Sunday Salon: Prequels and Sequels and Films, Oh, My!

Frank Cottrell Boyce will be writing a trilogy based on Ian Fleming’s Chitty Chitty Bang Bang: “The new story is about a family where the father has been made redundant and sets about trying to reconstruct a VW Camper Van. He unwittingly uses the original Chitty Chitty Bang Bang engine for the camper van, which has its own agenda, to restore itself.”

Newbery Award winner Patricia MacLachlan has signed up with Albert Whitman & Company to write a prequel for Gertrude Chandler Warner‘s popular series, The Boxcar Children. I hope her prequel is better than the awful sequels/series extenders (over 100 of them) that were written and published starting in the 1990’s. Only the first nineteen books in the series were written by Gertrude Chandler Warner, and only those nineteen are worth the time as far as I’m concerned.

Walden Media announced that they will adapt The Magician’s Nephew next in the film adaptation of the Narnia series. I don’t know why they’re skipping over The SIlver Chair, but I would imagine that The Horse and His Boy, with its vaguely Arabic-culture villains would be way too controversial.

And Peter Jackson has finally started filming on his version of The Hobbit by JRR Tolkien. I say, “Hooray for The Hobbit! Long live Bilbo Baggins!”

The King’s Speech, the account of King George VI’s stuttering problem that won the Academy Award for best picture, is coming out in a PG-13 version in April. The original was rated R because of a scene in which the struggling king uses some crude and profane language to try to overcome his stammering. I thought, despite the language which is mostly confined to that one scene, the movie was wonderful, and it would quite inspiring for Christian young people to see the persistence and character exemplified in this story.

Some tips on How to Read a Classic (Novel) at A Library Is a Hospital for the Mind. Sarah makes these suggestions in relation to reading Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities, but her ideas are adaptable for most classic novels. Good stuff. Challenge yourself.

We’ve been watching mostly TV shows on Netflix here at the Semicolon household: Larkrise to Candleford and Psych. That’s an interesting combination.

Saturday Review of Books: April 16, 2011

“Books….are like lobster shells, we surround ourselves with ‘em, then we grow out of ‘em and leave ‘em behind, as evidence of our earlier stages of development. “~Dorothy Sayers

SatReviewbuttonIf you’re not familiar with and linking to and perusing the Saturday Review of Books here at Semicolon, you’re missing out. Here’s how it usually works. Find a review on your blog posted sometime during the previous week of a book you were reading or a book you’ve read. The review doesn’t have to be a formal sort of thing. You can just write your thoughts on a particular book, a few ideas inspired by reading the book, your evaluation, quotations, whatever.

Then on Saturday, you post a link here at Semicolon in Mr. Linky to the specific post where you’ve written your book review. Don’t link to your main blog page because this kind of link makes it hard to find the book review, especially when people drop in later after you’ve added new content to your blog. In parentheses after your name, add the title of the book you’re reviewing. This addition will help people to find the reviews they’re most interested in reading.

After linking to your own reviews, you can spend as long as you want reading the reviews of other bloggers for the week and adding to your wishlist of books to read. That’s how my own TBR list has become completely unmanageable and the reason I can’t join any reading challenges. I have my own personal challenge that never ends.

