Saturday Review of Books: February 26, 2011

“I feel a kind of reverence for the first books of young authors. There is so much aspiration in them, so much audacious hope and trembling fear, so much of the heart’s history, that all errors and shortcomings are for a while lost sight of
in the amiable self assertion of youth.”
~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Tomorrow, February 27th is Longfellow’s birthday, by the way. You can read more about this beloved American poet here, here, here, here, and here (A Celebration of Longfellow). I’m rather fond of Longfellow.

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. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Turtle in Paradise)
2. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (37 books I have loved)
3. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Read Aloud Thurs.–picture books by Barbara McClintock)
4. Collateral Bloggage (War)
5. SuziQoregon @ Whimpulsive (Gideon’s Sword)
6. Carol in Oregon (Two Towns in Provence)
7. Diary of an Eccentric (How Many Miles to Babylon?)
8. Diary of an Eccentric (On Maggie’s Watch)
9. Diary of an Eccentric (The Last Brother)
10. Barbara H. (A Memory Between Us)
11. Beth@Weavings (Along Came a Dog)
12. Beth@Weavings (Six Ways to Keep the “Little” in Your Girl)
13. Moomin Light (Abarat)
14. Donovan @ Where Peen Meets Paper (C)
15. Janet (The Red House Mystery)
16. Janet (Brokenness – The Heart God Revives)
17. Janet (The Wanderings of Odysseus)
18. Alice@Supratentorial(Cakewalk)
19. Lazygal (Haunting Violet)
20. Lazygal (Midnight in Madrid)
21. Heather @ Books For Breakfast (Sylvester, The Mouse With The Musical Ear)
22. Heather @ Books For Breakfast (Fish Head)
23. The Lemme Library (The Friendship Doll)
24. Hope(All Things Considered by Chesterton)
25. SmallWorld Reads (Bloodroot)
26. Marie (The Giver)
27. DHM, The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society
28. Library Hospital (The Belfry)
29. Lucybird’s Book Blog (When God was a Rabbit)
30. Lucybird’s Book Blog (About a Boy)
31. Girl Detective (One Day)
32. Reading to Know (No Legal Grounds)
33. Reading to Know (With Calvin in the Theater of God)
34. Reading to Know (Think)
35. Colleen@Books in the City(Odious Ogre
36. Colleen@Books in the City (Devotion)
37. Colleen@Books in the City (Saving Cee Cee Honeycutt)
38. Zee @ Notes from the North (Anne’s House of Dreams)
39. Margaret @ BooksPlease (True Grit)
40. Colloquium (Skipping a Beat — GIVEAWAY)
41. Colloquium (Devotion)
42. Colloquium (The Other Life)
43. Mindy Withrow (Olga Grushin’s THE LINE)
44. Mindy Withrow (Clare Vanderpool’s MOON OVER MANIFEST)
45. Beth S. (The True Meaning of Smekday)
46. Yvann (The Seamstress)
47. Yvann (The Shadow of What We Were)
48. BookBelle (Left Neglected)
49. Melissa Wiley (recent picture book reads)
50. Beckie@ByTheBook (Beyond The Rapids)
51. Beckie@ByTheBook (The Tudor Secret)
52. Beckie@ByTheBook (The God Hater)
53. Beckie@ByTheBook (Old Friends and New Fancies)
54. BeckieBurnham@ByTheBook (Thoroughly Southern Mysteries)
55. Florinda @ The 3 R’s Blog (Certain Women)
56. Florinda @ The 3 R’s Blog (Devotion: A Memoir)
57. Miriam (The Watsons Go To BIrmingham–1963)
58. Lars Walker (Meadowland)
59. Gina @ Bookscount (Tiny Sunbirds Far Away)
60. The Lemme Library (Horton Halfpott)
61. Woman of the House (Journey Cake by Isabel McLennan McKeekin

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Observing Lent

Easter is late this year, not until April 24th. And so the season of Lent begins in March. Shrove Tuesday is March 8, and Ash Wednesday is March 9. I want to do some special things with our family to observe both Lent and the fifty days after Easter which constitute the Easter feast that lasts from Easter until Pentecost Sunday, June 12.

The following ideas for Lent come from:
Lenten Links: Resources for a Post-Evangelical Lent.
One deep drawer: Observing Lent with our families
10 Lenten Traditions to Enrich Your Family’s Easter Celebration by Barbara Curtis
At a Hen’s Pace: An Anglican Family Lent.
Recommended Reading for Lent at Conversion Diary.

