Monday, May 18, 2026

The Life God Blesses: The Secret of Enjoying God's Favor

By: Jim Cymbala with Stephen Sorenson

Personal hardcover 128 pages

Published: 2001

Genre: non-fiction, Christian faith

 

My dear friend Jeremy Stasiowski gave this to me quite a long time ago (twenty-ish years?) and I've just recently read it! 

 

I loved this book so much! I underlined a lot. One section I took a picture of is on pages 70-71:

 

What a blessing it is to have a Zechariah in your life! Do you have a spiritually minded friend who reminds you or the greatness of God and his promises? Do you have someone who stirs within you a spiritual hunger for more of God?

 

(Yes, I need to send him a letter of thanks and recognition of the role he and his wife Lydia played in my spiritual growth.) 

 

I love the inscription Pastor Jeremy put inside the front cover, but don't feel a need to post it. I also inscribed a new message and gave the book to a friend. Praise God for blessings!
 

The Unselected Journals of Emma M. Lion, Volume 1

By: Beth Brower

Libby audiobook 

Narrated by: Genevieve Gaunt

Published: 2019 (this version 2025)

Genre: historical fiction

 

I loved this so much that I wanted to re-listen to it, but it auto-returned before I could. I may just have to get the physical, print books (in order? to purchase?) to enjoy. Set in 1883 London, the story is told through journal entries. Emma M. Lion has been orphaned and misused by her relations. She goes to live in the Lapis Lazuli House, the home she will inherit once she comes of age.

 

 I have some quick notes:

Aunt Eugenia Spenser  and cousins Damian and Arabella (mother's side). Cousins Mathilde and Archibald (dad's side - nasty, awful people).

 

Vicar Young Hawkes - I'm super curious about him!

 

The Scar / Maxwell / The Great Burning of 1882 . . . we learn some of this, but much of it must be revealed in later volumes.

 

Trewartha! Made me think of my friend Deb.

 

"Gossip is as catching as the Plague ever was."

 

Lapis Lazuli - brilliant blue

 

St. Crispian's / Whereabouts Lane / Traitor's Road / - I wonder if the print books include a map. I wonder how much is factual about this neighborhood and how much is creative. 

 

I've requested the print book of volume #1 from the Scott County library. It will probably take me most of the summer to read these (with long waits on holds). Ah, well. I can be patient. I'll update this entry after reading the print book. 

 


The Women of Oak Ridge

By: Michelle Shocklee

Libby ebook

Published:  2025

Genre: Christian historical fiction

 

Set in 1944 and 1979 Oak Ridge, Tennessee, this story follows Mae Willett from a Kentucky coal miner's family to the very secret Oak Ridge for a job to support her family. In the 1979 sections, her niece Laurel is trying to learn more about the experiences of women who worked at this top secret government facility, enriching uranium for nuclear weapons. Only Aunt Mae is beyond reticent to talk about the war years and her experiences.

 

I bookmarked a LOT but will try to just "hit the high points" in this entry.

 

Prologue: "I am sure that they will cheerfully help to pay a large part of its financial cost while it goes on. I am sure they will cheerfully give up those material things that they are asked to give up. 

And I am sure that they will retain all those great spiritual things without which we cannot win through." 

 

Theoretically, this is part of a speech that President Roosevelt gave, I wasn't curious enough to search for it, but his repetition of the word cheerfully seems incongruous to the message.

 

Chapter 1: "No one wants to talk about those days. The past is in the past. Best to leave it there."

 

 It's interesting that Laurel went to spend time with her aunt, intending to do research for her PhD, but didn't realize that Mae did NOT want to talk about it. This caused some ongoing tension for the two of them.

 

Chapter 1: "Not every secret needs to be told. Some just need to be forgotten."

 

I guess it depends on what the secret is and what might come about from revealing it, but in general, hidden secrets tend to cause damage to someone.

 

Chapter 1: My friends tended to label me as driven. Whether or not it was a compliment depended on the situation.

 

Yes! I think most character traits can be negative or positive, depending on the situation and the degree to which they are exercised.

 

Chapter 2: She'd saved our shoe ration coupon for a special occasion, but I was familiar enough with the greedy practices of the company-owned store to know the exorbitant price would be added to the already enormous debt Pa owed.

 

I hate greed, especially when greedy people prey upon needy people! Mae's Pa had already given his health and life to the coal mine owners . . . yuk.

  

Chapter 3:  "I don't get to talk about those days much, and unlike your aunt, I believe there's value in telling our stories. After all, no one on the planet experienced what we did."

 

I didn't like how nosy Georgeanne got as the story went on, but I appreciated her willingness to be interviewed by Laurel and the information she shared. I also value telling stories.

