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Unfamiliar FishesTakeaway: Sarah Vowell is both one of my favorite narrators and one of my favorite historians.  That probably says a lot about me.

Purchase Links: Hardcover, Kindle Edition, Audible.com audiobook

Sarah Vowell is a unique historian.  She may be the only historian known as much for her unique speaking voice as she is for her writing.  She has been a regular on This American Life, the voice of the daughter on the movie The Increadibles and is the author of six books.

So it is her voice (both actually and literary) that will lead you to love or hate her.  To get an idea of her actual voice you can watch the book trailer below.  But that will really only matter if you want to listen to the audiobook (which I did.)

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Churched: One Kid's Journey Toward God Despite a Holy MessTakeaway: If you want a recovered fundamentalist version of David Sedaris this is a good attempt.

Purchase Links: Hardback, Paperback, Kindle Edition, Free Audiobook

I am a regular reader of Matthew Paul Turner’s blog.  I am not a fan of everything there, but I think his is a voice that needs to be listened to.  He is not afraid to poke fun at the church or himself or others.  But there are times when his humor and sarcasm can be a bit mean.  This is not all that frequent, but it is fairly regular.  In spite of that, I continue to be a regular reader, because there is a community there that would not happen in other places on the web.

I have had this book on my ‘To read someday list’ for a while.  I read his more recent Hear No Evil about a year ago.  It is a similar book but focused on how Turner related to music in spite of his fundamentalist upbringing.  I thought it was decent, especially the later chapters after he was an adult.

Churched has a different feel.  I am listening to this on audio (still free right now) and maybe that is the difference.  This feels much more like a David Sedaris book.  I like David Sedaris in very small doses.  But too much and I just get bored.  I haven’t finished either of the last two books of his that I have started.  The stories have a bit too much detail and feel a little too forced.

Some of them are funny, but Churched seems a bit less kind to his parents, family and community than Hear No Evil was.  It is a book that probably needs written because there are church worlds like this that still exist.  But I am more saddened by the reality of the distortion of Christianity than I am humored by ‘those silly fundamentalists.”

I want to like it more than I do. I don’t hate it.  And some will like it a lot.  But much like Hear No Evil, I like the end the best.  The afterward was the best chapter.

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Short rant on pricing.  I am sure that Turner does not control the pricing of his book.  And I do appreciate that he is offering Churched free on audio. But it is still odd to me that publishers think that the Kindle Edition is worth more than the paperback and the paperback should be priced higher than the hardcover.

 

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God Is My Broker: A Monk-Tycoon Reveals the 7 1/2 Laws of Spiritual and Financial GrowthTakeaway: If you don’t know what good satire is all about, you have not read anything by Christopher Buckley.

Purchase Links: Hardcover, Paperback, Audible.com Audiobook

I hate abridged audiobooks.  You never know what you really are missing, you just know something is missing.  Is it a good part, a lousy part.  Is it five minutes or three-quarters of the book?

But I also love Christopher Buckley.  And I am running out of his books.  I reserve them for reading emergencies, but that comes along about every 3 to 4 months.  I am not sure what I will do when I run out.  I have listened to all of the unabridged Christopher Buckley books.  Now I am going to have to work through the abridged.  I picked God is My Broker, both because it looked hilarious, and because it looks like it is out of print, so it is unlikely to ever get an unabridged audiobook.  And it is not available on kindle.

The set up is that Brother Ty is a monk.  He was an alcoholic Wall Street trader, but he got fired and ended up in a monastery.  Now sober for a couple years, his monastery is facing financial problems when God starts giving him stock tips.  His abbot is convinced it is the power of positive thinking from Deepak Chopra that is providing the money.  But Brother Ty knows it is actually God.

As with all of Buckley’s humor, nothing is safe.  This book targets self help books, Wall Street, the Catholic Church and a host of other likely targets.

In the end, what I like about Buckley, is that he know that ideas are nothing without a story.  Buckley knows how to write a story with people that you care about, even those that are not the heroes.

If you care, this is one of the cleaner stories by Buckley, no sex, barely any language.  A rated PG book.

The Restaurant at the End of the UniverseTakeaway: The story keeps moving.  I like the humor as much or better than the first.  Not a stand alone book.

Purchase Links: Paperback, Kindle Edition, Kindle Edition of Ultimate (all five books) – Ultimate is only $9.17 while each individual book is $6.29.

I am slowly working my way through the five books in the series.  I am reading it from my Ultimate kindle edition (which I recommend, so much cheaper and I alway recommend kindle versions.)

The second book moves the story along fairly well.  I didn’t really laugh out loud with this book either, but I liked the humor.  It is a little subtler than the first book.