1. Sarah Reads Too Much (The Ice Harvest)
2. Farrar @ I Capture the Rowhouse (Alex Rider: Scorpia Rising)
3. Sparrow Road (Lemme Library)
4. the Ink Slinger (Something Wicked This Way Comes)
5. Dana (Swan)
6. Books on Education
7. Across the Page (Parenting is Your Highest Calling – and 8 Other Myths)
8. violet (Gray Matter)
9. Reading to Know (Loose Tooth picture books)
10. Reading to Know (The Sword & the Stone – book and movie)
11. Reading to Know (Her Daughter’s Dream)
12. Reading to Know (The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie)
13. Hope (Books about Women of the West)
14. SenoraG (Sarah, They’re Coming For You)
15. Collateral Bloggage (Euphemania)
16. Donovan @ Where Pen Meets Paper (Economy of Grace)
17. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (When You Reach Me)
18. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Cousins of Clouds: Elephant Poems)
19. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Mitchell’s License & other picture books)
20. SuziQoregon @ Whimpulsive (Heads You Lose)
21. SuziQoregon @ Whimpulsive (A Rule Against Murder)
22. Barbara H. (10 Gospel Promises for Later Life)
23. DebD (Boy from Baby House 10)
24. Yvann (A Pale View Of Hills)
25. Yvann (The Thirteenth Tale)
26. FleurFisher (Lasting Damage)
27. FleurFisher (Not to be Taken)
28. FleurFisher (The Report)
29. JHS (The Island)
30. JHS (Rescue)
31. JHS (The Long Goodbye GIVEAWAY)
32. Melissa @ The Betty and Boo Chronicles (American Wasteland)
33. Melissa @ The Betty and Boo Chronicles (The Quickening Maze)
34. BookBelle (Bloodroot)
35. Beckie@ByTheBook (The Face of God)
36. Beckie@ByTheBook (The Associate)
37. Beckie@ByTheBook (Heavenly Daze series)
38. Amber Stults (Try Me)
39. Word Lily (The Mapping of Love and Death)
40. Nicola (Excalibur: The Legend of King Arthur by Tony Lee)
41. Nicola (Lewis & Clark by Nick Bertozzi)
42. Nicola (DC Super-Pets! Royal Rodent Rescue)
43. Nicola (The Mystery of Ireland’s Eye by Shane Peacock)
44. Nicola (Merci Mister Dash by Monica Kulling)
45. Nicola (Moon Over Manifest by Clare Vanderpool)
46. Nicola (Mystify by Artist Arthur)
47. Megan @ Leafing Through Life (The Ingram Interview)
48. Library Hospital (The Enchanted Wood)
49. S. Krishna (666 Park Avenue)
50. S. Krishna (Reading Lips: A Memoir of Kisses)
51. S. Krishna (The School of Night)
52. S. Krishna (Devil’s Trill)
53. S. Krishna (The Bird Sisters)
54. S. Krishna (The Tiger’s Wife)
55. S. Krishna (The 4 Percent Universe)
56. Benjie @ Book ‘Em Benj-O (The Canary List)
57. Lucybird (I am Number Four)
58. Lucybird (A Wild Sheep Chase))
59. Debbie Rodgers – Exurbanis.com (A Fine Balance)
60. Marie (Our Singing Planet)
61. Marie (The Sandalwood Tree)
62. Laughing (I Remember Nothing)
63. A Foodie Bibliophile in Wanderlust (Delirium)
64. A Foodie Bibliophile in Wanderlust (Pug Hill)
65. Carina @ Reading Through Life (Tweak: Growing Up On Methamphetamines)
66. Carina @ Reading Through Life (We All Fall Down: Living With Addiction)
67. Carina @ Reading Through Life (The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian)
68. Carina @ Reading Through Life (Darkly Dreaming Dexter)
69. Carina @ Reading Through Life (Where She Went)
70. Janie (Uncovering the Logic of English)
71. Jessica (Write These Laws On Your Children)
72. Diary of an Eccentric (Spaceheadz)
73. Diary of an Eccentric (My Jane Austen Summer)
74. Diary of an Eccentric (Wickham’s Diary)
75. Gina @ Bookscount (The Inheritance of Beauty)
76. Gina @ Bookscount (Semi Sweet)
77. Gina @ Bookscount (The Girl in the Lighthouse)
78. Gina @ Bookscount (A Turn in the Road)

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Prayer Adventures

I’ve been thinking a lot about prayer, and I’ve actually been praying more—ever since I read the book Praying for Strangers by River Jordan. It sounds a little crazy, since I’ve been a Christian for almost fifty years, but I think maybe God is trying to teach me to pray. Really pray. Not just think about praying or talk about prayer or read about prayer, but actually get still and form words and offer them up to Him. So, here’s a sampling of what’s been going on in my mind and heart around this topic of prayer:

I read and appreciated this brief post: Prayer and Goosebumps Yes, I’m praying a lot more short, on the spot, before-I-forget, prayers.

