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Sunday Salon: What I’m Reading, Watching, Enjoying

The Sunday Salon.com

Can a thriller be literary? by Adam LeBor from the London Financial Times.

“So what exactly is a thriller, and how does the genre differ from ordinary novels? The key word is conflict. The protagonist will confront a series of threats before the plot builds up to a climax, which is often violent. The hero will confront his inner demons along the way and be forced to make an impossible choice. All this should unfold in vivid scene-setting that takes the reader into a new and unknown world.”

What a great idea! Little (20 book) public lending libraries. I want one.
Little Free Library.

Literature-inspired sneakers and iPhone cases. I would want some of these if my favorite books were included. Maybe The Three Musketeers would be worth showing off.

I spent my TV watching time for the past couple of weeks with the first (and only) season of the program Commander in Chief, starring Geena Davis as the vice-president of the United States who is unexpectedly thrown into the job of president after the sudden death of the sitting president. It was a good series, 18 episodes about an independent woman acting as a credibly authoritative president. Unfortunately, the writers or somebody associated with the show couldn’t sustain the “political independent” part of the equation. The “bad guy” in the show is, of course, a nasty old Republican, played wonderfully by Donald Sutherland, and President Mackenzie Allen is supposed be an independent, neither fish nor fowl, neither Democrat or Republican, neither liberal nor conservative. So she supports an airline strike instead of ending it by presidential fiat, sends the FBI into Maryland to solve some crime without authorization, defends gay marriage, and finally, in fit of liberalism that can’t be denied, she resurrects the ERA and tries to get it ratified by three more states so that women can finally have the equal rights that have been so long denied to them. You may or may not agree with all of those policy decisions, but liberal Democrat is the only label that can be used meaningfully to describe a person who pursues those policies and others on the show.

And, yet, it was a well-acted, engaging TV show, and I’m not sure why it was cancelled after only one season. Wikipedia cites “declining ratings.”

I’ll be reading a lot more INSPY-nominated books, Cybils-nominated easy readers and early chapter books, twentieth century history, and anything else that takes my fancy. So expect review of those genres and books, coming up for your reading pleasure.

What are you reading, watching, and enjoying these days?

Sunday Salon: Love and Marriage

The Sunday Salon.com

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (BP) — If leaders of Mexico City’s socialist democrat Party of the Democratic Revolution have their way, the city’s 2009 law legalizing gay “marriage” will be followed this year with temporary marriage licenses.

The minimum marriage contract would be for two years and could be renewed if the couple is happy, the bill’s co-author, Leonel Luna, told the Guardian newspaper. The licenses would include a pre-divorce agreement on the disposition of children and property if the couple decides to terminate the marriage.

“The proposal is, when the two-year period is up, if the relationship is not stable or harmonious, the contract simply ends,” Luna told the Guardian. “You wouldn’t have to go through the tortuous process of divorce.”

I wonder if one could write a dystopian/utopian novel about a society in which this kind of contract was the norm. What would a practice of moving every two years or so from one relationship to the next, always in search of that elusive “happiness”, do to people and families and societal stability? Would it be so very different from the society we’re living in now?

Why young Christians aren’t waiting anymore by Joe Blake.

“The article in Relevant magazine, entitled “(Almost) Everyone’s Doing It,” cited several studies examining the sexual activity of single Christians. One of the biggest surprises was a December 2009 study, conducted by the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy, which included information on sexual activity.

While the study’s primary report did not explore religion, some additional analysis focusing on sexual activity and religious identification yielded this result: 80 percent of unmarried evangelical young adults (18 to 29) said that they have had sex – slightly less than 88 percent of unmarried adults, according to the teen pregnancy prevention organization.”

So how is our culture very different from the Mexican socialist proposal that we legitimize short-term relationships and go on from there?

I still believe in marriage, life-long and for one man and one woman. However, if our culture has reached the point that this ideal is no longer practiced, even among a majority of professing Christians, what can we do to get the culture moving in a different direction?

