London Terrorist Attacks

Christian bloggers are calling for a day of prayer and fasting for London and all those involved including the terrorists.

Please set aside Monday, July 11th as a day of prayer and fasting.

Fast one meal, two meals or the whole day. Pray for revival in the land, wisdom for leaders, patience for the wounded and resolve to continue to fight this form of Islamic terrorism.

Islam is not a religion of peace contrary to some reports. Pray for those ensnared in this false and deadly religion.

I got this information from Stacy at Mind and Media.
Catez in New Zealand: God Bless London
Phil Johnson of Pyromaniac was having breakfast with Adrian Warnock in the train station just before the terrorist attacks. Both bloggers and their respective families are uninjured.
UK Blog Aggregator

The State of Christian Fiction

Phil who blogs at Brandywine Books and at Collected Miscellany sent me an email asking my opinion about Christian fiction in general and Levi’s Will by Dale Cramer in particular. Phil said I should post my reply, and since it’s the only coherent snippet of writing I’ve been able to do in the last couple of days, I will.

Yes, it’s (Levi’s Will) definitely Christian fiction. I don’t think a secular publisher would have published it, but I don’t know that much about the publishing world. I could be mistaken.

I do think Levi’s Will “breaks the mold” to some extent. First of all, it’s a male-centered book without being sci-fi or thriller. The female characters in the book are not well-developed and are not the focus of the book. It’s also Christ-centered without being preachy. It has different kinds of Christians with different understandings of their faith, including a rather legalistic father, a friend who doesn’t attend church but knows and lives the gospel nevertheless, and the main character who lives a life of lies and comes to see how destructive that kind of life can be.

I’ve read three good books so far this year that I would consider “Christian fiction” in the sense that they focus on characters who are struggling to live out some sort of orthodox Christian faith in a fallen world. One was Levi’s WIll; the other two were Peace Like a River by Leif Enger and Gilead by Marilynne Robinson. The publication of the the latter two by secular mainstream publishers (and the Pulitzer Prize for Gilead) indicates to me that those publishers are open to Christian themes and characters in well-written books.

Oh, I forgot Acts of Faith by Philip Caputo. I don’t think a Christian publisher or imprint would have anything to do with that book, but it’s definitely exploring Christian ideals and how those ideals become compromised.

I did read a couple of other fiction books published by Christian publishers this year, and I do know exactly what the complaint is. The plots are thin and kind of boring, and the Christian characters are too good to be true–and too preachy to be very likeable. Or some of the novels are poor imitations of books and genres that were/are popular in the secular world. See this article about “Christian chick-lit.” Although I haven’t read the author featured in the article, I doubt if I would enjoy baptized chick lit since the unbaptized sort doesn’t appeal to me.

Phil is discussing this issue of the state of Christian fiction at Brandywine Books.
Also Dan Edelen at Cerulean Sanctum.
An old post from Jared at Mysterium Tremendum.

The List

The List of books I want to read has grown at an alarming rate. Here’s the list from the beginning of this year, with additions; the ones in bold print or with links are the ones I’ve actually read so far. I also graded them. I’m rather stingy with the A’s.

84 Charing Cross Road–Hanff
A Mango-Shaped Space–Mass
Acts of Fait–Caputo A-
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn–Twain
After the Ball–Beard
Airborn–Oppel B+
Amazing Grace: A Vocabulary of Grace–Norris
Another Place at the Table–Harrison
Armey’s Axioms–Armey
Bad Ground by W. Dale Cramer B
Balkan Trilogy–Manning C-
Behind the Burqa–Yasgur
Beyond Stateliest Marble: The Passionate Femininity of Anne Bradstreet by Douglas Wilson C
Beyond the Summerland–Graham.
Black as Night–Doman
Blog: Understanding the Information Reformation that’s Changing Your World–Hewitt B-
Book of Seven Truths–Miller
Brief Intervals of Horrible Sanity–Gold
Canterbury Papers–Healey
Captains from Castile–Shellabarger
Case Histories–Atkinson C
Chamomile Mourning–Childs C-