Prayer is not merely an occasional impulse to which we respond when we are in trouble: prayer is a life attitude. ~Walter A. Mueller

Certain thoughts are prayers. There are moments when, whatever be the attitude of the body, the soul is on its knees. ~Victor Hugo, Les Misérables

We must move from asking God to take care of the things that are breaking our hearts, to praying about the things that are breaking His heart. ~Margaret Gibb

Men may spurn our appeals, reject our message, oppose our arguments, despise our persons, but they are helpless against our prayers. ~Sidlow Baxter

There is not in the world a kind of life more sweet and delightful than that of a continual conversation with God. ~Brother Lawrence

Prayer does not fit us for the greater work; prayer is the greater work. ~Oswald Chambers

The main lesson about prayer is just this: Do it! Do it! Do it! You want to be taught to pray. My answer is pray and never faint, and then you shall never fail. ~John Laidlaw

Friday Night Lights by H.G. Bissinger

I grew up in West Texas, San Angelo, not Odessa, but definitely football country, the era and culture of Friday Night Lights. I learned football sitting in the flute section of the Edison Junior High School band as my band director explained to me first downs and safeties and extra points. I never learned it well, but I knew enough by the time I got to high school that I could get my flute in place to play the fight song when our team made a touchdown.

Friday Night Lights has become a movie and a TV series. I’ve never seen either one. However, I can vouch that the culture and the obsession depicted in the book did exist, and probably still does. I graduated from Central High School in San Angelo in the mid-seventies, and football was a Big Deal. We saw Permian, the school featured in the book, as the school to beat. We detested “Mojo” and all their black and gold trappings. They probably saw us as not so much of a threat since the San Angelo Bobcats have only won two state championships in their history, in 1943 and again in 1966. I think Mr. Bissinger, who is a Yankee from Philadelphia, probably got a a narrow but accurate picture of the place and influence of high school football in a West Texas town, as he spent a year following the fortunes of the Odessa Permian Panthers.

He also made a lot of people mad. In the afterword, written in 2008 ten years after the book was written, Bissinger says he received death threats at the time of publication and that many Odessans still resent and argue with the depiction of their town, their attitudes, and their football team in the book. I’m sure the fictional extension and embellishment of the story in movie and television has done nothing to change the perception that Bissinger misquoted, fictionalized, and sensationalized a narrative that was dear to the people of Odessa. I don’t know. Certainly, football is important, even worshipped, in Odessa and in other towns and high schools and colleges in Texas. I’ve seen it myself. Perhaps Mr. Bissinger could have found many people with a more balanced and rational view of the significance of the Permian Panthers football team and its win/loss record had he tried. However, he wasn’t writing about those balanced people with little or no interest in football; he was writing about the Mojo of Permian High School football and about its effect on a group of young men who found their identity in a series of Friday night football games.

Friday Night Lights is a sad book. It asks the question, “If football is your life, what happens when the season is over?” Win or lose, the answer to that question isn’t pretty. I felt sorry for the boys in the book. How could such a system be good for anyone concerned? And why do we continue to perpetuate such intense pressure on young men to succeed at a game that is essentially meaningless in and of itself? When I read about football mania as practiced in Friday Night Lights, I’m glad we homeschool. And it makes me look carefully at my own life and the expectations I have for my children. Is there anything that I have made into an idol that takes the place of God in the lives of my children? I pray not.

The book is excellent. It deals with both the strengths and weaknesses of a community’s having a cause or a team to unite them. Taking pride and inspiration from the accomplishments of a group of athletes or other successful people is a good thing, in moderation. Loading the hopes and dreams of an entire city on the shoulders of a group of seventeen and eighteen year old boys is a mistake and a perversion of true community.

Saturday Review of Books: April 9, 2011

“What I like best is a book that’s at least funny once in a while. What really knocks me out is a book that, when you’re all done reading it, you wish the author that wrote it was a terrific friend of yours and you could call him up on the phone whenever you felt like it. That doesn’t happen much, though.”~J.D. Salinger

SatReviewbuttonIf you’re not familiar with and linking to and perusing the Saturday Review of Books here at Semicolon, you’re missing out. Here’s how it usually works. Find a review on your blog posted sometime during the previous week of a book you were reading or a book you’ve read. The review doesn’t have to be a formal sort of thing. You can just write your thoughts on a particular book, a few ideas inspired by reading the book, your evaluation, quotations, whatever.