Sociologically speaking, the one big difference – and it’s monstrous – between the biblical teaching and our culture is the arranged marriages of very young people. If you get married when you’re 13, you don’t have 15 years of temptation. ~Scott McKnight

I’m not suggesting, and neither is Mr. McKnight, that 13 year olds should be marrying. But what about seventeen, eighteen, and nineteen year olds? Why is it that eighteen year olds are old enough to join the army and old enough to vote, old enough to have sex, but not old enough to marry, according to cultural expectations?

We need stories, historical fiction, dystopian fiction and others, that explore the ramifications of these and other questions about marriage. If you are a writer, you have the power to move the conversation in our nation, not in a propagandistic way, but as a powerful by-product of the stories you choose to tell.

Sunday Salon: Books Read in September, 2011

Children’s and Young Adult Fiction:
Oh, Those Harper Girls! by Kathleen Karr. Semicolon review here.
My Brother’s Shadow by Monica Schroder.
Lord of the Nutcracker Men by Iain Laurence. Semicolon review here.
The Foreshadowing by Marcus Sedgewick. Semicolon review here.

Adult Fiction
On Hummingbird Wings by Laurraine Snelling.
His Other Wife by Deborah Bedford. Semicolon review here.
Unlikely Suitor by Nancy Moser.
Anna’s Book by Barbara Vine. Semicolon review here.
While We’re Far Apart by Lynn Austin. Semicolon review here.
Forbidden by Ted Dekker and Tosca Lee. Semicolon review here.
The Attenbury Emeralds by Jill Paton Walsh. Semicolon review here.

Nonfiction:
In the Neighborhood: the Search for Community on an American Street, One Sleepover at a Time by Peter Lovenheim.
The Five Love Languages of Teenagers by Gary Chapman. Semicolon review here.
Primary Source Accounts of World War I by Glenn Sherer and Marty Fletcher. Semicolon notes here.
Remember the Lusitania! by Diana Preston.

Miscellaneous Links and Thinks for Sunday Salon

The Sunday Salon.com

I suppose I could “tweet” all of these links or put them on Facebook or even Google+ them, but I sort of like gathering them together here at the old blog. Tweet or facebook or + as you like.

Water lilies in my hometown, San Angelo, Texas. I like stories about self-educated hobbyists who pursue a subject with passion and become experts.

Cindy at Ordo Amoris does Shakespeare with the family. “I always tell new students of the bard that if they do not like Shakespeare that is fine but it is the height of ignorance to conclude that it is the Bard’s fault rather than something lacking within themselves.”

All of the back issues of John Holt’s Growing Without Schooling newsletter (1977-2001) are now available to read online. I have many of the early issues of this pioneering newsletter. I probably subscribed in about 1980 or 81. And the newsletter was inspiring. Before I even had children, I knew that there were all these crazy people out there —leftover hippies, religious types, farm families, suburbanites, and city-dwellers– who were teaching their children at home. Or maybe “letting them learn” at home is a more appropriate designation. Although we ended up with a more structured homeschooling experience than many of the original GWS contributors and readers, I learned a lot from the newsletter about educational possibilities and creative thinking in relation to the way children and adults learn. Along with Melissa, I’m welcoming the appearance of Growing Without Schooling, free, on the web. Thank you to all those who made this gift possible.

Seuss, Sendak, and Silverstein: Children’s Authors Who Broke the Rules. I must admit that all three of these authors are favorites of mine, Seuss and Silverstein more than Sendak, but all three to some extent. I never got the appeal of some of Sendak’s books (In the NIght Kitchen, Outside Over There), but Max the Wild Thing is a classic character and his story is worth sharing with kids.

The Thinking Mother shares a Dystopian Literature reading list that she developed for her fourteen year old boy. Good resource for teen boys who are interested in dystopia and science fiction.

