Archive | August 2008

Sunday Salon: A Study in Contrasts

Last Sunday I wrote about my book club, Biblically Literate, and this Sunday I’m starting my Bible study for the book club in 1 John. I read through the book, only five short chapters long, this afternoon, and the first thing I noticed was all the contrasts that John draws in his letter. It’s a message full of stark contrast: love vs. hatred, light vs. blindness, life vs. death, truth vs. lies, righteousness vs. sin, forgiveness vs. condemnation, true worship vs. idolatry, confidence vs. fear, real vs. counterfeit.

We tend to think we live in a moral universe of grey tones. Situational ethics and the dangers of legalism have taught us that nothing is as simple as it seems, that no one is completely good or wholly evil. It’s a grey world for most of us, most of the time. Or as Paul said in I Corinthians, “Now we see through a glass darkly.”

But someday, according to both Paul and John, we will see God, the Maker and Lover of the Universe, face to face. John says, “We know that when He appears, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is.” Then the contrasts will be clear: Truth on one side, Evil and Deceit on the other. Men will be without excuse, having chosen either goodness and truth and forgiveness or evil and deceit and condemnation. No in-between, if there is a purgatory, that medium state will be over and done with; we will be known and we will know the Light of the World is Jesus.

We may value ambiguity in our literature here and now because the world looks ambiguous through that dark glass, but it won’t always be so. In fact, if John is right, Reality isn’t ambiguous even now; it only looks that way to us on this side of eternity. Oh, how I want to see everything in contrast, even if people call me simplistic and unsophisticated; I want to see everything through the Light. John declares, “God is Light; in him there is no darkness at all.” No shades of grey at all.

In other news, Hurricane Gustav looks like a near miss for Houston, where I live about thirty miles from the coast. Pray for the people of Louisiana and other points east who may be inundated by wind and rain this Labor Day weekend.

Someone referred me to this blog, written by Director of Missions Joe McKeever, who lives and works in New Orleans, right after Katrina. I’ve kept reading it ever since because Pastor McKeever has such good insights about both New Orleans and the Christian life. (He also makes me homesick for being a Southern Baptist.) Now he’s writing about the stress of living in a New Orleans under hurricane threat —again.

I have this children’s fiction book about the Galveston hurricane of 1900 on my shelf. I think I’ll give it to the kids, maybe Karate Kid, to read, since they’ve all heard enough about hurricanes this week to make them curious about what a real hurricane would be like. I also read and wrote about this nonfiction book on the same storm a couple of years ago that some of the adults might want to read if you’re interested in that sort of thing.

Quoth Sarah Palin

Financial Post: What is it like to be named as a VP prospect?
Ms. Palin: It kind of cracks me up. It is so far out of the realm of possibility and reality.
FP: How so?
Ms. Palin: Because I’m a hockey mom from Alaska. And I have a heck of a lot on my plate up here with a very full and fulfilling job as governor.

In response to a reporter who asked if she was qualified to be Vice-President: “[A]s for that V.P. talk all the time, I’ll tell you, I still can’t answer that question until somebody answers for me what is it exactly that the V.P. does every day? I’m used to being very productive and working real hard in an administration. We want to make sure that that V.P. slot would be a fruitful type of position, especially for Alaskans and for the things that we’re trying to accomplish up here for the rest of the U.S., before I can even start addressing that question.”

“And I know up here in Alaska, most every Alaskan believes that ANWR should be drilled, and no one cares more about Alaska’s environment–our lands, our wildlife, our fresh air, our clean water–than Alaskans themselves. And we know that this can be allowed safely, cleanly, ethically–this type of exploration and development of an American supply of energy.”

“I am pro-life and I believe that marriage should only be between and man and a woman. I am opposed to any expansion of gambling in Alaska.”

On pork and federal spending: “Alaska is not going to be able to request that the rest of the United States pay for projects that are going to be perceived as solely benefiting Alaskans anymore. They are going to have to have national implications.”

On the birth of her fifth child who has Down’s Syndrome: “Trig is beautiful and already adored by us. We knew through early testing he would face special challenges, and we feel privileged that God would entrust us with this gift and allow us unspeakable joy as he entered our lives. We have faith that every baby is created for good purpose and has potential to make this world a better place. We are truly blessed.”