Chasing Hepburn–Lee
Children of Men–PD James A-
Christianity for Modern Pagans–Kreeft
Cold Mountain–Frazier
Covenant Child–Blackstock
Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night–Haddon
Cut and Run–Pearson C+
Disappearing Duke–Freeman-Keel
Empty Cradle: How Falling Birthrates Threaten World Prosperity and What to Do About It by Phillip Longman
Enna Burning–Hale
Eragon–Paolini B+
Erling’s World–Walker
Facing East: A Pilgrim’s Journey into the Mysteries of Orthodoxy–Mathewes-Green A
Fewer: How the New Demography of Depopulation Will Shape Our Future by Ben J. Wattenberg
Flame Tree–Lewis B+
Game of Kings–Dunnett
Gilead–Robinson A
Girl Meets God–Winner
Glimpses of Truth–Cavanaugh
God I Love by Joni Eareckson Tada B+
The Goose Girl–Hale B+
The Great Gatsby–Fitzgerald
Great Improvisation–Schiff
Growing Pains: Diaries and Drawings from the Years 1908-1917–Gag
Habits of the High-Tech Heart: Living Virtuously in the Information Age–Schultz
Heartbreaker–Garwood
Home Fires Burning–Stokes
Home Invasion–Hagelin
Housekeeping–Robinson
The Idiot-Dostoevsky
Improbable–Fawer B+
In the Company of Cheerful Ladies–McCall Smith A-
Invisible Child: On Reading and Writing Books for Children–Paterson B

Ireland–Delaney
John Halifax, Gentleman–Dinah Mulock Craik
Jonathan Edwards, A New Biography–Murray
Kalahari Typing School for Men–McCall Smith A
The Keeper’s Son–Hickam C
The Kite Runner–Hosseini A
Kitty, My Rib–Mall
Kristen Lavransdatter–Undset
Lamb in Love–Brown
Last Storyteller–Noble
Levi’s Will–Cramer B+
Lord Vanity–Shellabarger
Mable Riley: A Reliable Record of Humdrum Peril and Romance–Jocelyn
Mad Mary Lamb–Hitchcock
Magnus–Brouwer
Mark of the Lion Trilogy–Rivers
Maul and the Pear Tree-P.D. James
Michaelangelo and the Pope’s Ceiling–King
Miniatures and Morals: The Christian Novels of Jane Austen–Leithart
Miss Marjoribanks–Margaret Oliphant
Monkeywrench–Tracy
Mystic Rose–Lawhead
Nectar in a Sieve–Markandaya A-
Never Let Me Go–Ishiguro
New Way to Be Human–Peacock
Nightbringer-Huggins
No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency.-McCall Smith A
Oceans Apart by Karen Kingsbury C+
Once Upon a Marigold–Jean Ferris B
Ordeal by Innocence–Christie

Paris to the Moon–Gopnik
Peace Like a River–Enger A
Plain Truth–Picoult
Please Stop Laughing At Me–Blanco
Power of the Powerless–De Vinck
The Princess Academy–Hale
Prophetic Untimeliness–Guinness
Rating the First Ladies–Johnson
Riding the Bus with my Sister–Simon B+
Right Turns–Medved B

Sacred Way–Jones
Safely Home–Alcorn
Sailing the Wine Dark Sea: Why the Greeks Matter–Cahill
Scaramouche–Sabatini
Seabiscuit: An American Legend by Laura Hillenbrandt A
Sea of Trolls–Farmer B
Secret Radio–Massi
Shackleton’s Stowaway–McKernan
Shadow of the Bear–Doman
Shadowmancer by G.P. Taylor B
Silent Speaker–Stout B+

Strangers on a Train–Highsmith
Switherby Pilgrims–Spence
Tathea–Perry.
Tears of the Giraffe–McCall Smith A-
Tenant of Wildfell Hall–Ann Bronte
Testimonies–O’Brian B
The Eight–Neville
The Singer–Calvin Miller
Thief Lord–Funke
This Vast Land–Ambrose
Thirteenth Juror–Lescroart
Time Lottery–Moser D
The Time Traveler’s Wife–Niffenegger C-
Twilight Children–Hayden
Wide as the Waters–Bobrick
Wild Strawberries–Thirkell
Word Freaks–Fatsis
Year of the Warrior–Walker
Year of Wonders–Brooks B+

Should I take any of these off my list? Dare I ask: should I add any books to my list?

Homeschooling Family With Ten Children Loses Mom to Heart Attack

I think this family in Ohio could use some help. I’m not sure why it is that I feel a special kinship with homeschooling families. I really don’t see homeschooling as a religion, just feel for this family. Tip from HE&OS.

“They think she might have had a massive heart attack, and she never came out of that,” Walker said, standing outside the farmhouse he shares with his 10 children, ages 2 to 17. “I guess we’re just thinking the Lord wanted to take her.”
Mrs. Walker died June 21 at the age of 42. Walker is trying to pick up the pieces, and do what he can for his children: Christen, 17; Jacob, 15; Adam, 13; Leah, 12; Julia, 10; Hannah, 9; Sarah, 7; Matthew, 6; Lilia, 4; and Rebekah, 2.
“I’m just trying to figure out what’s normal again, or create a new normal for us,” he said.