Then on Saturday, you post a link here at Semicolon in Mr. Linky to the specific post where you’ve written your book review. Don’t link to your main blog page because this kind of link makes it hard to find the book review, especially when people drop in later after you’ve added new content to your blog. In parentheses after your name, add the title of the book you’re reviewing. This addition will help people to find the reviews they’re most interested in reading.

After linking to your own reviews, you can spend as long as you want reading the reviews of other bloggers for the week and adding to your wishlist of books to read. That’s how my own TBR list has become completely unmanageable and the reason I can’t join any reading challenges. I have my own personal challenge that never ends.

1. the Ink Slinger (The Hunt for Red October)
2. Bonnie (Tatiana and Alexander)
3. SuziQoregon @ Whimpulsive (Mistletoe Man)
4. SuziQoregon @ Whimpulsive (Bloodroot)
5. JHS (Memoirs of a Widowed Mistress)
6. JHS (Dead Reckoning)
7. Donovan @ Where Peen Meets Paper (Banker to the Poor)
8. Donovan @ Where Peen Meets Paper (Never Let Me Go)
9. Collateral Bloggage (The RIse and Fall of the Bible)
10. Judy @ Seize the Book Blog (Lazarus Awakening)
11. Yvonne@fictionbooks ‘Hearts Of Gold’ by Jessica Stirling
12. Graham @ My Book Year (In A Strange Room)
13. Beth@Weavings (Mr. Darcy Broke My Heart)
14. FleurFisher (Death and the Pleasant Voices)
15. FleurFisher (Invisible River)
16. FleurFisher (The Road to Wanting)
17. Across the Page (Cranford)
18. Across the Page (Deeper Experiences of Famous Christians)
19. Sheri @ Life on the Farm (The Housekeeper & the Professor)
20. BookBelle (P.S. I Love You)
21. 1/2 the Church Review & Give Away
22. Barbara H. (Faithful)
23. Alice@Supratentorial(Unbroken)
24. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Dark Emperor)
25. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Black Ships before Troy)
26. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Homeschooling with a Meek and Quiet Spirit)
27. Hope (The New Woman by Jon Hassler)
28. Lazygal (Please Look After Mom)
29. Lazygal (The Song of Stone)
30. Lazygal (Kissing Game)
31. Lazygal (Divergent)
32. Lazygal (Where She Went)
33. Word Lily (Stalking Susan)
34. Word Lily (Missing Mark)
35. Word Lily (Heads You Lose)
36. Farrar @ I Capture the Rowhouse (Gateway and General Winston’s Daughter)
37. Beckie@ByTheBook (The Girl in The Gatehouse)
38. Beckie@ByTheBook (Adventures in Nowhere)
39. Beckie@ByTheBook (Beside Still Waters)
40. Girl Detective (The Handmaid’s Tale)
41. S. Krishna (Mothers and Other Liars)
42. S. Krishna (Double Black)
43. S. Krishna (The Sandalwood Tree)
44. S. Krishna (The Scent of Rain and Lightning)
45. S. Krishna (The Silver Boat)
46. S. Krishna (Maisie Dobbs)
47. S. Krishna (Little Princes)
48. Carol in Oregon (A Godward Life, Bk 2)
49. Cindy’s Book Club (Operation Bonnet)
50. Bless This Mouse (Lemme Library)
51. Jezebel Lee (The Named)
52. Margaret @BooksPlease – The Murder of Roger Ackroyd
53. Melody @ Fingers & Prose (The Secret Scripture)
54. Nicole (Three Hens and A Peacock)
55. Nicole (The Uncoupling)
56. Amber Stults (The Association 1: Presidents Park Incident)
57. Kara @ Home With Purpose (Pompeii: City of Fire)
58. Kara @ Home With Purpose (The Girl in the Gatehouse)
59. Kara @ Home With Purpose (Counterfeit Gospels)
60. JHS (My Jane Austen Summer GiVEAWAY)
61. Yvann (Strike Back)
62. SmallWorld Reads (The Diary)
63. 5 Minutes for Books (The Wilder Life)
64. 5 Minutes for Books (Sweet Valley Confidential)
65. 5 Minutes for Books (Girls Like Us)
66. 5 Minutes for Books (The Fourth Stall)
67. 5M4B (Press Here)
68. Nicola (Taro and the Terror of Eats Street by Sango Morimoto)
69. Nicola (Death Note:Black Edition, Vol. 2 by Tsugumi Ohba)
70. Nicola (Greek Myths by Ann Turnbull)
71. Nicola (Assassin: Lady Grace Mysteries #1)
72. Nicola (The Joy of Being a Catholic Child by Rev. Jude Winkler OFM, Conv.)
73. Nicola (Quiver by Holly Luhning)
74. Nicola (Library Wars: Love & War, Vol. 4)
75. Deeper Into the Word – violet
76. Woman of the House (Notes from the Tilt-A-Whirl by N.D. Wilson)
77. Diary of an Eccentric (Heart of Deception)
78. Diary of an Eccentric (What Would Mr. Darcy Do?)
79. Diary of an Eccentric (Lebensborn)
80. Gina @ Bookscount (Black Friday)
81. Gina @ Bookscount Already Home)
82. Nicole (Enclave)
83. Beckie@ByTheBook (False Witness)
84. Jezebel Lee @ Jez’s Bookcase

