Archive for January, 2009

January 27, 2009

#6 – Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha Christie

murder-on-the-orient-expressRead because: I was looking for audio books at the library and I saw that David Suchet was the reader.

Rented from: the Sacramento Library

Rating: 7 out of 10

Synopsis (from Amazon): Just after midnight, a snowdrift stops the Orient Express in its tracks. The luxurious train is surprisingly full for the time of the year, but by the morning it is one passenger fewer. An American tycoon lies dead in his compartment, stabbed a dozen times, his door locked from the inside. Isolated and with a killer in their midst, detective Hercule Poirot must identify the murderer — in case he or she decides to strike again.

My review: I’ve tried Agatha Christie a couple times over the years but found that I like other mystery writers better. I was at the library, though, and wanted to take a few audio books home. I saw Murder on the Orient Express and decided to give it a shot, especially after I realized that it was read by David Suchet, who I like as an actor. I ended up really liking this book. There were characters from England, America, France, Hungary, and elsewhere, and Suchet did a great job of bringing them to life. That’s a lot of accents to master! The plot was interesting, and even though I figured out whodunit before it was revealed (well, sort of), I spent most of the time thinking, “I totally can’t be right – it’s too weird. It’s not how mysteries are supposed to go.”

Perhaps I just needed an audio book shot of Agatha Christie to finally like her. Then again, this is arguably her best book (according to reviews and ratings), so maybe I should just quit while I’m ahead.

January 23, 2009

#5 – Faith and Doubt by John Ortberg

faith-doubt

Read for: My small group at church (although, two friends have recommended John Ortberg in the past — Sheena and Carolyn)

Purchased from: Berean Christian Book Stores

Rating: 8 out of 10

Synopsis (from the back of the book): We often think of doubt as the opposite of faith, but could it actually strengthen our relationship with God? According to John Ortberg, best-selling author and pastor, the very nature of faith requires the presence of uncertainty. In this refreshingly candid look at a life of faith, he traces the line between belief and unbelief: less a dividing line between hostile camps than a razor’s edge that runs through every soul. His findings point us toward the relief of being totally honest. Questions can expand our understanding, uncertainty can lead to trust, and honest faith can produce outrageous hope.

My Review: Because I started my small group while they were in the middle of this book, I ended up reading it in the weirdest order. Chapters 7 and 8, 1 through 4, 9 through 11, skimmed 7 and 8 again, 5 and 6. Luckily the material wasn’t completely new and Ortberg is a very capable writer, so I still got a lot out of it. Ortberg posits that it’s really impossible to have faith without doubts. Faith requires that we believe in something that we’re not certain of. If we knew everything, we would have knowledge, but no faith. Ortberg is very candid—he talks about times he’s struggled when friends have committed suicide, and when babies have drown, and when Christians have run amok, doing everything but living out their faith. But he then notes that we do have to make a choice of whether or not to believe despite our doubts. Hanging in the middle really isn’t an option. He says that “Uncertainty is a gift because it gnaws at us to pursue truth.” He also does a good job of distilling bigger thoughts into some useful quotes (and every single one of which applies to me, by the way), such as:

“To choose doubt as a philosophy for life is akin to choosing immobility as a means of transportation.” (Page 31)

“We all hope, but hope comes in two flavors: hoping for something and hoping in someone.” (Page 84)

“But one man, whose son died climbing a mountain when he was twenty-five, said that what he came to see was ‘tears, a weeping God, suffering over my suffering. I had not reazlied that if God loves the world, God suffers. I had thoughtlessly supposed God loved without suffering. I knew that divine love was the key. But I had not realized that divine love that is the key is a suffering love.’” (Page 115)

“Underneath the surface of the skeptic is fear—fear of being disappointed. The skeptic says, ‘I would rather stand on the sidelines and look like an intelligent observer than risk trusting.’” (Page 123)

“One thing is certain: if there is a God, then many things are not permitted. And if I want to do one of those things, my mind has to find a way to get rid of God, at least for a while. We all are at least temporary atheists, strategic athiests.” (Page 145)

Ortberg also has some great quotes from others in his book:

“A true opium of the people is the belief that nothingness after death—a huge solace for thinking that we are not going to be judged for our betrayals, greed, cowardice, murders.” (Page 133, Czeslaw Misosz)

“Comfort is the one thing you cannot get by looking for it. If you look for truth, you may find comfort in the end: If you look for comfort, yu will not get either comfort or truth—only soft soap and wishful thinking to begin with, and in the end, despair.” (Page 148, CS Lewis)

January 19, 2009

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January 16, 2009

#4 – Welcome to my Planet by Shannon Olson

welcome-to-my-planet

Recommended by: My friend Hillary

Purchased (well, traded) from: www.bookins.com

My rating: 8 out of 10

Synopsis (from Publishers Weekly): In Welcome to My Planet, the fictional Shannon Olson–who shares her creator’s name–is witty but confused, whip-smart but unable to fully release her ties to bad boyfriends, childhood obsessions, and the “gassy expanse” of marginal jobs. With the help of a therapist known only as the counselor, this almost 30-year-old Midwestern neurotic gamely tries to steer her way past credit-card-fueled Target binges and a too close relationship with her mother, Flo, and to slowly inch toward the elusive land of adulthood.