Hollywood Republican: 12 Essential Films for the Moral Formation of Boys. I would add Chariots of Fire, Gettysburg, and The Bridge on the River Kwai.

Sunday Salon: Books Read in August, 2011

Children’s and Young Adult Fiction:
This Lullaby by Sarah Dessen. Semicolon review here.
Lock and Key by Sarah Dessen. Semicolon review here.
What Happened to Goodbye by Sarah Dessen. My review at The Point: Youth Reads.
Distant Waves: A Novel of the Titanic by Suzanne Weyn.

Adult Fiction:
Love, Charleston by Beth Hart Webb. Semicolon review here.

Nonfiction:
To End All Wars: A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914-1918 by Adam Hochschild. Semicolon review here.
Radical Together: Unleashing the People of God for the Purpose of God by David Platt. Interesting, but hardly radical.

I think I read more books than these in August, but these are the only ones I remember or have records of. Oh, well, out of sight, out of mind.

Sunday Salon: Literary Links and Homeschool Hitches

This week Christian Audio announced that Wendell Berry’s novel Hannah Coulter will be its free download for August. Here’s Russell Moore on why you should read (or listen to) Hannah Coulter.

Unschoolers learn what they want, when they want by Jacque Wilson. I actually like the idea of unschooling, but I’m a chicken and afraid that my children would want to learn: nothing.

Josephine Tey/Gordon Daviot/Elizabeth MacKintosh —whatever her name, she wrote some fine books. My favorites are: Daughter of Time and The Franchise Affair.

Summer camp for bookish kids. Now this is the kind of summer camp I could still enjoy even at my age.

Sunday Salon: Books Read in July, 2011

Children’s and Young Adult Fiction:
Between Shades of Gray by Ruta Sepetys. Semicolon review here.
Three Black Swans by Caroline B. Cooney.
Small Town Sinners by Melissa Walker.
Stolen by Lucy Christopher.

Adult Fiction
The Daughter’s Walk by Jane Kirkpatrick.
Friends and Lovers by Helen MacInnes.
Angel Sister by Ann H. Gabhart.
The Hardest Thing To Do by Penelope Wilock.Semicolon review here.
The Hawk and the Dove by Penelope Wilcock.
The Wounds of God by Penelope Wilcock.
Amy Inspired by Bethany Pierce.

Nonfiction:
The Fear by Peter Godwin. Semicolon review here.
One Thousand Gifts by Ann Voskamp.
The Peacemaker by Ken Sande.
Unplanned by Abby Johnson with Cindy Lambert.

Plus some bookish links:
Minimalist posters inspired by children’s stories.
Five Vacation Spots for Book Lovers. I doubt I could afford any one of these, but it’s fun to dream.
This year’s Bulwer-Lytton prize for bad writing.

Sunday Salon: Books Read in June, 2011

Children’s and Young Adult Fiction:
The Rise and Fall of Mount Majestic by Jennifer Trafton. Semicolon review here.
Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs. Semicolon review at The Point, Youth Reads
You Killed Wesley Payne by Sean Beaudoin. Hard-boiled teen detective solves a high school murder mystery with way too much farking and bobbing. I wanted to scream, “If you can’t clean up your language (best choice), just use the word already. Enough with the euphemisms!”
Famous by Todd Strasser. Semicolon review here.
My Life, the Theater and Other Tragedies by Allen Zadoff. Semicolon review here.
13 Little Blue Envelopes by Maureen Johnson.
Divergent by Veronica Roth. Look for my review at The Point: Youth Reads sometime soon.
Matched by Ally Condie.
The Queen’s Daughter by Susan Coventry.
Daughter of Xanadu by Dori Jones Yang.