1. Make doughnuts or some other deep-fried treat on Mardi Gras or Fat Tuesday.
2. Learn a new song. a song that points to spring coming and new life sprouting.
3. Go for a walk every day. I once knew of a homeschooling family who put a pot of soup on to simmer for lunch and headed out for a walk each day, no matter what the weather.
4. Make a nature almanac recording what you see on your walks.
5. Learn a new prayer to say at meals.
6. Give up meat as a family. or sugar. Give the money to an organization like Heifer.
7. Change your seasonal table or altar. Add a bowl of water to be the waters of life, or a tray of sand to be the 40 years in the desert, our own long journey, our dustiness.
8. Sprout something. Grow something. Plant something.
9. Make bread. to go along with the soup.
10. Celebrate National Poetry Month (April) with a poem a day.
11. Wear purple, the traditional color of Lent, to keep you mindful.
12. Light candles at meals. Turn off the electric light. Enjoy the darkness.
13. Observe silence even for a few moments each day at the same time.
14. Memorize an Easter passage of Scripture as a family. Suggestions: one of the Psalms,
15. Celebrate Purim, March 20-21. Read the book of Esther aloud.
16. Celebrate Passover, April 19-25.
17. Post Bible verses, especially the words of Jesus, on the refrigerator, bathroom mirrors, wherever a busy family is sure to see them.
18. Bake your own pretzels. Pretzels originated as early Christian Lenten treats, designed in the form of arms crossed in prayer.
19. In Matthew 12:39-41, Jesus points to the story of Jonah as a sign of his own destiny. So this is a great time to review it with your children, discussing the issues of sin, obedience, and God’s mercy.
20. Read books together as a family or alone to lead you into Easter Resurrection celebration. Books for Lent to lead you into Resurrection.
21. Read the Church Fathers during Lent.
22. Practice confession, asking God to search our hearts and point out those things in our lives that need to change.
23. Fast on Fridays or fast from meat on Fridays.
24. Decide as a family on one thing that is distracting your family from following God fully, and take that one thing out of your family life at least for the duration of Lent.
25. Participate in World Vision’s Relentless Acts of Justice.
26. Pray and read the Bible daily.

W.F. Matthews: Lost Battalion Survivor by Travis Monday

Reading Unbroken(Semicolon review here) made me want to take a look at this WW II memoir about a man who was a deacon and a patriarch at my church when I was growing up in San Angelo, Texas. Mr. Matthews also survived imprisonment with the Japanese in Southeast Asia. As I remember it, my parents told me that Mr. Matthews had been a prisoner of the Japanese during World War II but that he “didn’t like to talk about it.” So I was curious, but I never asked.

Apparently, Mr. Monday who pastored my parents’ church for a while after I had already moved away from San Angelo, did ask—and wrote this self-published book in 2004 to tell “the incredible true story of an American hero,” W.F. Matthews.

The most striking note in the book was Mr. Matthews’ almost dispassionate attitude toward his captivity.

About the Japanese treatment of prisoners: “They beat on us pretty good. It seemed like—you know most of them are short—seemed like they resented us being so much bigger than they were.”

About the New Testament BIble that he carried and hid from the Japanese all through his captivity: “I’d get down, boy, and I’d sneak out and get that thing out and sit there and read it for about 20 minutes, and boy I’d get pepped up again.”

About working near Bangkok during bombing raids: “It was pretty rough up there. The Americans started bombing us. They were bombing at River Kwai and all down through there.”

About his condition after the war’s end in hospital: “I was about 90 pounds when I got in there, and of course, I had that malaria and dysentery. And they put me in that hospital and treated me for that, and I got in pretty good shape. I started eating and I gained a little weight.” (He weighed 220 pounds when he left Texas for San Francisco at the beginning of the war.)

About his recovery from the emotional scars of the war: “People would hover around me and want to talk and I had to leave pretty quick.” “There was a creek right by the house there, and I’d go way down on that creek walking around and kind of staying by myself.”

What magnificent understatement. What a matter of fact attitude.

W.F. Matthews went on to marry and father two sons. He was, as I said a deacon in my Southern Baptist church, and I grew up with his boys. He never said much of anything about the war, certainly never intimated that he was a hero or a person to be admired. As far as I knew, until my parents mentioned something about Mr. Matthews’ war experience, he was just Randy’s and Tommy’s dad, just a good ol’ West Texas man who happened to drink coffee with my dad and some other men every morning at the Dunbar Restaurant.