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God’s Trombones by James Weldon Johnson

40 Inspirational Classics for Lent

These poems, based on the preaching style of the traditional Black preacher, contain some of the finest images of Biblical truth and of Scriptural exposition that I have read. I posted here a You-tube video of pastor Wintley Phipps performing Johnson’s poem, “Go Down, Death.” Here’s another poem from God’s Trombones, “The Creation”:

But this poem, The Prodigal Son, is my favorite one from the collection. “Young man, your arm’s too short to box with God.” Oh, it is, and thank God that it is and that we can learn to “be still and know that He is God” and that we are not.

Gleaned from the Saturday Review and Other Places

Thanks to Carrie for pointing me to this review of Praying for Strangers by River Jordan. I’m intrigued by the idea of this book about an author who decides to choose one stranger to pray for each day. My first thought after reading about Ms. Jordan’s resolution was, “I could do that!” Then, I read at her blog that Ms. Jordan not only prays for a stranger each day, but she also often feels led to tell the person that she will be praying and asks for prayer requests. That’s a little more intimidating. See, I’m really rather shy and reserved. The idea of going up to a complete stranger and telling them that I’ll be praying for them is, well, actually terrifying. So I’ve been praying for a stranger each day for the past three days, but I haven’t told anyone about it, especially not the person I prayed for, until I wrote this post.

I also downloaded the book for my Kindle and started reading it today. I’m intrigued, and I can see the benefit to me and to others of actually talking, getting my stranger’s name, and telling the person that I’ll be praying for him or her. I’m just not sure I have enough courage to do it. Maybe in the pages of Ms. Jordan’s book, I’ll find the gumption and unselfishness to move me to talk to strangers. Maybe I’ll just continue to talk to God about the people He brings across my path. Either way I’m expecting God to work through this prayer thing, even though I’ll be the first to admit that I don’t really understand how or why prayer works.

On another note, I found a few other books at Borders and at Barnes and Noble that I’d like to read soon. I didn’t buy anything, but I’ll be looking for these books at the library soon:

Decision Points by George W. Bush. I’m a Bush fangirl, and I’ve been meaning to read his book. But I sort of forgot about it, so I was happy to be reminded whe I saw it in the bookstore.
Truman by David McCullough. Another president, another biography by the author of John Adams. I expect to enjoy learning more about Mr. Truman when I get around to this one.
The Last Greatest Magician in the World: Howard Thurston versus Houdini & the Battles of the American Wizards by Jim Steinmeyer. I heard the author of this book talking about Thurston and Houdini on NPR, and I thought then that I would like to read the book. However, it’s another one I had forgotten until I saw it displayed in the bookstore.
Fortunate Sons: The 120 Chinese Boys Who Came to America, Went to School, and Revolutionized an Ancient Civilization by Leil Leibovitz and Matthew Miller. “In 1872, under the auspices of the Chinese Educational Mission, 120 Chinese boys were sent to the U.S. to attend elite colleges, absorb the best this mysterious country could offer, and return to enrich China with their experiences and knowledge.” (Booklist) Why does this subject sound so fascinating to me?
The First Clash: The Miraculous Greek Victory at Marathon and Its Impact on Western Civilization by Jim Lacey. And this one, too?