This books is focused on why the Earth exists.  Doesn’t completely solve the issue. But takes a few very interesting turns.

Imaginary JesusTakeaway:  Imaginary Jesus is a fun romp through some real spiritual issues that could not be done another way with quite the same effect.

I think I received Imaginary Jesus in a Catalyst mailing.  But I am not sure.  Someone might have given it to me.  Regardless I have had it for at least three or four months.  I had a plane ride and I wanted something a light.  So I figured I would pick this one up.  I had no idea I would enjoy it so much.

The basic story line is that Matt Mikalatos (yes the author made himself a character in a fiction book, no it is not supposed to be autobiographical) is having coffee with his friend Jesus when Peter walks past.  Peter sees Matt’s bible and heads over.  When Jesus sees Peter, Jesus takes off running down the street, Peter takes off after him.  Peter explains to Matt that the Jesus sitting with Matt was not the real Jesus, but an Imaginary Jesus.  This starts Matt down the road to find the real Jesus.  He has to find and realize why each of his Imaginary Jesuses are not real before he can find the real one.

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The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy cover art

Image via Wikipedia

 

Takeaway: Not as funny as I remember from 20 years ago, but at less than $10 for all five books on kindle, well worth picking up.

I remember Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy as being one of the funniest books I have ever read.  For some reason I never read the rest of the books in the series.  So when I saw the kindle version of the Ultimate Hitchhiker (all five books) was only $9.99 (it is now a bit less) I picked it up.

Revisiting books that you read 20 years ago is always a bit tricky.  You are not at the same place and different jokes are funny now.  I enjoyed the re-read.  But I did not laugh out loud.  I remember laughing out loud frequently on the original reading.

The rest of the books will be a first reading.  I hope they will be at least as enjoyable as the re-reading was this time, maybe even better.

If you have a kindle, there is no reason not to pick up the Ultimate version.  The single Hitchhiker’s Guide book is just over $6, while the Ultimate is just over $9.

Purchase Links: Ultimate Hardback, Ultimate Kindle, Hickhiker Paperback, Hichhiker Kindle

Every once in a while I need something to clense the pallet.  Wait, that is how I started my review of No Way to Treat a First Lady.  Well I am a big fan of Christopher Buckley’s humor.  Darn it.  That is how I started the review of Boomsday.  At least I read Supreme Courtship before I started this blog.

On Friday, I saw a forum post on Kindleboards asking for some comedy book recommendations.  I recommended Christopher Buckley’s book, which are not exactly comedy, but more satire.  That recommendation made me want to listen to another Christopher Buckley book.  I picked up Florence of Arabia from audible.com and by Sunday afternoon I had finished listening to the just over 8 hour book.  There are very few books that I listen to start to finish.

I enjoyed this one, but not as much as the other three.  I am not sure why.  This book was cleaner, a lot less swearing (although there still was some).  The sex was mostly just hinted at, although there were discussions of harems, so it isn’t a child’s book.

It may be that I am less close to the target of the satire in this book.  The basic story line is about Florence, a State Department employee that is tasked with starting a women’s focused Arabic TV station in order to prompt women to rebel against the strictures of their society.  It spends a lot of time showing how western governments are wrapped up in oil and the problems of the middle east.  But most of the time is really spent talking about issues of the middle east and Arab culture.  Christopher Buckley may be a conservative, but he has no problems showing the weaknesses of all sides of the political spectrum.

I still obviously enjoyed the story.  And the last 2 minutes was a welcome addendum.  But if you are starting from scratch, I would pick one of the other three that I have read so far.

One of the best things about ebook readers is the ability to sample smaller independent authors, or in this case an established author that does not have a book contract in the United States.  Douglas Anthony Cooper is a writer originally from Canada, who lived for a while in New York City but now lives in Mexico.  He has written three books.  His first book Amnesia was “postmodern architectural fiction” according to Wikipedia.    The second book was Delirium and deals with the problems of narrative and a person’s will to control their own story.  It was also the first novel to be fully serialized on the web.  While these seem somewhat interesting (the author has a MA in philosophy and studied architecture); it has almost nothing to do with Milrose Munce.

Milrose Munce and the Den of Professional Help (only available on kindle in the US right now, paperback available in Canada and the UK) is about a teen that speaks to ghosts and the “Professional Help” that tries to “solve his problem”.  This is a very advanced young adult book.  Not that the reading level is really high (I would guess advanced 10 year olds to about 15 should be interested in it) but that like the Lemony Snickett books, that is a dark, funny book that consciously tries to not speak down to the reader.

Milrose is seen speaking to ghosts, which of course no one else can see, and he is recommended for “Professional Help”.  A second student, Arabella, which becomes a partner and romantic interest, is also in the same “Professional Help” sessions.