I believe we are surrounded by quiet, matter of fact, humble heroes, not always war heroes, but all kinds of unheralded and unsung heroism, and we often know nothing about the stories that these quiet heroes never think to tell.

How W.F. Matthews said he wants to be remembered: “I’d like them to remember that we were Americans and that we had a little more to live for than the rest of ’em. That Bible and a few things like that made a difference.”

Saturday Review of Books: February 19, 2011

“It is a good plan to have a book with you in all places and at all times.”~Oliver Wendell Holmes

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. Semicolon (Epitaph Road)
2. Semicolon (Unbroken)
3. Cindy Swanson@Cindy’s Book Club (Words)
4. SuziQoregon @ Whimpulsive (The Cruelest Month)
5. Carol in Oregon (A Dog in Flanders)
6. SuziQoregon @ Whimpulsive (Learning to Swim)
7. Carol in Oregon (Guys Reading Books)
8. Barbara H. (Song of Renewal)
9. Beth@Weavings (Brighty of the Grand Canyon)
10. Beth@Weavings (Today Matters)
11. Barbara H. (Living with Purpose in a Worn-out Body)
12. Collateral Bloggage (Never Let Me Go)
13. Collateral Bloggage (Will the Theologians Please Sit Down)
14. the Ink Slinger (The Martian Chronicles)
15. Krakovianka (Olive Kitteridge)
16. Lazygal (The Iron Queen)
17. Lazygal (Seeds)
18. Lazygal (Before I go to Sleep
19. Lazygal (The Sandalwood Tree)
20. Lazygal (The Tender Mercies of Roses)
21. Lazygal (Small Town Sinners)
22. Janet, Across the Page (One Thousand Gifts)
23. Janet (Black Ships Before Troy)
24. Alice@Supratentorial(One Thousand Gifts)
25. Upside Down B (A Geography of Time))
26. Upside Down B (Sarah’s Key)
27. Bart’s Bookshelf (Piercing)
28. Bart’s Bookshelf (Milo and the Restart Button)
29. Anne (3 books)
30. jama’s alphabet soup (Mini Racer)
31. jama’s alphabet soup (Babyberry Pie)
32. The Worm Hole (Cheerful Weather For The Wedding)
33. LL(Son of Hamas, Mennonite/Black Dress, The Glass Castle
34. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand)
35. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Read Aloud Thursday–ancient Egypt)
36. Heather @ Books For Breakfast (Little Red Riding Hood)
37. Lucybird’s Book Blog (Everything is Illuminated)
38. Lucybird’s Book Blog (Shades of Grey)
39. blacklin (Tutankhamun)
40. Word Lily (Havah)
41. The Lemme Library (Stinky Smelly Feet)
42. Dana(Cartoons Flannery O’Connor)
43. S. Krishna (Cracked Up To Be)
44. S. Krishna (Keys to the Castle)
45. S. Krishna (The Other Life)
46. S. Krishna (The Oracle of Stamboul)
47. S. Krishna (Riding the Ice Wind)
48. S. Krishna (The Vaults)
49. S. Krishna (Atlantic)
50. Nicola (The Book of Revelation by John the Apostle)
51. Nicola (Superman: Cosmic Bounty Hunter)
52. Nicola (Ghostwriter by Travis Thrasher)
53. Diary of an Eccentric (Bridge to Terabithia)
54. Nicola (How Do Apples Grow? by Betsy Maestro)
55. Diary of an Eccentric (Mr. Darcy’s Secret)
56. Nicola (Wonder Woman: Rumble in the Rainforest)
57. Nicola (Robot City Adventures Vol. 1-4)
58. SmallWorld Reads (Frankenstein)
59. Nicola (Death Note:Black Edition, Vol. 1 by Tsugumi Ohba)
60. Nicola (Bubble in the Bathtub by Jo Nesbo)
61. Melissa @ The Betty and Boo Chronicles (Molly Fox’s Birthday)
62. Girl Detective (I Think I Love You)
63. 1morechapter (Amsterdam)
64. 1morechapter (The Weird Sisters)
65. Judy @ Seize the Book Blog (Lady in the Mist)
66. Beckie@ByTheBook (Just Jane)
67. Beckie@ByTheBook (Book Lover’s Devotional)
68. Beckie@ByTheBook (Sharon Dunn’s Ruby Taylor mysteries)
69. Marie (Too Many Books)
70. Bonnie (Unaccustomed Earth)
71. Sarah Reads Too Much – Cost
72. Reading to Know (Dragon Picture Books))
73. Reading to Know (Loving the Little Years: Motherhood in the Trenches))
74. Reading to Know (Planet Home)
75. yvonne – fiction books ‘Apartment 3B
76. Library Hospital (Romantic Passages from Favorite Reads Part VI)
77. Library Hospital (Romantic Passages from Favorite Reads Part V)
78. Carol in Oregon (The Peterkin Papers)
79. 1morechapter (Disgrace)
80. Ruth (three latest books)
81. BookBelle (Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand)
82. Amy Reads (The Price of Salt)
83. Amy Reads (The Education of a British-Protected Child)
84. Florinda @ The 3 R’s Blog (At Home: A Short History of Private Life)
85. Colloquium (Shadow Tag)
86. Colloquium (The Rhythm of Secrets))
87. BookBelle (The Weird Sisters)
88. The Lemme Library (Horton Halfpott)
89. Carina @ Reading Through Life (The Hunger Games)
90. Carina @ Reading Through Life (Moonface)
91. melydia (Don’t Know Much About Mythology)
92. melydia (The Animal Review)
93. Gina @ Bookscount (Under the Mercy Trees)
94. Gina @ Bookscount (My Gay Sparkling Vampire Romance )
95. Lucybird’s Book Blog (When God was a Rabbit)