For my money, she sounds a heck of a lot better than Joe Biden, and she looks better. too.

Poetry and Fine Art Friday: Of the Father’s Love Begotten

This week we’ve been learning and singing this o-l-d hymn from the fourth century. (We’re studying the Middle Ages and the Renaissance this year in school.) Anyway, the hymn poem was written by a man named Aurelius Prudentius who lived in Spain and wrote in Latin. It was translated into English by John Mason Neale in the mid-nineteenth century in England. The version I copied for the urchins and me to sing runs to nine verses, and we sang them all, much to someone’s chagrin. I always want to sing all the verses.

1. Of the Father’s love begotten,
Ere the worlds began to be,
He is Alpha and Omega,
He the source, the ending He,
Of the things that are, that have been,
And that future years shall see,
Evermore and evermore!

2. At His Word the worlds were framed;
He commanded; it was done:
Heaven and earth and depths of ocean
In their threefold order one;
All that grows beneath the shining
Of the moon and burning sun,
Evermore and evermore!

3. He is found in human fashion,
Death and sorrow here to know,
That the race of Adam’s children
Doomed by law to endless woe,
May not henceforth die and perish
In the dreadful gulf below,
Evermore and evermore!

4. O that birth forever blessed,
When the Virgin, full of grace,
By the Holy Ghost conceiving,
Bare the Savior of our race;
And the Babe, the world’s Redeemer,
First revealed His sacred face,
Evermore and evermore!

5. This is He Whom seers in old time
Chanted of with one accord;
Whom the voices of the prophets
Promised in their faithful word;
Now He shines, the long expected,
Let creation praise its Lord,
Evermore and evermore!

6. O ye heights of heaven adore Him;
Angel hosts, His praises sing;
Powers, dominions, bow before Him,
And extol our God and King!
Let no tongue on earth be silent,
Every voice in concert sing,
Evermore and evermore!

7. Righteous judge of souls departed,
Righteous King of them that live,
On the Father’s throne exalted
None in might with Thee may strive;
Who at last in vengeance coming
Sinners from Thy face shalt drive,
Evermore and evermore!

8. Thee let old men, thee let young men,
Thee let boys in chorus sing;
Matrons, virgins, little maidens,
With glad voices answering:
Let their guileless songs re-echo,
And the heart its music bring,
Evermore and evermore!

9. Christ, to Thee with God the Father,
And, O Holy Ghost, to Thee,
Hymn and chant with high thanksgiving,
And unwearied praises be:
Honor, glory, and dominion,
And eternal victory,
Evermore and evermore!

Computer Guru Son, who also considers himself something of an expert on music, says that the traditional tune that this hymn is sung to is not very good music, not very good at all. I, philistine that I am in terms of musical appreciation, kind of like it. In fact, I like it very much. Click here to listen at Cyberhymnal. (I don’t much care for the plinkety-plunk midi sound, but on a real organ or a piano . . . . )

On another note, pun intended, you should posilutely, absotively, read this article at Poetry Foundation by Susan Thomsen of the blog Chicken Spaghetti: Home Appreciation: Homeschoolers are turning a million kids on to poetry through fun, not homework. Here’s how you can do it too.

Semicolon’s September Links, Celebrations, and Birthdays.

Semicolon Author Celebration: Tasha Tudor

I’ve written about author Tasha Tudor here at Semicolon before. I even invited her and Madeleine L’Engle to tea, before the deaths of both authors made that impossible. Her books, and particularly her illustrations, are old friends here in our home. So, I was trying to explain to myself what it is exactly that is so endearing and captivating about Tasha Tudor’s stories and illustrations.

First, there’s the obvious fact that, whether or not it’s possible or even truly desirable, all of us long sometimes for an agrarian past, a more wholesome, less complicated, time period and culture when families enjoyed simple pleasures like baking bread or playing dolls or rolling hoops in the garden. And Tasha Tudor’s books evoke such a lost time and place.

