Posts

Fear and Trembling - Søren Kierkegaard

Image
Published by Penguin Books/The Penguin Group: London, England, 2005. First published as Frygt og Baven in 1843. Translated from Danish by Alistair Hannay, 1985. If I told you I "got" all of this book, I would be lying. There are definitely aspects that went over my head, even if I thought I got the gist of them. It is not an easy book. It is interesting, though. Which makes sense. Søren Kierkegaard is a philosopher who fascinates me, because of the way in which he chose to write: under different pen-names that each took a different position on what he was writing. This book, for example, is written under the name 'Johannes de silentio' (John the Silent), and is a meditation on the faith of Abraham, particularly regarding the sacrifice of Isaac. It is also the only Kierkegaard book I have ever successfully read the whole way through (so far). I think this is because "John the Silent" is a writer that appeals to me, being interested in what we can learn about ...

Shadow of Phobos - Ken Catran

Image
Published by Tui/HarperCollins Publishers (New Zealand) Ltd: Auckland, NZ, 1994. Book 3 in 'The Solar Colonies.' Preceded by ' The Ghosts of Triton. ' Elise and I (along with Ezekiel) have just returned from a two-week holiday/church ministry time in Australia, visiting friends in Tasmania and Melbourne. It was a great trip, with lots to unpack, but one without a lot of time for reading. Also, the main book I've been working my way through - Moby Dick - is in a big omnibus, which would have weighed too much to justify taking on the plane.  So, instead, I took two books with me that were a little bit smaller, one of which - Fear and Trembling - I was already part of the way through, and the other - this one - a book that I knew was an easy read to unwind with in the little bit of downtime I would find. Both were finished while in Australia, but this one (the easier read) was the first I completed. Both of the two Solar Colonies books I have read have had a different...

Eric - Terry Pratchett

Image
Published by Harper/HarperCollinsPublishers: 2008. First published 1990. It's been a while since I finished a book, which feels strange! I know why though! In the background I have been reading Moby Dick, which is taking a long time to get through. I've also traded my shorter audiobooks (like Thursday Murder Club and its sequels) for The Institutes of Christian Religion by John Calvin, and that is gonna take a long time to finish! Finally, I've also been reading a few books to do with recent or upcoming sermons, and neither Fear and Trembling by Søren Kierkegaard or Jesus and Jews by Zola Levitt are quick reads. Anyway, all this to say that I picked up Eric from the school library on a whim the other day, and was happy to read something I could finish quickly. This is the 9th Discworld novel chronologically and 4th involving the wizard Rincewind, although the first Rincewind novel that I have reviewed here - previously only having reviewed the 31st Discworld novel Monstro...

Holes - Louis Sachar

Image
Published by Bloomsbury Publishing Plc: London, 2000. First published 1998. Ages ago I saw the film that this book was based upon. Except for the physical appearance of the main character (who in the book is quite fat but in the film is portrayed by a young, slim Shia LaBeouf) the film turns out to be quite faithful to the plot. That makes sense, because the plot is one of those intricately constructed ones where there are a number of factors that all come together at the end - think of the way the movie Signs makes sense of every character quirk and random non sequiturs in the final showdown with the alien. Holes includes a lot of back-story, interspersing it with the 'current' events, and each event and quirk from the past (a family curse, the family name, onions, etc) all come together at the end to help resolve the plot. So, its an interesting story. I wouldn't say I was 'gripped' while reading it, but it still gives that sense of "oh, clever!" at the ...

Blessed Be Your Name - Matt and Beth Redman

Image
Published by Regal Books/Gospel Light: Ventura, California, 2005. Having previously read and enjoyed Matt Redman's 2004 book on worship, Facedown , I was happy to pick up the 2005 book he and his wife Beth wrote together, also on worship, entitled Blessed Be Your Name.  Anyone who has been in Christian circles for long enough will recognise that the title of this book comes from the song of the same name, that Matt and Beth wrote in 2002. It is a powerful song, in part because it not only focusses on worshipping God during the good times (eg. "When the sun's shining down on me... When the world's all as it should be" ) but also on worshipping God in the hard times (eg. "On the road marked with suffering...Though there's pain in the offering" ). The book itself - which is only five chapters long - has a similar focus; each chapter title comes from a lyric in the song, and focusses on the ways in which we can still worship God during each season of our...

The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding (and a Selection of Entrees) - Agatha Christie

Image
Published in an omnibus edition: " Ordeal by Innocence "; " One, Two, Buckle My Shoe "; " The Adventures of the Christmas Pudding " as part of the "Agatha Christie Crime Collection" by Lansdowne Press: Australia, 1985 (1973). First published in omnibus edition 1970. First published individually 1960.   This 'book' is actually a selection of short stories by Agatha Christie, mostly involving Poirot. The first - and longest - in the collection is the titular Adventure of the Christmas Pudding, which involves Poirot trying to determine who has stolen a missing ruby and what they have done with it. It is not a spoiler to say that a Christmas pudding features heavily in this story. This one is fairly straightforward for a Poirot story, partially due to being a short story and partially due to logic: a subplot involving kids pretending to have discovered a murder seems very unlikely to have resulted in an actual death! The second story, The Mys...

The Railway Children - E Nesbit

Image
Published by Arcturus Publishing Limited: Bermondsey Street, London, 2019. First published 1905. Apparently E Nesbit is known for two books: Five Children and It, which Elise and I read a few years ago, and this novel, The Railway Children, which we have just finished now! Although The Railway Children is much more realistic than Five Children - in which the titular 'It' was a sand-fairy who granted wishes - both novels have a lot of similarities in style: both books have fairly self-contained and occasionally over-long chapters that follow a group of siblings in a remote location, without much parental oversight, who get into numerous adventures, many involving a level of humour but also a level of pathos... in this book, the latter is provided by the absence of the children's father, who - it emerges over time - has been imprisoned for some unspecified crime. So much for the similarities. In The Railway Children, it may come as no surprise that a railway features heavily!...