Archive | January 2022

The Blithedale Romance by Nathaniel Hawthorne

I am working through a reading project, a Century of Reading —reading one book published in each year from 1851-1950. My choice for a book published in 1852 was Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Blithedale Romance. It’s not a long novel, a little over 200 pages, but it took me the entire month of January, reading a couple of chapters at a time, to finish it. And then, I was confused.

Questions (with spoilers): What was the relationship between Zenobia and Westervelt? Why was Priscilla so docile and weak-willed? Was Coverdale actually in love with one of the two women in the story? What was the meaning of the masquerade scene at the end? How did Zenobia lose her money? Why does Zenobia commit suicide? What kind of person is Coverdale really? Is he a reliable narrator or an unreliable one? What do the personal love lives of these four main characters have to do with the experimental farm called Blithedale? Is the failure of such a utopian community inevitable? Why?

I already knew about the connection between Hawthorne’s experiences at Brook Farm, the failed Transcendentalist experiment in communal living, and this novel written many years later. I read the Introduction by John Updike in my Modern Library edition and found not much to illuminate or answer my questions. I read the Wikipedia article, and a few other pieces, mostly feminist musings on the character of Zenobia, and still no answers. Then, I found this article, Love Conquers All, at an online journal called The New Atlantis. Although it didn’t answer all of my questions, it certainly was helpful, giving me some perspective on the novel.

I think, whether he knew it or not, Hawthorne was writing in part about the dangers of idol worship. Each of the main characters in the novel is looking for someone or something to worship, someone or something to give his or her life meaning and purpose. And God, for the most part, is ignored or given short shrift. Hollingsworth is completely wrapped up in his scheme of reforming criminals. Zenobia worships Hollingsworth and accommodates even her most cherished views to his overpowering sermons. Priscilla silently worships Zenobia and Hollingsworth, but her high god is shown to be Hollingsworth. Coverdale flits from one god to another: the community and its high purpose, his own poetry, his own individuality, the beauty he finds in Zenobia and in nature itself, maybe Priscilla. Coverdale can never commit to anything or anyone, and that is his tragedy.

The great tragedy for all of the characters in this novel is that they try to create heaven without God, and they all end up without any meaning or purpose at all. They give lip service to a Creator, but like all of us, their foolish hearts try to find Him in the worship of the things and people He has created. I recently heard a story about a Bible study group that was studying the book of Romans, and one of the members asked incredulously, “You mean good people who try to do everything right are not righteous in God’s sight? A good person will not necessarily go to heaven?” This novel (and the book of Romans) show how being good, having good intentions, trying to worship good things, is never enough. We are more deceived, even as we look into our own hearts, than we can know.

For although they knew God, they neither glorified him as God nor gave thanks to him, but their thinking became futile and their foolish hearts were darkened. Although they claimed to be wise, they became fools and exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images made to look like a mortal human being and birds and animals and reptiles. . . . But you see, at just the right time, when we were still powerless, Christ died for the ungodly.  Very rarely will anyone die for a righteous person, though for a good person someone might possibly dare to die.  But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.

Romans 1:21-23; 5:6-8

And yet there is hope. Here’s what Hawthorne wrote about Zenobia’s body, recovered from the stream after her suicide.

“One hope I had; and that, too, was mingled half with fear. She knelt, as if in prayer. With the last, choking consciousness, her soul, bubbling out through her lips as it may be, had given itself up to the Father, reconciled and penitent. . . . The flitting moment, after Zenobia sank into the dark pool–when her breath was gone, and her soul at her lips–was as long, in its capacity of God’s infinite forgiveness, as the lifetime of the world.”

p.213, The Blithedale Romance

Finding You (movie review)