Second, if you read about Tasha Tudor’s life, you see that she tried to live the life that her books idealized. Yes, she was divorced (twice), a single parent, and she was born and grew up in Boston, about as far from a simple New England farmhouse as you can get. But it didn’t matter because she chose as an adult to live on a farm and garden and raise animals and wear nineteenth century farm family clothing and cook in the fireplace. She actually lived out, however imperfectly, the life that many people dream of and never even try to achieve.

Third, her books and illustrations are deceptively simple. You look at them, like you look at a Norman Rockwell painting, and you think, “That’s a cute picture of some kids swimming in the creek or a family of dolls or a garden in the summer.” But the illustrations draw you back again and again to look at the details, to note the vine curled around the edge, or the little dog in the corner, or the ruffle on the girl’s dress, and you realize that’s there’s more and still more to explore and study and enjoy. Tasha Tudor’s illustrations for classics such as The Wind in the Willows or The Secret Garden are especially intriguing as they look so right and appropriate for the classic time period of the book in question and yet give new insight into old familiar stories.

Three reason to love the work of Tasha Tudor, author, illustrator, and gardener. I’m sure there are many more. If you’ve written about Ms. Tudor in a past post or today on her birthday, please share a link with us as we celebrate her life and work here on her birthday. Just leave your name or the name of your blog and a link to the post celebrating Tasha Tudor in the Mr. Linky below.

She would have been 93 years old today.

1. Janet
2. Tasha Tudor Day at Story Book Woods
3. Rose Cottage Tasha Tudor Tea
4. Poopsie Celebrating Tasha Tudor
5. Heidi\’s Birthday Celebration
6. Junie Moon
7. Marilyn on Tasha Tudor\’s Iced Tea
8. MarmeeCraft
9. At the Pink Gate
10. Cay\’s Author Fiesta
11. Creekside Cottage
12. Deb\’s Tasha Tudor Day
13. Miss Mari-Nanci: Thank You Tasha
14. ~Vicki: Tea and Blackberry Tarts
15. Christina in MA
16. Judy: Simply Thrift
17. Lynn: A Mother\’s Journal
18. Lady Laurie
19. Laurie\’s Celebratory Tea
20. Karen: Thankful for Tasha
21. Jamie: In the Garden
22. Brenda: Tasha Tudor Day
23. Island Sparrow
24. Karla\’s Cottage
25. Terri: How to Celebrate
26. Margaret\’s Earthly Paradiseo
27. Gillian\’s Memories of Tasha Tudor
28. Spinneretta Remembering Tasha
29. Noel
30. Jenny
31. Cathy Santarsiero
32. Thistle Dew
33. Jill: A Tribute to Tasha35. Betzie
36. Carrie – Oak Rise Cottage
37. Happy Birthday Tasha! by Barb
38. Mary at St. Athanasius Academy
39. Gumbo Lily Remembering Tasha Tudor
40. Gumbo Lily Part II
41. Sue at Country Pleasures
42. Plumwater Cottage
43. Emily: Christmas with Tasha Tudor
44. Faith Girl

Powered by… Mister Linky’s Magical Widgets.

Here, There Be Dragons by James A. Owen

Here There Be Dragons by James Owen. Recommended by Gina Dalfonzo at Breakpoint.

A murder brings three Oxford “scowlers” together on a dark and stormy night in a club at 221B Baker Street, London. When an eccentric stranger, Bert, crashes the party, or wake, and tells the three that they are all in danger, they are forced to believe him by the appearance of strange, bloodthirsty creatures called Wendigo outside the window and clamoring to get in. So they flee, in Bert’s ship, and the adventure begins.

Shades of Narnia: There’s a Dawn Treader-like ship, and an island voyage, and nightmare creatures, and talking animals. Oh, and the world has an edge where you can fall off.

Shades of Alice in Wonderland: The trio feel as if they’ve landed in a world turned upside-down and backwards, and the King and Queen of Hearts make an appearance, croquet mallets in hand.

Shades of Morte d’Arthur: One of the islands is Avalon, and King Arthur has some influence on events in the book.

Other cameo appearances are made by Dickens’ Magwitch and the Green Knight and Captain Nemo and the Three Fates and Pandora and assorted goblins, elves, trolls, dwarves, and even the evil Mordred. To me anyway, none of the references to classical mythology and more recent fantasy felt derivative or plagiaristic, merely allusive and suggestive. I had lots of fun trying to place the various literary allusions and trying to figure out where the appearance of this character or that plot element, reminiscent of a particular classic work of fiction, was leading the story.