Right now, in addition to the prayer book, I’m reading a book about Louisa and John Quincy Adams called Cannibals of the Heart: A Personal Biography of Louisa Catherine and John Quincy Adams. The book is annoying me in some ways because the author, Jim Shepherd, seems to have no sympathy for John Quincy Adams at all. In fact, his portrayal of JQA makes one wonder how in the world he ever would have managed to get a job as local dogcatcher much less world famous diplomat, senator, U.S. president, and legislator. Mr. Shepherd likes Louisa a lot more and tries to induce his readers to feel sorry for her and her lot as an early nineteenth century woman, enslaved and dominated by the men in her life, especially the irascible Mr. Adams. I’m sure she was in a pitiable state and one at which I would have chafed, but Mr. Shepherd’s obvious and heavy-handed partisanship makes me want to take JQA’s side just to be contrary. Still, I’m finding the life story of of this Washington power couple to be full of interest and excitement, not to mention historical significance. I’ll be writing more about the Adams family soon, I’m sure.

I will finish my posts on the 40 Inspirational Classics for Lent, too. I’ve been in the midst of a blogging block or dry spell or something the past few days, so my 40 Classics posts may go past Easter and into the time of feasting after Easter. But that’s OK with me.

Sunday Salon: Books Read in March, 2011

The Sunday Salon.com

First of all, announcing: The National Homeschool Book Award Homeschoolers will vote for one of four nominees to win the award in the inaugural year of this children’s book award.

Adult Fiction
She Walks in Beauty by Siri Mitchell. Semicolon review here.
The Double Comfort Safari Club by Alexander McCall Smith. I’m just getting around to this latest in Mr. McCall Smith’s series about traditionally built lady detective Precious Ramotswe and her assistant Mma Makutsi. I actually think this series, contrary to typical expectations, gets better with each installment. The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency series is comfort food for traditional readers. There’s a new book in the series just out this month: The Saturday Big Tent Wedding Party.
Talk of the Town by Lisa Wingate. The accented dialog in this Texas chick-lit novel about a reality TV producer who finds true reality in the small town of Daily, Texas was a bit overdone, but the story was readable and entertaining. Read on my Kindle.
After the Leaves Fall by Nicole Baart. Also a Kindle read. Review will be forthcoming.

Young adult and children’s fiction
Taking Off by Jenny Moss. Set in Houston in 1986, the time of the space shuttle Challenger crash. I remember these events, so how could I not become absorbed in this coming-of-age novel about a girl and her dream and her admiration for Christa McAuliffe?
Trash by Andy Mulligan. Excellent mystery/action/adventure story about poor garbage picker children living next to the trash dump in the Philippines who find a valuable treasure in the garbage. Resilience and courage were the hallmarks of the young protagonists in this thriller for kids.
Sent (The Missing: Book 2) by Margaret Peterson Haddix. I had to read this next book in Haddix’s The Missing series since it deals with the two princes in the Tower and Richard III. I’m still with Josephine Tey and the Richard defenders, but Haddix’s take on the story was enjoyable anyway.
Bitter Melon by Cara Chow. Semicolon review here.
Before I Fall by Lauren Oliver. I read this one because my teens have been reading this book and a newer one by this author. I found it disturbing because of the very unlikeable characters and the toxically self-absorbed teen culture that is described. I think Ms. Oliver probably describes the teen/high school world quite accurately; it’s just a world that I’m sorry that anyone has to inhabit. Even in a book. Read more about the book itself, rather than my reaction to it at Reading Rants, Rhapsody in Books or Life With Books. Many other reviews are only a Google search away.
Delirium by Lauren Oliver. Of the two by this author, I liked this dystopian novel the best. Very sad.