I just watched the movie that’s based on this Christian romance novel by Jenny Jones. And I can say that my book review goes double for the movie. If it hadn’t been for the setting, Ireland, I don’t think I would have made it through the entire movie. It’s sort of a Hallmark movie with cute actors and very poor plotting and dialog. So many unbelievable and disconnected twists and turns, and yet at the same time so predictable. Of course the two sisters who are the enactors of a lifelong feud, manage to reconcile just before one of the sisters dies. Of course, boy manages to end up with girls despite the many obstacles along the way. However, the course of true does NOT run smooth. Oh, and there’s a town drunk who magically becomes both wise and sober whenever

Watch it via Amazon when you’re in the mood for something mindless and sort of Irish. Well, at least the scenery is Irish.The accents are sometimes Irish. The story is, well, not to be blamed on the Irish. (Oh, the movie leaves out any God-talk, except for a brief shot of a Bible verse on a tombstone.)

Wild Swans by Jung Chang

Wild Swans is the story of three generations of a Chinese family during the rise of Communism, and Mao Tse Tung, and the Cultural Revolution. Jung Chang’s grandmother was a concubine to a Chinese general. She had her feet bound as a child in the traditional Chinese way. But her daughter, Chang’s mother came of age during the conflict between the Nationalist Chinese under Chiang Kai-shek the Communist idealists who followed guerrilla leader Mao Tse-tung. The Changs, mother and father, became dedicated Communists who believed in Chairman Mao and the ideals of the Communist Party without question. True believers, Jung Chang’s parents endured great suffering and hardship for the sake of changing Chinese culture and society into a Marxist Communist paradise. Because she was taught the virtues of communism under Mao and the evils of a capitalist society, Jung Chang came to share their philosophy and to idolize Chairman Mao and his Little Red Book. But eventually, it all came crashing down when Chang’s own family became the persecuted instead of the persecutors during the Cultural Revolution.

“The whole nation slid into doublespeak. Words became divorced from reality, responsibility, and people’s real thoughts. Lies were told with ease because words had lost their meanings—and had ceased to be taken seriously by others.”

The state of China in 1958, from Wild Swans by Jung Chang

It was horrible, yet instructive, to read about an entire society gone mad in twentieth century China and about how slowly and subtly a utopian ideal can become a nightmare, especially with a power-hungry madman in charge. It happened in Russia with Stalin, in Cuba with Castro, in Venezuela with Hugo Chavez and Maduro, and in China with Mao. From 1958 to 1962, Mao’s Great Leap Forward policy led to the deaths of up to 45 million people in a famine that starved people throughout China. The Cultural Revolution that followed in the late 1960’s killed somewhere between 500,000 and two million people. The number of people who didn’t die but suffered great injury and trauma under Mao’s Communist rule is literally incalculable. Jung Chang’s Wild Swans brings the story of this historic horror down to an understandable but terrible story of one family. The book shows how the first generation suffered in the political corruption and prejudice against women that characterized Chinese culture before Communism, how the second generation came to idolize Mao as the embodiment of their dreams of a socialist paradise, and how Jung Chang herself and her siblings, the third generation, paid the price for their own and their parents’ mistaken ideals.

I think everyone should read this book or another book that shows the true story of what can happen in an authoritarian society run by a charismatic but evil ruler. “Mao hoped his movement would make China the pinnacle of the socialist universe and turn him into ‘the man who leads planet Earth into communism.'” Instead, he became the bloodiest dictator the world has yet known. Some other accounts of twentieth century China, the Great Leap Forward, the Cultural Revolution, and the aftermath of the late twentieth century.