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Blackout and All Clear by Connie Willis

Life is just one d— thing after another. ~Elbert Hubbard

Life is what happens to you while you’re busy making other plans. ~John Lennon

History with its flickering lamp stumbles along the trail of the past, trying to reconstruct its scenes, to revive its echoes, and kindle with pale gleams the passion of former days. ~Winston Churchill

Very few things happen at the right time, and the rest do not happen at all: the conscientious historian will correct these defects. ~Herodotus, The History of Herodotus

We are the prisoners of history. Or are we? ~Robert Penn Warren

Perhaps nobody has changed the course of history as much as the historians. ~Franklin P. Jones

Connie Willis writes some of the best books about time travel and history and epistemology and philosophy that I have ever had the privilege of reading. I first read her novel The Doomsday Book, about time-traveling historians from the future, in 2009. In that book Kivrin, a history student at Oxford in 2048, travels through “the net” back in time to the fourteenth century. After I finished The Doomsday Book, I immediately went out and found a copy of Ms. Willis’s next time travel history book, To Say Nothing of the Dog. It’s a delightful romp in which the fate of the universe may or may not be at stake. However, the course of history and the universe is “self-correcting,” shades of LOST, so the universe is never really in danger of imploding or careening off-track. Probably. I loved it even more than The Doomsday Book.

Now, in 2010, Ms. Willis has published two more future-historians-travel-through-time books: Blackout and All Clear. In these some of the same characters reappear, and the universe or the space-time continuum IS in danger of going off the rails. The focal point of all the temporal disturbance and crisis is World War II, and of course, several of our intrepid historians are criss-crossing Britain through time and space, trying to avoid the temptation to interfere in history and do something that, however well-meaning, might actually change the course of the war and end up making Hitler and the Nazis the victors. It’s not easy to observe history without changing it, however, as Polly and Mike and Eileen find out. It’s also not easy to survive the Blitz in London, even if you know about when and where the bombs are going to drop. Nor is Dunkirk a safe vantage point from which to observe heroism, even though there’s a lot of it going on.

I have several things to say about these two novels. First of all, they’re not really two novels; it’s one novel in two volumes, just as The Lord of the Rings is one book in three parts. So be sure to have the second book, All Clear, on hand before you start the first one. And read them in order even though there’s lots of time travel involved so that events in the novel(s) don’t exactly appear in chronological order.

Second, read these books. If you liked LOST because of the mind-bending time travel and suspenseful and philosophical elements, you should like what Connie Willis has done with these two books. If you’re a WW II buff, you will find these books fascinating. If you just enjoy a good science fiction or historical fiction story, read Blackout and All Clear. And read all the way to the end. It’s worth the confusion that accompanies the 1000+ pages of the two books. (Time travel makes my head hurt—in a good way.)