Adult FIction:
Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day by Winifred Watson.
The Ambition by Lee Strobel. Semicolon review here.
The Moon in the Mango Tree by Pamela Binnings Ewen. Semicolon review here.
City of Tranquil Light by Bo Caldwell. Semicolon review here.
The Skin Map by Stephen Lawhead. CLIFFHANGER warning: Do not read this book unless you are prepared to wait however long it takes to have published however many books Mr. Lawhead is planning to write to complete this series. The story is quite unfinished in this first volume. I find this year-long wait between parts of a story annoying and unacceptable, even though I admire Mr. Lawhead as a writer.
The Red House Mystery by A.A. Milne.

Nonfiction:
The Mind of the Maker by Dorothy Sayers.
Love Wins: A Book about Heaven, Hell, and the Fate of Every Person Who Ever Lived by Rob Bell. Semicolon review here.
The Mascot: Unraveling the Mystery of My Jewish Father’s Nazi Boyhood by Mark Kurzem. Semicolon review here.
Lost in Shangri-la: A True Story of Survival, Adventure, and the Most Incredible Rescue Mission of World War II by Mitchell Zuckoff. Semicolon review here.
Jesus, My Father, the CIA and Me: A Memoir . . . of Sorts by Ian Cron. Semicolon review here.
American Eve: Evelyn Nesbit, Stanford White, The Birth of the “It” Girl, and the Crime of the Century by Paula Uruburu. Semicolon review here.
The World Is Bigger Now: An Americna Journalist’s Release from Captivity in North Korea by Euna Lee with Lisa Dickey.

Sunday Salon: It Takes Darkness and Light to Make a Good Book

The Sunday Salon.com

I’ve read several rather interesting blog posts and articles this week about the quality and the breadth of selection of books in the young adult section and in the Christian fiction genre. I’ll give you some links, and then invite you to come back here to see how I masterfully tie all this opinion and controversy together.

First, Meg Fox Gurdon wrote an article for the Wall Street Journal about a mom who was having trouble finding an appropriately bright or upbeat book as a gift for her thirteen year old daughter. The piece was called Darkness Too Visible.

(ADDED: Lenore Skenazy: Is This What Your Kid’s Reading? “I am SURE this author thinks he’s cutting-edge — so to speak — by showing us what teens are “really” like, without the sugarcoating of well-adjustment. But there is such a thing as being trite in the other direction, too. The triteness of teen despair.”)

The kidlitosphere exploded in response to Ms. Gurdon, attacking not the bookstore’s selection policies or the publishers’ choices of what to emphasize in their publishing lists, but the poor mom and the author who was pointing out her dilemma. Here are a couple of responses:
There’s Dark Things in Them There Books by Liz B. at A Chair, A Fireplace and a Tea Cozy.
Salon: Has young adult fiction become too dark? by Mary Elizabeth Williams

Janie B. Cheaney, one of my favorite writers of children’s fiction and of opinion for World Magazine, wrote a post on her blog called Turn On the Light in support of Ms. Gurdon’s original concerns. I’m obviously a lot closer to Ms. Cheaney’s opinion than I am to others who have written responding to Ms. Gurdon.

Then, Gene Veith linked to a seemingly unrelated piece in Image journal by Tony Woodlief entitled Bad Christian Art. Mr. Woodlief gives examples of what he calls common sins of the Christian writer: neat resolution, one-dimensional characters, sentimentality, and cleanliness (the purging of bad language and sensuality and critical questioning).

So how does all this discussion about the “darkness”, or lack thereof, the language, the explicit sexual perversion, or lack of it, and above all the critical questioning going on in both young adult literature and in so-called “Christian” fiction come together in my mind? Glad you asked.

I don’t think it’s as simple as the anti-book-banning crowd or the hyper-cleanliness squad or anyone else has tried to make it.

