture - there is much material there for Giles to draw on. For the majority of the notes, I found the engagement creative and well researched. We are challenged to take responsibility for all sorts of things - having presented ourselves to God at the beginning of the journey through these notes - for the food and drink that enters our bodies, to consumption on a global scale. I found the way that Giles poses these questions helpful, we don’t feel completely helpless in the face of world crisis, but see how our own choices affect the whole.

    At the back of the book there are notes that might be used for groups. As I tend to find with these type of notes, these will be helpful for groups where the individual members are able to share openly with each other and are well experienced in doing their own reading and preparation, otherwise there might not be enough material.

    As we go through Lent, I hope that you have found notes which grow your relationship with the Lord: I’m sure that these will not disappoint you.

    Jody Stowell, March 2009

    Jody Stowell is a theology student at Spurgeon’s College, which trains baptists for ministry and mission. She, however, is an Anglican, and soon to begin training for ordained ministry in the Church of England. She is also a self-confessed internet junkie and can be found commenting about most things on her own blog www.radical-evanglical.blogspot.com and on Fulcrum forums, where she is on the leadership team.

    BRF (Bible Reading Fellowship) | Order from www.christianbookshops.org

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    Tuesday, March 10, 2009

    MisQuoting Jesus

    This weekend I quoted from the book “MisQuoting Jesus”, by Bart Erhman, a former Christian, turned agnostic, by, he says, the unclear evidence of the New Testament text.  His book has been on the NYT best sellers list for a number of weeks.  It is an easy read, and in reading it, one concludes that the New Testament text, in the original greek,  is very suspicious.  Here is a link to a review of this book by a man I trust a great deal, Dan Wallace. If this issue is of interest to you, this will be informative and helpful!

    http://www.bible.org/page.php?page_id=3452

    Sunday, March 1, 2009

    Book Review - Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver

    Barbara Kingsolver is an undeniable master of storytelling. For the first time, she indulges us with a nonfiction story and she doesn’t disappoint.  “Animal, Vegetable, Miracle” includes a year’s worth of trials and tribulations of her family as they produce, process, and enjoy their own food on a small farm in West Virginia. The result is a well-crafted tale about relationships, adoration, and worship of food, very much in the style of MFK Fisher, whose iconic writings, continue to uphold the highest standard of “food” writing.

    Kingsolver’s major focus in the book is to make a passionate case for the sustainable relationship that is formed between an individual and community when food consumption is centered around two things: producing food yourself and buying from local producers.  Kingsolver tells a story about life centered around the seasons; the hard months of spring when cupboards are bare and gardens have yet to produce, the beauty of a fully producing garden in the summer, the intense months of harvest in the fall, and the joy of overstocked larders in the winter. She captures the rhythm of life lived close to the earth while spinning stories about zucchini wars, 50th birthday parties, melting pumpkin carcasses, and turkey copulation.

    As a nonfiction book, “Animal, Vegetable, Miracle” provides exhaustively researched references about sustainable agriculture. Gleaning much from scientific research, government policy, and current trends in community activism, Kingsolver’s husband Steven L. Hopp shares essays that reinforce the farm experience in relation to the world community. The couple shares facts such as, “(b)uying your goods from local businesses rather than national chains generates about three times as much money for your local economy.”  In addition to Barbara’s tale, her oldest daughter, Camille Kingsolver, includes her own memories of kitchen life and recipes that her mother may have mentioned in the chapters.  It adds another beautiful dimension to the intensity of relationships that are woven within the book.

    The biggest obstacle for this high-desert garden reader to overcome is the lusciousness of the Appalachian climate.  Kingsolver’s book begins with her family moving from arid Phoenix to a farm tucked in the hills of West Virginia, where irrigation is never again mentioned.  And yes, I’m jealous. Living in an environment where it’s impossible to pick up the daily paper and not read about water rights, the luxury of a non-irrigated garden is beyond my wildest dreams.  And yet we persevere, with a heavy sigh.

    Kingsolver presents a convincing testimonial to the love of food, family, and community in this inspiring read.

    Susan Fries is executive director of the Pueblo Performing Arts Guild, as well as avid traveler, bookworm, gardener, and cook.