  • Red Scarf Girl by Ji-li Jiang. Middle school/high school account of the experiences of one girl, twelve years old when the Cultural Revolution began.
  • China’s Long March by Jean Fritz. Describes the events of the 6,000 mile march undertaken by Mao Zedong and his Communist followers as they retreated before the forces of Chiang Kai-shek.
  • Blood Letters: The Untold Story of Lin Zhao, a Martyr in Mao’s China by Lian Xi. Not the best written book, and definitely for adults. The title pretty much sums up this harrowing and true story of a Catholic girl martyr.
  • Sparrow Girl by Sara Pennypacker. This picture book manages to tell about the backward disaster that Mao’s Great Leap Forward precipitated without being unnecessarily traumatic for young readers. Based on real events in China, when Chairman Mao ordered the people to kill all of the sparrows because they were annoying and stealing too many seeds.
  • Revolution Is Not a Dinner Party by Ling Chang Compestine. Nine year old Ling, the daughter of two doctors, struggles to make sense of the Cultural Revolution. Young adult to adults.
  • Little Leap Forward: A Boy in Beijing by Guo Yue. In Communist China in 1966, eight-year-old Leap Forward learns about freedom while flying kites with his best friend, by trying to get a caged wild bird to sing, and through the music he is learning to play on a bamboo flute. A gentle introduction to this difficult period of history for younger children.

I’ve not read any of the mostly adult books on these lists, but I’m interested in pursuing at least some of them.

The best books on the Cultural Revolution.

Five Must-Read books about the Chinese Cultural Revolution.

Best books about the Chinese Cultural Revolution

End of the Year 2021 Book Lists

Every year I try to collect a list of the most interesting and inspiring book lists for the end of the year. I get a lot of ideas from these lists, and every year I add more and more books to my own never-ending TBR list. Ah, well, as they say, so many books, so little time. Nevertheless, this exercise is one of the most enjoyable parts of the holiday season for me.