Read about it here.

Picture Book Preschool Week 27

Picture Book Preschool is a preschool/kindergarten curriculum which consists of a list of picture books to read aloud for each week of the year and a character trait, a memory verse, and activities, all tied to the theme for the week. You can purchase an updated, downloadable version (pdf file) of Picture Book Preschool by Sherry Early at Biblioguides.

WEEK 27 (June) THE UNITED STATES – TRAVEL
Character Trait: Courage
Bible Verse: . . . the Lord your God is with you wherever you go. Joshua 1:9

1. Anno, Mitsumasa. Anno’s USA. Philomel, 1983.
2. Munro, Roxie. The Inside-Outside Book of Washington, D.C. Dutton, 1987.
3. Feeney, Stephanie. A Is for Aloha. University Press of Hawaii, 1980.
4. Sandin, Joan. The Long Way to a New Land. Harper and Row, 1981.
5. Turner, Ann. Dakota Dugout. Macmillan, 1985.
6. Sandin, Joan. The Long Way Westward. Harper and Row, 1981.
7. Crews, Donald. Parade. Greenwillow, 1983.

Activities: Look at a map of the U.S. Find the places you are reading about. Find your own home state. Find the place(s) you will visit on your vacation if you are planning one soon.

Friday Blogamundi

We’re interested in France here at Semicolon since Eldest Daughter is planning to spend nine months of her life there soon. So here’s an article in Foreign Policy about a new kind of French politician, one who likes the United States and free markets. His name is Sarkozy, and even more shocking, he’s the son of immigrants. Link via Michelle Malkin.

On Betsy’s Page I found a link to this article in the London TImes Online entitled “Give Africa a Private Schooling.” In the article, James Toole, professor of education policy at Newcastle University, says:

We tested 3,000 children in maths and English, from government and private schools, controlled for background family variables, and found that the children in the unregistered private schools, so despised by the government, achieved 14 percentage points higher in maths and 20 percentage points higher in English than children in government schools. Teachers in the government schools were paid at least four times more than those in the unregistered schools. The private schools were far more effective for a fraction of the cost.

What does this sort of research say about parent-directed education?

Dawn Eden at The Dawn Patrol is doing a several-part series about her faith journey and about her conversion to Catholicism. She’s got the first two parts up and promises more soon. Since she grew up Jewish in Galveston, Texas, I’m interested to see how she got from there to New York and Catholicism.

In the Agora has background information on Judge Emilio Garza who may be the one nominated to replace Justice Sandra Day O’Connor who announced her retirement today. I think Judge Garza sounds OK, and I’m praying that whoever President Bush appoints, he’ll get it right. The next few Supreme Court nominations will determine the direction of this country for many years to come.

The guys at In the Agora also wrote a post about Darfur last week and linked to information about the National Weekend of Prayer and Reflection for Darfur, July 15th, 16th, 17th. I plan to continue praying about the actrocious situation in Darfur and to especially pray and talk to others at my church on that particular weekend. Jim atStones Cry Out writes about Darfur and other forgotten crises.

David Gergen praises Teach for America. Link via Joanne Jacobs.

Southern Appeal says there’s still a chance tha Alberto Gonzales could be appointed to the Supreme Court. Please, no.

Jared at Thinklings liked Batman Begins. My teenage urchins are going to see it this weekend sometime. I think I’ll pass. Oh, by the way, it’s really OK that I’m not even part of the landscape at Thinklings, much less the Inner Sanctum. Those guys still write a good blog. They just don’t know everything there is to know about the blogamundi.
Whereas I do.

Read, White and Blue: Books and Links for the Fourth of July

Calling all U.S. citizens, how will you celebrate the Fourth of July? We always have a full day: parade in the morning, home to cool off, and then the community get together and fireworks in the afternoon/evening. This year our church is handing out bottles of water for parade-goers and cards of encouragement to send to soldiers overseas at the parade. What will you be doing? How does your church family celebrate our nation’s founding? Should churches have patriotic music and special celebrations to mark the birthdate of our country? Or is this combination of patriotism and worship dishonoring to God?

As for me, I plan to attend a July 3rd Freedom Concert with (blast from the past) Dallas Holm at a local Methodist church. I remember Dallas Holm and Praise from way back when, and I would love to hear him sing Rise Again.