My Review: This was definitely not run-of-the-mill women’s fiction. Shannon is much more real than most other heroines I’ve come across. She’s sharp and witty, but the book isn’t laugh-out-loud funny. I spent more time going, “yikes, I’ve been there.” Like so many women in their late 20s, she’s waiting for life to start — she’s in a holding pattern. It’s easier for her to just sit around and wait instead of making something happen. Overall, my favorite portions of the book are the interactions between Shannon and her mother, Flo. They felt so very real. Her mother wasn’t a cariacature of ridiculous mothers seen in so many books. She was real and hurting and wanted the best for her children. Her relationship with Shannon was how many mothers and daugthers are and I really loved that about this book.

January 15, 2009

#3 – Irresistible Revolution by Shane Claiborne

irresistible-revolution

Recommended by: My brother Chris

Purchased from: Berean Christian Book Stores

Rating: 9 out of 10

Synopsis (from Publishers Weekly): If there is such a thing as a disarming radical, 30-year-old Claiborne is it. A former Tennessee Methodist and born-again, high school prom king, Claiborne is now a founding member of one of a growing number of radical faith communities. His is called the Simple Way, located in a destitute neighborhood of Philadelphia. It is a house of young believers, some single, some married, who live among the poor and homeless. They call themselves “ordinary radicals” because they attempt to live like Christ and the earliest converts to Christianity, ignoring social status and unencumbered by material comforts.

My Review: I’m not sure if I’ve ever read a book that has smacked me upside the head like this one. I’ve been seriously considering how I live out my faith in the past few months. One evening, I was cleaning out my closet and I realized how many pairs of shoes I have. It’s a ridiculous number. Not Imelda Marcos ridiculous, but still. I broke down. I cried and I cried. I couldn’t believe that I had so many pairs of shoes — and so many pairs that I never wore — while there are millions of people who will never make enough money to even afford shoes. God broke my heart that night and I realized that perhaps we’re not living in communion with other people like we should, helping each other out and shouldering each others’ burdens. The more I read in the Bible, I’m getting a picture of a different community, one that is rooted in love instead of judgement, sharing instead of stockpiling wealth, helping instead of ignoring. This book served to drive that point home. I’m not sure what this looks like for my life yet, but my eyes are open to see the needs of the world now, so I’m hoping and praying God will do something with this sight He has given me. I’m excited about my Reading Challenge, but I’m also feeling called to get my hands dirty. Can’t wait!

The book is full of great insights, both from Claiborne and from other authors he quotes. Here is just a sample (my book is half highlighted!):

“It’s not the parts of the Bible I don’t understand that scare me, but the parts I do understand.” (quoting Mark Twain, page 40)

“As I read the Scriptures about how the last will be first, I started wondering why I was working so hard to be first.” (page 42)

“…we have insulated ourselves from miracles. We no longer live with such reckless faith that we need them.” (page 48 )

In reference to the removal of a cross from a mega-church because it makes people uncomfortable: “True, the cross is not always seeker sensitive. It is not comfortable. But it is the cornerstone of our faith, and I fear that when we remove the cross, we remove the central symbol of the nonviolence and grace of our Lover. If we remove the cross, we are in danger of promoting a very cheap grace. Perhaps it should make us uncomfortable. After all, it wasn’t so comfy to get nailed there.” (pages 106 and 107)

“Few people are interested in a religion that has nothing to say to the world and offers them only life after death, when what people are really wondering is whether there is life before death.” (page 117)

“We are called to be the Good Samaritan, but after you lift so many people out of the ditch you start to ask, maybe the whole road to Jericho needs to be repaved.” (page 153)

“Some of us have been told our whole lives that we are wretched, but the gospel reminds us that we are beautiful. Others of us have been told our whole lives that we are beautiful, but the gospel reminds us that we are wretched. The church is a place where we can stand up and say we are wretched, and everyone will nod and agree and remind us that we are also beautiful.” (page 245)

No, really, I could go on and on. The book has a lot of stories of simple people living out their lives in love. Claiborne points out the inconsistencies between the church in America and the church in the Bible without being angry or condescending. He was funny and you could tell that his heart is bursting at the seams with love for the people in his Philadephia neighborhood. Still, I didn’t agree with everything that he offered up in his book. For example, he’s staunchly anti-war, but doesn’t offer up an alternative when, say, an guy named Hilter is killing six million Jews. Yes, blessed are the peacemakers, but sometimes (in very, very rare instances), I think it might be necessary to take some just-war action. I’m not sure what Claiborne would have to say about it, considering one of the guys he quotes frequently, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, tried to assassinate Hitler. But my misgivings were few and far between and overall the book was one giant bucket of conviction. I have a hard time believing that someone could read it and remained unmoved.

And yes, we are all insulated from the poor, but there are hundreds of other things that need our attention as well — abused women, people being forced into slavery, the sexual exploitation of children, kids who die from malaria, the AIDS pandemic, people’s hopeless lonliness, our culture of self-entitlement, etc. etc. etc. Shane’s “Calcutta” is the poor (a reference to Mother Theresa), but I think we can all search out and find our own Calcuttas. We can discover where God needs us to go…and from there, with His guidance and mercy, we can make a difference.

And because of this book, I have several authors I want to read now — Mother Theresa, Chuck Colson, Tony Campolo, Martin Luther King Jr., St. Francis, and others. My to-read list is growing every day!

As of yesterday, my total raised is $2,230 (not counting my boss’s or my matching funds)!

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