  • 2021 For the Church Book Awards. From this list of favorites chosen by several evangelical church leaders and pastors, I am most interested in Jackie Hill Perry’s Holier Than Thou: How God’s Holiness Helps Us Trust Him, Andrew Peterson’s The God of the Garden, and the joint biography of J. Frank Norris and George W. Truett by O.S. Hawkins, titled In the Name of God.
  • BBC History Magazine’s Books of the Year 2021: 33 best books for history lovers. The Word-Hord: Daily Life in Old English by Hana Videen looks like a book I could enjoy, or maybe even savor, a book about the history of Anglo-Saxon words and their sources.
  • John Ehrett: The Best Books I Read This Year. Until I read this list, I didn’t know that Kashuo Ishiguro has a new novel out: Klara and the Sun. It sounds intriguing. And I might also need to read Andy Weir’s newest, Project Hail Mary.
  • David Quaod: My Top Ten Books of 2021. I thought to read Calvin, one would have to read The Institutes, a somewhat daunting task especially for a person who doesn’t consider herself a Calvinist. But Mr. Quaod’s top book for 2021 is A Little Book on the Christian Life by John Calvin, a distillation of Calvin’s writings on living the Christian life. I think I might be up for that.
  • Delightfully Feasting: Crystin’s Top Ten Books of 2021. I’ve read about half of these, and I agree that those I’ve read (Cry, the Beloved Country, What Is a Girl Worth?, Till We Have Faces, and others) are worthy of a top ten list. I would like to read Crossing to Safety by Wallace Stegner and Why I Read by Wendy Lesser.
  • Anthony Kidd: Theology in Practice, Top Books for 2021 Reading. Last Best Hope: America in Crisis and Renewal by George Packer may become my “challenge” book for the next year. Written by a self-proclaimed liberal and an Atlantic journalist, this book sounds as if it would be readable while still showing me a very different perspective. I agree with Mr. Kidd that Live Not by Lies (Dreher), Trueman’s Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self, and Just Mercy by Bryan Stevenson are all good and challenging, too.
  • W. Jackson Watts’ Top Books in 2021: Mr. Watts is a Free Will Baptist. (I am not.) He also listed Live Not By Lies and Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self. I’m interested in the Herbert Hoover biography by Glen Jeansonne that he also listed.
  • Nomadic Matt: The Best Books I Read in 2021. Matt runs a travel blog, but he read a lot of books while stuck at home in 2021. One of those books, Scotland Beyond the Bagpipes by Helen Ochyra, sounds like a book I could fall for.
  • Bob on Books: Best Books of 2021. Bob lists the Eugene Peterson bio, A Burning in My Bones by Winn Collier, a book I’ve had my eye on. And he has as his best children’s book St. Nicholas the Giftgiver by Ned Bustard, a book I’d also like to take a look at. And I’ve been intending to read Prayer in the Night by Tish Harrison Warren all year long. 2022 is the year.
  • Sheridan Voysey: Best Books I Read in 2021: Mr. Voysey read The Yellow House by Martin Gayford, about roomies Vincent Van Gogh and Paul Gaugin. I’d like to read this one in this my spring of Van Gogh studies. And the novel Summer’s Out at Hope Hall by Pam Rhodes sounds good.
  • Catholic World Report: The Best Books I Read in 2021. Over forty book lovers tell this Catholic publication the titles that they most enjoyed in reading year 2021. Dale Ahlquist read Sigrid Undset’s Kristen Lavransdatter trilogy, which I also highly recommend. Alan Anderson read Peter Kreeft’s Wisdom from the Psalms, which sounds great. Michael Ward has written After Humanity: A Guide to C.S. Lewis’s The Abolition of Man, which might need to be added to my reading list since I plan to re-read Abolition this year. The Light of Caliburn by Jake Frost is a tale of Merlin’s activity in modern day Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, a children’s book recommended by David Deavel’s son. Another children’s book I’ve never heard of, although I am familiar with the author, is Bubble Trouble by Margaret Mahy, recommended by Eleanor Nicholson. In a Far-Off Land by Stephanie Landsem is Christian fiction (from Tyndale House) by a Catholic author, described as deeply moving, recommended by Rhonda Ortiz who is a novelist herself. Tolkien’s Modern Reading by Dr. Holly Ordway is another book I’m going to need to check out. I’m not any more Catholic than I am Free Will Baptist, but this article was a treasure trove of reading recommendations.
  • Happy Catholic: Best Books of 2021. Julie also has a list at her blog of the best movies she watched in 2021. And a reading challenge for herself for 2022. I added Stratford Caldecott’s All Things Made New to my TBR because I’ve heard good things about this author.
  • Stuck in a Book: Top Books of 2021. From this list, Murder Included by Joanna Cannan sounds like a a good solid murder mystery read.
  • At a Hen’s Pace: Books Read in 2021. She recommends C.J. Archer as an author of mysteries mixed with magic, and I might give this author a try.
  • Jared C. Wilson: My Top Ten Books of 2021. Again, I’m going to go with Jackie Hill Perry’s book, Holier Than Thou.
  • Dr. Carmen Imes (Biola University): Best Books of 2021. Dr. Imes recommends Jesus and John Wayne by Kristen du Mez, a book I’m afraid is going to make me mad, but I probably need to read it.
  • Barbara at Stray Thoughts: My Top 12 Favorite Books Read in 2021. Barbara always has lots of good books to recommend.
  • Debra at Readerbuzz: Best Books I Read in 2021. Debra suggests quite a few books that sound delightful, including books on healing, happiness, food, nature and children’s books, too. I need to ask her what she thinks is the very best book of all time on happiness/joy since I think she’s read a lot of them. I’m skeptical about self-help reads, but I do tend to reflect that which I read. So, maybe books about joy can bring joy?
  • Gulfside Musing: The 2021 Wrap-up and My List of Favorites. In addition to favorite reads of 2021, JoAnn has a list of a few things that worked for her to maintain and improve her reading life.
  • Ti at Book Chatter has My Favorite Reads: Best of 2021. I think Ti convinced me in her review to give Amor Towles’ Rules of Civility a try this year.
  • Savvy Verse & Wit: Best Books of 2021. Serena has six poetry books on her best of 2021 list, narrowed down from twelve. From which I deduce that she reads a lot of poetry.
  • Mary at BookFan: 2021 Favorites: I guess I’ll have to try Once Upon a Wardrobe and Surviving Savannah, both by Patti Callahan, who also wrote Becoming Mrs. Lewis. I didn’t much care for Becoming Mrs. Lewis, but I’m willing to give Ms. Callahan another chance.
  • Avid Reader: 2021 End of the Year 2021 Book Survey. Melissa’s post is encouraging me to read Code Name Helene by Ariel Lawhon. Historical fiction. The French Resistance. Sounds like a winner.
  • Martha’s Bookshelf: My Year in Books. Chicken Talk Around the World, a book about how chickens sound to speakers of different languages around the world, sounds like a great addition to my library. I’m going to have to find a copy of this one.
  • I Wish I Lived in a Library: My Favorite Books of 2021. Katharine also recommends Once Upon a Wardrobe, as well as Q’s Legacy by Helene Hanff and The Last Bookshop in London by Madeline Martin.
  • Literary Feline: Top 15 Books Read in 2021: She’s got Lisa See (The Island of Sea Women) and Laurie Halse Anderson (Shout) at the top of her list, so I’m a kindred spirit.
  • Dewey’s Treehouse: Mama Squirrel’s Reading List. Not squirrelly at all, she’s got some good ones. Maybe I need to read some Alan Jacobs: How To Think: A Survival Guide for a World at Odds. Goodness knows, I could use some help in the thinking department. (Oh, my, I just figured out that this blog, one I have visited frequently in the past, is Ambleside Online author Anne White’s blog.)