I do not want to give away too much of the story, but it is the tone and humor, more than the story line that I really like.  It is not that it was a bad story line, I liked the story.  But the tone and humor were what I was really drawn to.

The author has the electronic right to the book in the US, but not the paper rights.  Doubleday has the paper rights, but has not chosen to publish the book in paper.  So Cooper released the book on his own through Amazon Kindle.  The price bounced from a penny to $1.99 for quite a while and the book completely disappeared several times because Doubleday kept asserting that they owned the electronic rights as well.  That seems to have been cleared up now and the price has stabilized at $1.99.  But it looks like on Tuesday (June 22) a completely re-written and expanded version of the book was released.  All the reviews on Amazon so far are 5 star, but the book I am linking to is not the same one as the one I read.

I will probably not re-purchase and re-read now.  But the author has a second book written, so I may wait until the second one comes out and re-read the expanded version in preparation for the second book.  I can not complain too much because I was one of those that picked the book up for a penny.

I posted a book review over at ChurchCrunch. Here is the start of the review:

Twitter is ubiquitous.  Now it is even a format for books ideas.  It seems odd, but as far as I can tell (in my very brief amount of searching) this is the first book made up mostly of a curated twitter stream.

I have read blog books, and journal books and letter based books, so the idea is not completely unique.  And I do not think it is likely to become widely used format.  140 characters is short, perfect for twitter, a bit too short for a book.

Catch the rest of the review at ChurchCrunch

Takeaway: God has created pleasure, we should not feel bad when we enjoy what he has created.

Purchase links: Paperback, Kindle Edition, Audible.com Audiobook

I have been puttering through this book for about eight weeks now.  I started it, read a few chapters, then got distracted by some other books.  Then picked it back up as my pastor started a series called “Guardrails” (itunes podcast link).  In some ways, Pure Pleasure is the opposite of the point of the Guardrails series.  But I like to read several books together in tension.  I have been reading three different books on virtue and keep stopping one to read another to keep them in conversation.

The short version of the thesis is Christians were designed as spiritual, physical people.  But too often Christians reject physical pleasures as “less than” or sinful.  Instead Christians should embrace both physical and spiritual pleasures as a form of worship.

In the author’s words, “Here’s the great irony: Most people outside the church (and some inside it) think of holiness and pleasure as opposites. They see holiness as the main threat to their pleasure. What a lie!  Holiness is pleasure’s truest friend.”

There is a tension in the book, while Thomas continually advocates for pleasure, he also agrees that there is a limit to healthy pleasure.  I think that one of the good emphasis  is about sin and good pleasure.  ”In short, whenever you begin to sense the allure of sin, it’s time to find a holy and healthy alternative.”  Late in the book, Thomas illustrates the idea by talking about what this means, when you see yourself tempted to cheat on your spouse, is when you need to seek pleasure in your marriage.

Another illustration is in this quote, “We find biblical balance in the fourth commandment (the Sabbath). One of my seminary professors, Dr. Klaus Bockmuehl, reminded us that the command to take one day off follows the command to work six days. Some Christians focus on the six days and only grudgingly give in to the day off. Others treat every day like a Sabbath, forgetting to labor diligently for the six days. When we find the right mix between work and rest/play, we live in the same rhythm as the God who made us. He made us in his image and designed us to operate in his image. Any imbalance—toward either work or play—distorts God’s image and design.”

There are multiple chapters that I think are useful for most Christians.  One is on alcohol and the passage about “causing your brother to stumble.”  A second one is about the importance of family (and other relational) pleasures.  Another one is about pleasure in the midst of pain.   One quote that really hits me is, “I don’t mean to sound harsh, but honestly, we are very vulnerable in this world. Pain and suffering—whether emotional, physical, or spiritual—are not only common but universal.”

Toward the end of the book there is an extended discussion about the use of humor.  Not only is it physically good for us, humor really can help us with the message of the gospel.  ”If Jesus used humor, then by definition God uses humor. And if God uses humor, then why can’t his disciples? If Jesus thought he could make a particular point better understood and more easily received with a slight chuckle, how dare we shackle contemporary teachers of his truth to the somber, the overly serious, and the humorless? Sometimes as believers, and certainly as preachers, we do take ourselves too seriously.”

On the negative side, the book can be a bit repetitive.  A good editor probably could have cut 30-40 pages, but most books could be cut by at least that much.

This is one of the better books I have read recently.  Gary Thomas also wrote the best book on marriage that I have read, Sacred Marriage.  I am looking forward to reading more from him.  This was a free book on kindle that I picked up sometime around Christmas 2009.