There’s a nice surprise at the end, and if you read the reviews at Amazon, the surprise will be spoiled. I want to say I had it figured out, but I really only had it partially figured out. Suffice it to say that fantasy fans won’t be disappointed in Mr. Owens’ tribute to the best imaginative writers of all time.

Leila at Bookshelves of Doom didn’t much care for the writing, especially the dialog.

Colleen at Chasing Ray loved it as much as I did: “Here There Be Dragons is all about stepping up to the plate and doing the right thing and being smart and brave and saving the world and readers are going to love it from start to finish.”

Oh, and Computer Guru Son walked by while I was reading and stopped to looked at the cover art. He really liked the art, which I think was also done by James Owen.

According to the author’s website, there’s a sequel called The Search for the Red Dragon, and the next book in the series is coming out in October, 2008. It’s called The Indigo King, and I sure wish I could get an ARC of that one.

Mr. Owen also has a Livejournal sketchbook and blog here, last updated August 22nd of 2008.

Quoth Senator Joe Biden

On April 3, 1987, at a campaign stop in Claremont, New Hampshire, a voter named Frank asked Biden what law school he attended and how he performed there. “I think I have a much higher IQ than you do,” Biden answered. “I went to law school on a full academic scholarship.”

To a reporter after the above encounter: “I exaggerate when I’m angry.”

Biden to the Brookings Institution in 2005: “We can call it quits and withdraw from Iraq. I think that would be a gigantic mistake. Or we can set a deadline for pulling out, which I fear will only encourage our enemies to wait us out — equally a mistake.”

ABC’s George Stephanopoulos asking about Senator Obama: “You were asked is he ready. You said ‘I think he can be ready, but right now I don’t believe he is. The presidency is not something that lends itself to on-the-job training.'”
Sen. Biden: “I think that I stand by the statement.”
ABC’s “This Week,” 8/19/07

Campaigning in Iowa, 2008: “Please, decide how much it’s worth to you to give your country the strongest, most seasoned leadership. Then write that number on a check and mail it to ‘Biden for President’.”

During the primary: ”I am not running for vice president … I would not accept it if anyone offered it to me. The fact of the matter is I’d rather stay as chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee than be vice president.”

Biden, on MSNBC, October 30, 2007: “The only guy on the other side who’s qualified is John McCain.”

Abigail Iris: The One and Only by Lisa Glatt and Suzanne Greenberg

Move over, Clementine! Make room, Ramona! Judy Moody, Clarice Bean and Lucy Rose, you have a friend: Abigail Iris, The One and Only!

Abigail Iris is eight years old, and her adventures are just right for second and third grade readers. She has three friends, all of whom happen to be Onlies, the only child in the family. Abigail Iris, has two brothers and a sister, and while she’s not exactly jealous of her friends’ families, she does see some definite advantages to being an Only.

For instance, according to Abigail Iris:

“When you’re an Only, your house is sometimes bigger, and your car always, always has automatic windows.” Also “lots of leg room even in the backseat.”

“When you’re an Only, you have Heelys and sometimes you get pierced ears before you turn twelve. You have your own room and you can paint it any color you want.”

“Room service isn’t nearly as impressive when you’re an Only.”

“Oh, and you get your own big bed at the hotel, and even when you lay in the middle of that bed and spread your arms our as far as they’ll go, you’ll never, ever reach the end of the mattress. It’s impossible.”

“Onlies have Heelys and beach cruisers and get to go to ballet camp in the summer.”

And “Onlies are the luckiest girls in all of the world because they are not on a budget.”

In a nutshell, the book tells the story of how Abigail Iris gets to go on vacation with one of her best Only friends, Genevieve, to San Francisco and of how she figures out that “even Onlies aren’t happy every single minute.” There’s a nice balance in the book between the advantages and disadvantages of being an only child and the ups and downs of having a larger family. And Abigail Iris is a delight.