Well, that’s all of the lists I’ve had time to search out and link. If you have an end of the year favorite books list that I didn’t link to, please share in the comments. And Happy New Year, and here’s to more good books in 2022.

The Lion’s Paw by Robb White

I got this book for Christmas, and it was the last book I read in 2021. Author Robb White wrote for magazines and for television (several episodes of Perry Mason) and the movies, but he is best known for his 24 novels for young people. His books would be classified as “Young Adult” nowadays. Although they are full of adventure and feature somewhat rebellious and independent heroes, by today’s standards they probably wouldn’t be quite edgy enough for the YA market. I have read four of his books now, and I like them very much.

The Lion’s Paw is the tale of three runaway children who sail fifteen year old Ben’s father’s boat through the inland waterways of south Florida, down the Atlantic coast all the way to Captiva Island in the Gulf of Mexico. Ben is running away from a guardian who wants to sell his father’s sailboat because the uncle/guardian believes that Ben’s father, a Navy sailor, is dead. (The book was originally published in 1946, so Ben’s dad is assumed either dead or captured by the Japanese in the Pacific during WWII.) The other two runaways, Penny and her little brother Nick, have escaped from an orphanage. The orphanage doesn’t sound exactly cruel, just sterile, regimented, and uncaring. The story begins with Penny and Nick deciding that that they aren’t likely to be adopted by anyone decent and they just can’t stand life in the orphanage anymore. So they run away and meet up with Ben, and off they go!

The story includes tropical storms, bounty hunters, alligator encounters, near escapes, and the hunt for a seashell called the Lion’s Paw. Ben is convinced that if he can find a Lion’s Paw for his dad’s seashell collection, then his dad will come home. The story itself is beguiling with three plucky, courageous, and determined children facing both the dangers of sailing and surviving on the ocean and the strictures of the adult world which threatens to put an end to their freedom and adventure. There are couple of caveats: the children and an adult in the story use slang to refer to the Japanese (“Japs” and “Japoons”), and at one point the children use some potentially deadly weapons to fight a man who wants to turn them in to the searchers for a reward. Being prepared to use deadly force to counter an intruder would probably be disallowed or at least disapproved of if the book were written and published in the twenty-first century.

Still, I thought it was an exciting story with some brave and admirable characters. Both boys and girls, anyone over the age of twelve or so, would enjoy the tale and be inspired, not to run away from home or go out alligator hunting alone, I hope, but to “do hard things” and face difficulties with courage and ingenuity.