The lady in the WSJ article just wanted a book for her thirteen year old daughter. And she wanted a book that wouldn’t feature vampirism or rape or incest or (probably) profanity or other nasty stuff that she judged either her daughter wouldn’t want to read about or that the mom wouldn’t want her to be spending her reading time on. This request is not unreasonable, and a book, YA or adult, does not have to feature dark and corrupt themes and characters in order to be a good piece of literature or to be worth reading. If some people want to write about those things and if other people want to read their books, that’s their choice. But if someone, particularly a mom, comes along and says he or she wants something different, lighter, more hopeful, they are not censoring, banning or infringing upon anyone else’s freedom. They are simply saying that they prefer to have choices, too, and it seems to some of us that the darkness is overwhelming the light in Young Adult literature.

Yes, resolutions in novels can be “too neat” and unearned. But just because a novel resolves at the end, ends with a wedding rather than a death scene, doesn’t mean that the novel is unworthy or superficial. Comedies are just as literary as tragedies. And the unearned resolution happens in both stories written by Christians and stories by non-Christians. In the non-Christian variety, characters make all sorts of sinful and destructive choices, often described in gruesome detail, but they are rewarded with life, health, and happiness because underneath they’re really good people who mean well.

One-dimensional characters and sentimentality are both examples of poor storytelling techniques that are again found in all sorts of books from all sorts of publishers for every age group.

As for cleanliness, I believe that it is possible, and even advisable, to tell stories without an over-abundance of profanity and sensuality, but never without critical questioning. If YA authors or authors in the Christian publishing realm are putting gratuitous violence, sex, and language into their novels simply to titillate and thrill readers and sell books, then those writers are bad writers, no matter how many books they sell or how many accolades they receive. And if YA authors or Christian fiction writers take the sin and questioning and controversy out of their novels in favor of a sanitized version of reality, they are also poor writers who may have an audience but who have lost their message and their integrity.

Tolstoy, Victor Hugo, Tolkien–all of these men wrote novels without the kinds of gratuitous depiction of intimate sexuality and sin that is thought to be necessary for good literature these days. (Although Hugo did descend into the sewers for a good while in Les Miserables.:)) Yes, the books of all three of those authors contain all sorts of darkness: prostitution, violence, adultery, lies, and deception. But there is also goodness and joy and, dare I say it, a grace-filled resolution. Part of the problem is that when a book does not come with a “Christian” label or doesn’t have an explicitly evangelical Christian conversion scene, we cease to describe it as a Christian novel (or movie). So then the really good “Christian” movies or books never get factored into the discussions about bad Christian art. There are good movies and books out there, made by Christians and others with grace-filled themes and characters and ideas, but they may not fit the template of a Christian movie or book marketed to Christians. And there are good Young Adult fiction books, tastefully and honestly dealing with the messiness of life in the twenty-first century, either from a Christian or a non-religious point of view. But there aren’t enough of either, and sometimes you have to look really hard to find the good books, the ones that satisfy our need for a candid portrayal of truth without pandering to our sinful and fallen nature.

Sunday Salon: Books Read in May 2011

Children’s and Young Adult Fiction:
Boyfriends, Burritos, and an Ocean of Trouble by Nancy Rue. (Real Life series) I’m intereseted enough in this series that I went to the library and got the first one, and I’d like to get my hands on the third book in the series, which has been nominated for the INSPY’s in the Young Adult Literature category.
Taking Off by Jenny Moss. Semicolon review here.

Adult Fiction:
Bel Canto by Ann Patchett. Semicolon review here.
The Belfry by May Sinclair.
The Informationist by Taylor Stevens.
The Story of Beautiful Girl by Rachel Simon. Semicolon review here.

Nonfiction:
Glimmers of Hope: Memoir of a VSO in Zambia by Mark Burke. Semicolon review here.
Manic by Terri Cheney.
Evening in the Palace of Reason: J.S. Bach Meets Frederick the Great in the Age of Enlightenment by James R. Gaines. Semicolon review here.
The Narnian by Alan Jacobs.
We Die Alone by David Howarth. Semicolon review here.
Can I See Your I.D.? True Stories of False Identities by Chris Barton.
Jesus, My Father, the CIA, and Me by Ian Cron.