William Holman Hunt: The Light of the Worldphoto © 2007 freeparking | more info (via: Wylio)
Finally, I think these are what I would call Christian worldview novels. It’s not blatant or didactic or obvious, but if Ms. Willis is not a Christian, she has certainly co-opted Christian values and symbols and made the books breathe a Christian ethos in a way that is both attractive and entertaining. The central images and metaphors of the novels are Christian: The Light of the World, a painting by Holman Hunt, St. Paul’s Cathedral standing above bombed-out London, The Tempest by Shakespeare, a door that opens to another world. The themes are all about redemption and sacrifice and the power of obedience to what is good and noble even when you don’t know what the outcome will be. And this conversation, between a time traveler from the future and an elderly Shakespearean actor caught in the darkest days of WW II, toward the end of the second volume, clinches it for me:

“Was that your third question?” she managed to ask.
“No, Polly,” he said. “Something of more import.” And she knew it must be. . . .
“What is it?” she asked. . . .
He stepped forward and grasped the staircase’s railing, looked up at her earnestly. “Is it a comedy or a tragedy?”
He doesn’t mean the war, she thought. He’s talking about all of it–our lives and history and Shakespeare. And the continuum.
She smiled down at him. “A comedy, my lord.”

Surely, Christians are the ones who believe that life and history are ultimately a comedy that ends in the Great Marriage Feast.

I loved these books.

Guide to the Oxford Time Travel books at The Connie Willis.net Blog.

Content consideration: These novels are adult novels, not for children, and the characters sometimes use bad language. The character Mike, in particular, does take the Lord’s name in vain on numerous occasions.

Reading Through Egypt: Books and Links

Egypt is certainly in the news these days, perhaps inspiring some, like me, to read about this volatile and strategic nation with such a rich heritage and history.

Fiction books about modern-day Egypt for adults:
Woman At Point Zero is a classic novella by Egyptian doctor and feminist writer, Nawal El Saadawi. Recommended at BrownGIrl Speaks.
The Yacoubian Building by Alaa as Aswany. Reviewed by Kimbofo at Reading Matters.
The Cairo Trilogy by Naguib Mahfouz. First book, Palace Walk, is reviewed at Amy Reads and also at Farm Lane Books.
In the Eye of the Sun by Ahdaf Soueif. Reviewed at Amy Reads.
Moon Tiger by Penelope Lively. Reviewed at Of Books and Bicycles.

Nonfiction books for adults:
Beneath the Sands of Egypt: Adventures of an Unconventional Archaeologist by Donald P. Ryan. Reviewed by S. Krishna.
Now They Call Me Infidel: Why I Renounced Jihad for America, Israel, and the War on Terror by Nonie Darwish. Reviewed at Amy Reads.
A Border Passage: From Cairo to America by Leila Ahmed.
More Egyptian Nonfiction from The New Yorker.

Books about Egypt for children:
The Day of Ahmed’s Secret by Florence Parry.
Zarafa: A Giraffe’s True Story, from Deep in Africa to the Heart of Paris by Nancy Milton. Reviewed by Magistramater.
Bill and Pete Go Down the Nile by Tomie de Paola
What’s the Matter Habibi? by Betsy Lewin.
Look What Came from Egypt by Harvey Miles. Franklin Watts, 1998.
We’re Sailing Down the Nile by Laurie Krebs.
More books for children about Egypt, a list compiled by Bernadette Simpson.

Stories on the web:
Mama Maggie: the “Mother Teresa of Cairo.”
So far, Alexandria’s library is safe and pursuing its mission.

Boy Meets Girl

Just in time for Valentine’s Day, my ruminations on the state of love, romance, and marriage in contemporary Young Adult fiction:

Boy meets girl.
Boy loses girl
Boy finds girl again.
Marriage, happily ever after.

But now it seems that the recipe for romantic comedy (in the sense of happy ending) in Young Adult novels is more like:

Boy meets girl.
Boy loses girl, or at least complications ensue.
Boy finds girl again.
Mandatory premarital sex in the penultimate chapter.
Ambiguity and lack of commitment.

I’ve read two young adult novels this past week that followed the latter formula, and although I could see it coming, it was a disappointment both times. I liked the characters in both novels. I wanted more for them than a quick coupling in a motel room or an act of incredible vulnerability and tenderness that ended in a nebulous commitment to “see where this relationship takes us.”

The problem with this ubiquitous plot outline is not that premarital sex is mentioned or portrayed or described. Of course, young people engage in premarital sex, and it’s naturally going to be a part of young adult fiction sometimes. However, the problem that I see is that young people are being trained —in books, movies, magazines and on the web– to expect that their relationships with the opposite sex will lead to one night stands and uncommitted sex. No one connects sex to marriage, either before or after the act; no one seems to want commitment or marriage. Hardly anyone expresses the idea that sex means anything. It’s a just a fun, expected thing to do together on or after a date, like walking on the beach or going to a movie. On the third date or after a certain amount of time, you are expected to have sex if you really care about someone. But don’t think that this physical act means that the relationship has entered a new level of commitment, or heaven forbid, that you and your sexual partner, whom you of course love very much, will get married, spend your lives together, and create a family.