Nonfiction
The Great Silence: Britain from the Shadow of the First World War to the Dawn of the Jazz Age by Juliet Nicolson. Semicolon review here.
Orthodoxy by G.K. Chesterton. Semicolon review here.
Crazy Love by Francis Chan. Semicolon thoughts here.
What Good Is God? by Philip Yancey. The next book for the Faith ‘n Fiction Roundtable, to be discussed at the end of April.
Bonhoeffer: Pastor, Prophet, Martyr, Spy by Eric Metaxis. Excellent. One of the best nonfiction biographies I’ve read in a good while. After having finished the book and re-read the criticism, I can say that I think this bit of fault-finding is both unwarranted and unfair. Metaxis did a good job with writing about a complex man, and I found myself both admiring and questioning Bonhoeffer’s life and decisions. That’s a good balance.

Saturday Review of Books: April 2, 2011

“By elevating your reading, you will improve your writing or at least tickle your thinking.”~William Safire

SatReviewbuttonIf you’re not familiar with and linking to and perusing the Saturday Review of Books here at Semicolon, you’re missing out. Here’s how it usually works. Find a review on your blog posted sometime during the previous week of a book you were reading or a book you’ve read. The review doesn’t have to be a formal sort of thing. You can just write your thoughts on a particular book, a few ideas inspired by reading the book, your evaluation, quotations, whatever.

Then on Saturday, you post a link here at Semicolon in Mr. Linky to the specific post where you’ve written your book review. Don’t link to your main blog page because this kind of link makes it hard to find the book review, especially when people drop in later after you’ve added new content to your blog. In parentheses after your name, add the title of the book you’re reviewing. This addition will help people to find the reviews they’re most interested in reading.

After linking to your own reviews, you can spend as long as you want reading the reviews of other bloggers for the week and adding to your wishlist of books to read. That’s how my own TBR list has become completely unmanageable and the reason I can’t join any reading challenges. I have my own personal challenge that never ends.