Thanks to Bloomsbury/Walker Books for sending the review copy of this one, this time for real. I’m going to give it to my nine year old and watch her smile her way through it.

Expected publication date: March, 2009.

Go here for Little Willow’s list of Ramona readalikes, and I expect her to add Abigail Iris soon.

Perfect Chemistry by Simon Elkeles

I can’t believe I read the whole thing.

And now I’m going to write a spoiler review so that you don’t have to read it when it comes out in December, 2008. Or if you like stereotypical characters, a predictable plot, and lots of heavy breathing in your teen fiction, you can run out and grab a copy for Christmas. Just don’t give it to me.

Alex is a Chicano gang banger from the wrong side of town, and Brittany is the blond and beautiful leader of the pom-pom squad. Alex’s dad is dead (killed in a gang-related murder), and his mom is loving but overwhelmed. Brittany lives with an inattentive dad and a neurotic mom who pressures her to be perfect. In fact Brittany pressures herself to be perfect because her mentally handicapped sister can never be the perfect daughter that Brittany’s mom wants. This books is actually about perfectionism, gangs, and sex, with sex at the top of the list.

So Miss Perfect But Really Poor Little Rich Girl meets Chicano Gang Member from Down in the Boondocks with a Rough Exterior But a Heart of Gold –in chemistry class–and what do you think happens? Of course, they fall for each other, and after several mildly humorous cross-cultural misunderstandings and lots of heavy breathing, petting and foreplay, and not a little violence, they get together, have sex before marriage, and live happily ever after.

Again, any author has a right to tell whatever story he or she wants to tell, and I have a right to say that it’s not only unrealistic, but misleading to the teens to whom this book is being marketed. Bad boys are not usually changed into law-abiding citizens by the love of a good woman, no matter what the romance writers may say. If your daughter takes up with a gang banger who in his spare time is an enforcer for criminal enterprises, you had better do more than wring your hands and whine that he’s just not our kind of people. No one is beyond redemption, not Mexican American gang members and not perfectionist fake blondes, but redemption is the product of repentance and a change of heart, not lust and a lucky break, as it is in this novel.

And don’t even get me started on the stereotypes that fill the book: Mr. Macho, Miss Popularity, Mr. Sidekick, Tough but Fair Chemistry Teacher, Back-Stabbing Friend, Weak Lawyer’s Son Boyfriend, Distant Dad, etc.

Thanks to Walker Books for sending me a review copy of Perfect Chemistry, but no thanks.

Jocelyn at Teen Book Reviews has a completely different opinion from mine.

Three Cups of Tea by Greg Mortenson and David Oliver Relin

“The first time you share tea with a Balti, you are a stranger. The second time you take tea. you are an honored guest. The third time you share a cup of tea, you become family, and for our family, we are prepared to do anything, even die,” he said, laying his hand warmly on Mortenson’s own. “Doctor Greg, you must make time to share three cups of tea. We may be uneducated. But we are not stupid. We have lived and survived here for a long time.”

Subtitled One Man’s Mission to Promote Peace One School at a Time, this book was both inspiring and disappointing at the same time. Greg Mortenson was a mountain climber who attempted and failed to climb K2, the second highest mountain in the world found in the northern regions of Pakistan (Baltistan). While he was in this remote area of Pakistan, Greg was inspired to begin a one-man mission to build schools there, especially schools for girls, most of whom were not getting any kind of education.

As the son of Lutheran missionaries, Mortenson grew up in Africa as an MK, and even after they returned to the U.S. neither Greg nor his parents were exactly rich according to American standards. So Mortenson, living out of his car, began his campaign to build schools for girls in northern Pakistan by writing letters on an antiquated typewriter to every celebrity, famous person, or potential donor he could think to write. He explained what he wanted to do, wrote something like 600 letters, and got no response. A Pakistani expatriate who owned a copy store taught Mortenson how to use a computer and a word processing program, and he wrote more letters. Still no response.

Finally, he connected with one rich, sort of eccentric, donor, and he went to Pakistan with $30,000 to build his first school in the mountain village of Korphe. That one school was only the beginning, and that’s a capsule version of the inspiring part.