Let me emphasize that sex is NOT what the following books are about. That’s part of the problem. Sex is an afterthought or a step in the logical progression of a relationship that may or may not last. And nobody in any of these books tells the young characters that sex is meant for marriage, that two people who are committed to each other for a lifetime can express themselves in sexual relationship in ways that go way beyond the physical and touch the spiritual. Or even that it will hurt like you-know-what to have a sexual relationship with someone and then break it off and move on. Or, on a very practical level, that STD’s are rampant, and casual sex is an excellent way to contract an STD that may become a more constant companion than the guy or girl you slept with last night.

Here are just a few of the otherwise good recent YA novels that seem to me to reinforce this idea that sex is just another bump in the road, something to be experienced whether the relationship is going to last for five months or for a lifetime:
Harmonic Feedback by Tara Kelly. An autistic teen learns that sex can feel incredibly good and bring her close to the young man she loves, but neither the girl nor her paramour mentions marriage.
Amy and Roger’s Epic Detour by Morgan Matson. Semicolon review here.
Saving Maddie by Varian Johnson. Semicolon review here.
Willow by Julia Hoban. Semicolon review here.
Twenty Boy Summer by Sarah Ockler. Semicolon review here. Sex as a game, recreation for the bored and the vacationing.
How to Say Good-bye in Robot by Natalie Standiford.
After the Moment by Garrett Freyman-Weyr.

There’s just no sense whatsoever in these books of the sacredness of a sexual relationship. Our bodies are connected to our souls. We are persons made in God’s image, and what we do with our bodies affects our entire being. Sexual coupling was intended for a committed long-term marriage relationship, and without the commitment, it’s a harmful and ultimately unfulfilling act for both the man and the woman involved. When are we going to tell teens and each other the truth about sex?

Do you not know that he who unites himself with a prostitute is one with her in body? For it is said, “The two will become one flesh.” But whoever is united with the Lord is one with him in spirit.
Flee from sexual immorality. All other sins a person commits are outside the body, but whoever sins sexually, sins against their own body. Do you not know that your bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have received from God? You are not your own; you were bought at a price. Therefore honor God with your bodies.

Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience and Redemption by Laura Hillenbrand

Amazing story. If it weren’t so heavily footnoted and corroborated, I would find it difficult to believe such a miraculous survival story. Louis Zamperini, the subject of this riveting biography, was an Olympic runner. He won a bronze medal in the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, and he planned to compete in the 1940 Olympics. Louie, as he was called, was getting close to breaking the four minute mile, but World War II derailed Louis’s Olympic and world record hopes. However, the rest of the story which chronicles Louie’s experiences during and after World War II is even more astounding and transcendent than any world record in a sporting event. I don’t think I’ve ever read about anyone who survived the multiple ordeals that Zamperini was able to live through and then also managed, by the grace of God, to live a full and joyful life afterwards.

One of my urchins says she doesn’t believe in miracles. I think she’s saying she’s never heard a Voice from on high or seen a person instantly healed or witnessed the sudden appearance of manna from heaven. However, if what happened in the life of Louis Zamperini wasn’t a series of miracles, I don’t know what to call it. First of all, Louis and the pilot of his B-24 bomber survive a crash in the Pacific and forty plus days on a raft without supplies in the ocean. And it only get worse when the two Americans land on the Marshall Islands and are “rescued” by the Japanese army.

But the greatest miracle of all comes after the war is over for everyone else, when Louie is still trapped in the prison of his own mind.

No one could reach Louie, because he had never really come home. In prison camp, he’d been beaten into dehumanized obedience to a world order in which the Bird (a cruel Japanese prison guard) was absolute sovereign, and it was under this world order that he still lived. The Bird had taken his dignity and left him feeling humiliated, ashamed, and powerless, and Louie believed that only the Bird could restore him, by suffering and dying in the grip of his hands. A once singularly hopeful man now believed that his only hope lay in murder.
The paradox of vengefulness is that it makes men dependent upon those who have harmed them, believing that their release from pain will come only when they make their tormentors suffer. In seeking the Bird’s death to free himself, Louie had chained himself, once again, to his tyrant. During the war, the Bird had been unwilling to let go of Louie; after the war, Louie was unable to let go of the Bird.

This book actually brought me to tears, something that seldom happens to me while reading. I was reminded that as Corrie Ten Boom often said, “There is no pit so deep that God is not deeper still.”