Some picture books for July 4th:
Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth. Paul Revere’s Ride.Illustrated by Ted Rand. Dutton, 1990.
Dalgliesh, Alice.The 4th of July Story. Alladin, 1995. (reprint edition)
Spier, Peter. The Star-Spangled Banner. Dragonfly Books, 1992.
Bates, Katharine Lee. America the Beautiful. Illustrated by Neil Waldman. Atheneum, 1993.
Devlin, Wende. Cranberry Summer.

Also on July 4th:
Nathaniel Hawthorne was born July 4, 1804. Advice from Nathaniel Hawthorne on Blogging.
Stephen Foster was born on July 4, 1826. The PBS series American Experience has an episode on the life of Stephen Foster, author of songs such as Beautiful Dreamer and Oh! Susanna.
Calvin Coolidge was born on July 4, 1872.
The poem “America the Beautiful” by Katharine Lee Bates was first published on July 4, 1895.
On July 4, 1970 Casey Kasem hosted “American Top 40” on radio for the first time. I cannot tell a lie; in high school I spent every Sunday afternoon listening to Casey Kasem count down the Top 40.

James M. Kushner at Mere Comments recommends David McCullough’s book 1776 for Fourth of July reading. I haven’t read it yet, but I’ll probably add it to The List. I plan a six month update on The List very soon, for those who are interested.

Last but not least, via Ivy’s Coloring Page Search Engine, I found this page of free coloring sheets for the 4th of July. We liked the fireworks page.

Go celebrate with your own fireworks–or watch some—or something. Happy Independence Day!

The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini

The Kite Runner is set initially in Afghanistan, and it’s a tale of father and son and of betrayal and forgiveness. Amir, the protagonist and narrator, is the son of a wealthy Afghan businessman, while his best friend, Hassan, is a Hazara and a servant. I learned from reading the book that the Hazaras are an ethnic group within Afghanistan and that they are looked down upon because they are Shi’ite Muslims rather than Sunni and because of their ethnicity and poverty. Because Amir and his father do not understand one another and because family secrets poison the atmosphere in their home, Amir escapes into a world of books. He also spends a lot of time playing with his servant/friend Hassan, and it is Hassan who defends Amir when the two encounter bullies or other difficulties. Amir, writing this story from the vantage point of adulthood, is ashamed of the way he used and depended upon Hassan, and he is especially ashamed of one incident that happened when Amir was twelve years old and that, he says, changed his life forever.

“I became what I am today at the age of twelve, on a frigid overcast day in the winter of 1975.” So Amir begins his story. The rest of the novel is a sort of quest for atonement and forgiveness. Even though others forgive Amir for his weakness and cowardice as a twelve year old boy, Amir canot forgive himself until he is called upon to do something dangerous to atone for his sin. Even when he gets himself almost killed in a Taliban-ruled Afghanistan, Amir cannot remove all the consequences of his misdeeds. He can only live with what he has done and try to see glimpses of hope.

This novel is Dr. Khaled Hosseini’s first, and it was number seven at Amazon when I checked tonight. Pretty good for a first time novelist. His description of growing up in Afghanistan before the Soviet invasion and before the Taliban features boys running the streets freely, hurling pebbles at passing goats, and kite-fighting. Kite-fighting was a popular sport in prewar Afghanistan, and Amir and Hassan work together to become the best kite flyers in the city. Hassan has a further talent: he is the best kite runner, hence the title of the novel. A kite runner retrieves the fallen kite of an opponent, and his reward is to hang the kite, or perhaps many kites, on a wall as a trophy, a reminder of his triumph. Hassan runs the kites–and gives them to Amir, and then he is called upon to give much more than just kites. Later, Amir must repay Hassan’s courage and selflessness with matching courage.

Another significant role reversal takes place in the novel, too. In Afghanistan, Amir’s father, Baba, is a strong man, respected, even beloved. Amir feels he can never live up to his father’s reputation nor his expectations. When the two men immigrate to the United States, Amir slowly becomes the strong one. He says of his father that he liked the idea of living in America, but actually living there gave him an ulcer. Amir seems not to realize that his strong, self-sufficient father is now dependent on him. Such changes do happen so slowly that we are surprised by them. Hosseini does a good job of showing this transition from boy to man as it occurs—in fits and starts, almost imperceptibly.

Excellent novel, highly recommended. This one and Acts of Faith are both on my A list for this year. I’ve been blessed to read several good recently published fiction books lately. Are the selections from the publishers improving? This book would make a great movie, but it may be too politically incorrect for Hollywood. The Muslims in the book are a mixed lot, some good, some bad, and the Taliban-types are totally evil.