1. SuziQoregon @ Whimpulsive (The Mapping of Love and Death)
2. SuziQoregon @ Whimpulsive (The Borgias and Their Enemies)
3. the Ink Slinger (The Terminal Man)
4. Trisha (The Organized Heart)
5. Carol in Oregon (Auntie Robbo)
6. Semicolon (Peace Child)
7. Semicolon (Brothers Karamazov)
8. Beth@Weavings (Five Children & It)
9. Beth@Weavings (The Preacher’s Bride)
10. Danielle (Chloe Marr)
11. Bonnie (The Bronze Horseman)
12. Jessica (Scripture By Heart)
13. Barbara H. (A Walk in the Park and A Long Walk Home)
14. Yvonne@fictionbooks … ‘The Summoner’ by Layton Green
15. Fourth Musketeer (Second Fiddle)
16. Collateral Bloggage (Will the Real Heretics Please Stand Up)
17. Graham @ My Book Year (Black Water Rising)
18. Liviania @ In Bed With Books
19. Reading to Know (The Dashwood Sisters Tell All)
20. Reading to Know (Parenting in the Pew)
21. Reading to Know (Tuff Books)
22. Reading to Know (Tell Me the Day Backwards)
23. FleurFisher (The Stone-Cutter)
24. FleurFisher (Blacklands)
25. FleurFisher (Scissors, Paper, Stone)
26. FleurFisher (True Things About Me)
27. JHS (The Provence Cure for the Brokenhearted GIVEAWAY)
28. JHS (So Much for That GIVEAWAY)
29. JHS (Stilettos & Scoundrels GIVEAWAY)
30. Nicola (Stink and the Ultimate Thumb Wrestling Smackdown by Megan McDonald)
31. Across the Page (Decision Points)
32. Across the Page (The Phantom Tollbooth)
33. Lucybird (First Among Sequels)
34. Lucybird (One of Our Thursday’s is Missing)
35. Word Lily (Among the Mad)
36. jama’s alphabet soup (easy as pie)
37. BookBelle (The Persian Pickle Club)
38. Upside Down B (Normal Kingdom Business)
39. Upside Down B (Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time)
40. Upside Down B (A Streetcar Named Desire)
41. Lazygal (Press Here)
42. Lazygal (The Dark City)
43. Lazygal (State of Wonder)
44. Lazygal (13 Curses)
45. Nicola (Greek Myths by Marcia Williams)
46. Lazygal (Spoiled)
47. SmallWorld Reads (The Double Bind)
48. Lazygal (Dark Parties)
49. Nicola (The Seventh Princess by Nick Sullivan)
50. Lazygal (Bitter End)
51. SmallWorld Reads (New Stories from the South)
52. Lazygal (Huntress)
53. Nicola (Flight, Volume 7)
54. Lazygal (The Magnoliga League)
55. Nicola (The Cay by Theodore Taylor)
56. Lazygal (She Loves You, She Loves You Not)
57. Nicola (Travelers Along the Way by Fr. Benedict J. Groeschel)
58. Nicola (Plenty of Fish by Millicent Selsam)
59. Mental multivitamin (two books)
60. Library Hospital (Decision Points)
61. Library Hospital (Tales from an African Vet)
62. Library Hospital (Pink Me Up)
63. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Moon over Manifest)
64. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (picture books about plants)
65. Upside Down B (Dearest Creature – Poetry Collection)
66. Sheri @ Life on the Farm (Charlotte Collins)
67. Girl Detective (Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks)
68. Girl Detective (Bad Marie)
69. Girl Detective (Nox)
70. Girl Detective (Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake)
71. Girl Detective (Loon Baby)
72. Swapna (Artifacts)
73. Swapna (The Dark and Hollow Places)
74. Swapna (The Third Rail)
75. Swapna (The Last Brother)
76. Swapna (A Cup of Friendship)
77. Swapna (My One and Only)
78. Swapna (Night Road)
79. Swapna (You Had Me At Woof)
80. Between the Stacks (Howl’s Moving Castle)
81. Yvann (The Existential Detective)
82. Margaret (The Distant Land of My Father)
83. Cindy’s Book Club (False Pretenses, by Kathy Herman)
84. SenoraG (Dog’s Don’t Lie)
85. Debbie Rodgers – Exurbanis.com (Mr. Shakespeare’s…)
86. Proud Book Nerd (Starcrossed)
87. Hope (Dear James)
88. Beckie@ByTheBook (The Damascus Way)
89. Beckie@ByTheBook (Fitzwilliam Darcy, Gentleman)
90. Beckie@ByTheBook (Lowlands of Scotland Series)
91. Woman of the House (On Christian Liberty by Martin Luther)
92. Gina @ Bookscount (The Knitting Diaries)
93. Gina @ Bookscount (The People of the Mist)
94. Cindy’s Book Club-Operation Bonnet, by Kimberly Stuart
95. nicole.eralok
96. Diary of an Eccentric (The Matchmaker of Kenmare)

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Poetry of Christina Rossetti

40 Inspirational Classics for Lent

I’ve posted several poems by Ms. Rossetti in the course of writing this blog—because I like her deceptively simple poetry.

In the Bleak Midwinter, lyrics by Christina Rossetti.
Summer by Christina Rossetti.
Love Came Down at Christmas, another Christmas carol by Christina Rossetti.
An End by Christina Rossetti: “Love, strong as Death, is dead.”
Beneath Thy Cross by Christina Rossetti.
A Better Resurrection by Christina Rossetti.
A Birthday by Christina Rossetti: “My heart is like a singing bird.”

And here’s yet another, entitled Up-hill:

Does the road wind up-hill all the way?
  Yes, to the very end.
Will the day’s journey take the whole long day?
  From morn to night, my friend.

But is there for the night a resting-place?
  A roof for when the slow dark hours begin.
May not the darkness hide it from my face?
  You cannot miss that inn.

Shall I meet other wayfarers at night?
  Those who have gone before.
Then must I knock or call when just in sight?
  They will not keep you standing at that door.

Shall I find comfort, travel-sore and weak?
  Of labour you shall find the sum.
Will there be beds for me and all who seek?
  Yes, beds for all who come.