I was also reminded of my conviction that the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were necessary evils. The Japanese were not planning to ever surrender to the Allies. In the book, Hillenbrand tells how the POWs in Japan saw women and children being trained to defend the homeland to the last person. And the Japanese had a “kill-all policy” which ordered prison camp commanders to kill all the prisoners of war if it ever became evident that they might be rescued and repatriated. This policy was carried out in several Japanese prison camps, and “virtually every POW believed that the destruction of this city (Hiroshima) had saved them from execution.”

Man’s inhumanity to man continues on into this century, but if we are to avoid and prevent future horrors, we must remember the past. And we must be presented with stories that affirm the possibility of redemption, even from the darkest of atrocities.

Epitaph Road by David Patneaude

Dystopian novels usually start with a dystopian premise: something has happened to change the world we know into a horrible place to live.

What if government become so big and so repressive that it controlled everyone and everything?
1984 by George Orwell.

What if everyone in the world suddenly lost their fertility and stopped having babies? What would the world be like after twenty or thirty years of no new pregnancies?
Children of Men by P.D. James.

What if our world were destroyed and reconfigured by climate change and the greed of oil hungry corporations and industries? How would a future world cope with a severe scarcity of oil?
Ship Breaker by Paolo Bacigalupi. Semicolon review here.

What if the world seemed perfect, no hunger, no violence, no inequality? But what if the underlying mechanism that sustained the culture and kept it pure and perfect was horribly unjust and hateful?
The Giver by Lois Lowry.

What if a repressive government used cyber-tools to monitor and control all dissent and to quash freedom?
Little Brother by Cory Doctorow. Semicolon review here.

In Epitaph Road the premise is: what if most of the men in the world were killed by a virus that only affected males, and as a consequence women ruled the world?

As it turns out, the result of getting rid of all of the men looks pretty good at first. Poverty, crime, war, and hunger have all disappeared. I happen to think Mr. Patneaude is mistaken in his predictions of what a female governed an female dominated world would look like, but it’s an interesting proposition anyway.

Kellen Dent is one of the few, the disrespected, the males. He and all of his fellow men are restricted by law to only a few possible professions and required to have “minders” with them whenever they travel. So when Kellen finds out that the virus that killed all the men in the first place is coming back and may infect his father, it’s not easy for him to find a way to warn his dad. Then, as Kellen finds out more and more about the governing authorities and what’s really going on beneath the surface of his seemingly peaceful world, he must make life-and-death decisions not only for himself but also for the people he loves and for whom he is responsible.

The best part of this novel was the way it turned everything upside down as far as gender roles and prejudice are concerned and yet at the same time it reinforced the preconceptions that we have about the real differences between men and women. In the book, the men are responsible for all the violence and crime in the world. With men a distinct minority, women are free to walk out alone in the cities without fear, to be intelligent without caring about male competition, to go anywhere, do anything. Men, on the other hand, are restricted, discriminated against, sometimes even treated as potential criminals and second-class citizens. One of the most coveted jobs for a man is sperm donor. I really liked the way the book made me think about why we need both men and women to make a vibrant God-honoring culture and about what roles men and women play in the growth of good government and cultural achievement.

The issue that I had with the novel was that it seemed to move too fast. The characters came to decisions and acted in ways for which I, as a reader, felt unprepared. I often read reviews in which the reviewer complains that the pace of the novel was “too slow” or “uneven.” I actually felt that the pace of Epitaph Road was way too rapid. I needed more time and information to get to know the characters in the novel and to understand why they acted the way they did. Kellen was generally understandable, probably because I knew him the best. The rest of the cast–Kellen’s parents, his aunt, his two female friends/accomplices–seemed to act too quickly without adequate motivation or at least without reasons that I had enough knowledge to understand.

Still, as long as I skipped over the questions about motivation and preparation, I enjoyed reading the book. I would be interested in a sequel–if it answered my “trust questions” such as why did Tia and Sunday suddenly trust Kellen enough to risk their lives for him? And why did Gunny, another character, protect some kids he didn’t know? And why did Dr. Nuyen share secrets with Kellen when she was essentially working for his enemies?

Good solid dystopian fiction for the die-hard fan.