The disappointing part was that, as much as I admire what Greg Mortenson has done and continues to do, I think he is mistaken to put his trust in education alone. He seems to have left his Christianity behind in a quest change the world through education. Education is a wonderful thing. Education may be the best, perhaps the only thing, that can be done for the girls and boys of Pakistan and Afghanistan, given their cultural and religious heritage. So, I applaud Greg Mortenson and his organization CAI for what they have done and for what they continue to do.

However, I first of all agree with this reviewer at Amazon who opines that boys need education just as much as girls do. Read his exposition for a look at why educating just girls or girls in preference to boys may be counter-productive and produce civil unrest instead of the peace we all want.

Secondly, education without a Christian moral foundation produces only educated fools, according to the Bible and according to historical experience. I can name many individuals and groups of individuals who have been highly educated and also committed to evil goals and foolish ideals. An education does not guarantee peaceful intent, and neither does a change for the better in socio-economic class. No matter how much we as Americans may want to think that we can change the world by improving people’s standard of living and giving them books, it will have only limited success. Do I believe that making poor people richer and giving young people a chance at an education is a goal worth working for, and donating to? Yes, I do. However, according to CAI’s website, “The best hope for a peaceful and prosperous world lies in the education of all the world’s children.”

No, our hope does not lie in education. Without Christ, the change in a culture that is produced by education is only cosmetic and unlikely to produce the kind of lasting political change that we as Americans would like to see. People can be educated, even educated using funds donated by Americans, and still hate us. We should give and do good because it’s the right thing to do, not because we expect that a school building and classes and clean water will make them quit believing the mullahs who tell them that we are godless infidels. I know it’s unpalatable and controversial, but education is not God.

The book itself is decently written, and the story is absorbing. The idea that one person can have an idea and do something important to make the world a better place and the details of that idea working out in one man’s life are inspiring, as I said. Don’t expect great literature; do expect the story of a great life.

Sunday Salon: Biblically Literate

Back in April, I started a book club. Well, at least I tried to start a book club. But what with one thing and another, mostly my lack of follow-through, the book club languished over the summer and became absorbed into Eldest Daughter’s summer book club project. And that was fun.

However, Eldest Daughter is now in Nashville, and my motto is, “If at first you don’t succeed, rise again.” Or something like that. So even though I don’t believe in reincarnation, this fall will see the second iteration of the Biblically Literate Book Club. The idea is the same. I’ll be focusing on one regular book and one book or portion of a book of the Bible each month, September through November, and anyone is welcome to read along, comment here, review there and get linked, or appear in person at the monthly meeting of the Biblically Literate Book Club at my home in Houston, TX on the last Saturday of the month. Email me (sherryDOTearlyATgmailDOTcom) for directions to my home or to be added to the email list for updates.

I set up a separate blog for Biblically Literate, and back in July when I had blog troubles, it got deleted. Now I’ve decided to just post here about the book club and the books and the Biblical passages, and I’ll title the posts “Biblically Literate” so that you can focus on or skip those posts as you see fit. The books for the next three months are the same as they were when I first began back in April:

September:
1 John
A Bell for Adano by John Hersey. “An Italian-American major in World War II wins the love and admiration of the local townspeople when he searches for a replacement for the 700 year-old town bell that had been melted down for bullets by the fascists.”

October:
1 Samuel 24-31.
So Brave, Young and Handsome by Leif Enger. “A stunning successor to his best selling novel Peace Like a River, Leif Enger’s new work is a rugged and nimble story about an aging train robber on a quest to reconcile the claims of love and judgment on his life, and the failed writer who goes with him.” (If you’ve never read Peace Like a River, you should. I loved it.)

November:
2 John and 3 John
Creed Without Chaos: Exploring Theology in the Writings of Dorothy L. Sayers by Laura K. Simmons.

In December, I plan to have a Christmas/New Year’s party for all who can come, we’ll discuss the book selections for next year. If you have suggestions via internet, feel free to email me or leave a comment. I would like to include the following in our reading for 2009: a mix of fiction and nonfiction, at least one Shakespeare play each year because I like Shakespeare, one Pulitzer or other prize winning book for adults, and one Prinz or Newbery or other prize-winning book for children or young adults. I’m looking forward to discussing specific, selected books with some of you, both online and in person.