Saturday Review of Books: February 12, 2011

“You can cover a great deal of country in books.”~Andrew Lang

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 Lemme Library (One Crazy Summer)
2. Collateral Bloggage (The Last Sorcerers)
3. Collateral Bloggage (Gregor and the Curse of the Warmbloods)
4. Janet, Across the Page (Safely Home)
5. Florinda @ The 3 R’s Blog (The Warmth of Other Suns)
6. Florinda @ The 3 R’s Blog (The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks)
7. the Ink Slinger (The Voyage of the Armada)
8. Reading to Know (The Hunger Games)
9. Reading to Know (The Littles Take a Trip)
10. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Betti on the High Wire)
11. Reading to Know (What are You Waiting For?)
12. Reading to Know (The Duggars: 20 & Counting)
13. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Read Aloud Thursday–Valentine’s Day picture books)
14. Donovan @ Where Peen Meets Paper (The Art of the Commonplace)
15. Beth@Weavings (Heart of Lies)
16. SuziQoregon @ Whimpulsive (A Study in Scarlet)
17. SuziQoregon @ Whimpulsive (State of the Onion)
18. Barbara H. (50 People Every Christian Should Know)
19. Barbara H. (Looking for Anne of Green Gables)
20. Page Turner / Heather (Emily Climbs)
21. Bonnie (In Siberia)
22. Carol in Oregon (Hilaire Belloc Sampler)
23. Laughing (The Book Thief)
24. GoldenGrasses (UnPlanned)
25. Iris on Books (The Taste of Sorrow – Jude Morgan)
26. Melody @ Fingers & Prose (Nine Horses–poetry)
27. Melody @ Fingers & Prose (True Grit)
28. Lazygal (The Returning)
29. blacklin (Man’s Search For Meaning)
30. Lazygal (The Death Catchers)
31. Lazygal (Imaginary Girls)
32. Lazygal (The Preacher)
33. Heather @ Books For Breakfast (Tim To The Rescue
34. Sarah Reads Too Much (Lolita by Nabokov)
35. Nicola (Unbroken: A World War II Story by Laura Hillenbrand)
36. Nicola (Grasshopper on the Road by Arnold Lobel)
37. SmallWorld Reads (On Agate Hill–Lee Smith)
38. Nicola (Batman: Mad Hatter’s Movie Madness)
39. Nicola (Children of the Sea, Vol. 4)
40. Nicola (The Whicharts by Noel Streatfeild)
41. Nicola (The Dynamic World of Chemical Reactions)
42. Nicola (The Whirlwind World of Hurricanes)
43. Nicola (Falcons Gold: Canada’s First Olympic Hockey Heroes)
44. 1morechapter (How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe)
45. Beckie@ByTheBook (Doesn’t She Look Natural?)
46. Beckie@ByTheBook (Head in The Clouds)
47. Beckie@ByTheBook (Mrs. Elton in America)
48. Mental multivitamin (Reading life review: January)
49. Judy @ Seize the Book Blog (If God is Good)
50. S. Krishna (The Best American Travel Writing 2010)
51. 1morechapter (Moon over Manifest)
52. S. Krishna (Choker)
53. S. Krishna (The Pioneer Woman)
54. S. Krishna (Love in Complete Sentences)
55. S. Krishna (A Discovery of Witches)
56. 1morechapter (Ship Breaker)
57. S. Krishna (Look Again)
58. S. Krishna (Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother)
59. Word Lily (The Chasm)
60. Megan (Open House)
61. Girl Detective (Room)
62. Girl Detective (Gilead)
63. Beth S. (Does My Head Look Big in This?)
64. Melinda (Kingdom’s Dawn…and giveaway)
65. The Worm Hole (Matched)
66. Civil Thoughts (Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother)
67. kort @ one deep drawer (On the Banks of Plum Creek)
68. Amber Stults (Spellbent)
69. Kathryn @ Suitable for Mixed Company (The Godly Man’s Picture)
70. Mystie (Knowing God)
71. Alice@Supratentorial(My Reading Life)
72. The Book Thief (My Devotional Thoughts)
73. Scandal Becomes Her (My Devotional Thoughts)
74. Carina @ Reading Through Life (Room)
75. Carina @ Reading Through Life (Annabel)
76. Carina @ Reading Through Life (Unbearable Lightness: A Story of Loss and Gain)
77. Carina @ Reading Through Life (If I Stay)
78. Carina @ Reading Through Life (The Spark)
79. Diary of an Eccentric (Defending the Enemy)
80. Diary of an Eccentric (Meet Molly)
81. Diary of an Eccentric (Speak)
82. Kevin Stilley (Antigone – discussion questions)
83. Kevin Stilley (Oedipus the King – discussion questions)
84. Gina @ Bookscount (The Polished Hoe)
85. Dana(Cartoons Flannery O’Connor)
86. Yvann (Life After Yes)

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