 

Chapter 3: My generation and generations to come need to hear those stories. We can't change the historical facts or the outcomes, but we can learn from them."

 

Laurel sums up a part of the reason she wants to hear about these stories. Learning from the past is a noble goal.

 

Chapter 3: "The whole thing was upsetting, but people didn't have any choice. If the government said they had to go, they had to go." 

 

Laurel is still talking with Georgeanne here. I can't imagine the government telling me to get out because they need the land where my house is more than I need it. Sixty thousand acres and only short notice to vacate!

 

Chapter 4: "You stand in long lines, ride in crowded buses, and walk through mud every day. I don't see how being in a Hollywood movie can even compare to this, do you?"

 

I loved the humor in this as young Mae and Sissy are becoming friends.

 

Chapter 5: "I was happy, then I was sad. There were days when I couldn't stop thinking that I had a part in killing all those people. It bothered me. It bothered me for a long time afterwards, but there wasn't anything I could do about it. I ultimately had to stop thinking about it and move on, so that's what I did. That's what we all did."

 

The moral dilemma of realizing what their work was leading to was well written about. I think the author handled sensitively the issues of sorrow and thankfulness regarding atomic weapons.

 

Chapter 7: "The average age of Oak Ridgers was twenty-five, which was fun and strange all at the same time."

 

That sounds like a lot of fun! If there were tens of thousands of young workers there, that would be a ripe situation for lots of interactions.

 

Chapter 7: That is a terrible, heartbreaking fact. It's easy to look back on history and make judgement calls about what should or shouldn't have been done. We can debate the decision to use the bomb from now until eternity, but it won't change things. All we can do is learn from it and pray a weapon like that is never used again."

 

 Elliot Tyson has granted Laurel an interview and sharing his honest perspective. Jonas Tyson is protective of his father and clearly interested in Laurel.

 

Chapter 9: "I imagine most of us take for granted what we see every day. The familiar doesn't usually leave a lasting impression on us." 

 

This is an interesting idea. I'm often guilty of not being observant of what's around me. I love the idea of mindfulness and paying close attention to what I can currently hear, see, smell, taste, feel . . . 

 

Chapter 10: " . . . He said the Bible tells us we've got to trust the Father with everything, including the people we love. The hard part is letting go of control."

 Tears swam in her eyes. "I hardly pray for Joe anymore, because when I do, I start to cry. I want God to promise that Joe will come home and live to be an old man, but that promise never comes."

 

Mae and Sissy are talking about their lives, their families, their fears, their faith. I loved the friendship between these young women.

 

Chapter 17: We called what Aunt Mae was doing a defense mechanism, a key concept of psychoanalysis. People often use repression, usually unconsciously, to protect themselves from anxiety-producing thoughts and feelings related to internal conflicts and outer stressors.

 

Defense mechanisms can definitely be a strategy for coping with conflict and stress. I prefer freedom in Christ!

 

 Chapter 22: The kindness of these people meant more than they would ever know.

 

I love that Velvet and Roonie showed up at the hospital and in separate cars! They were there for Mae AND for Laurel. Velvet was probably my favorite character in the entire book, followed closely by Jonas.

 

Chapter 23: . . . it occurred to me I had no idea the depth of suffering Velvet and her family had endured because of hatred and ignorance.

 

Mae has accepted Velvet's invitation to come over for coffee and realizes how very differently black people are treated than white people, even on the "Reservation."

 

Chapter 26: "My sister has always been a woman of high morals. Our mama instilled biblical principles of honesty, integrity, and faithfulness in us from the time we were born."

 

Laurel's dad (Mae's little brother) has trouble thinking that his big sister may have acted in criminal activity during the war. 

 

Chapter 28: "Life is too short to be set on one certain idea and miss all the wonderful surprises that come along. Surprises that can alter what we thought was the right path for ourselves but actually ends up being the very thing we needed to make us happy."

 

Laurel's dad is both making an observation about his own life and giving some fatherly wisdom to his daughter. He's right. Life is too short to get stuck on a preconceived path and miss out on wonderful surprises. 

 

Chapter 30: "Guilt has a way of making us think God is too angry to forgive our sins. That we're too far gone to be saved, but grace says otherwise."

 

There are LOTS of great lines from Velvet in this chapter! She is really preaching it! 

 

I had about twice as many highlighted passages than I've blogged here . . . but nothing incredibly profound. I enjoyed this book except I kept yelling at young Mae to NOT get in the car with Clive and to tell someone (like her boss) the complete truth! Clive was a truly nasty character. I love that she was able to reconnect with Garlyn in the 1979 part of the book. I'm always sad when a person (fictional character or real life person) misses out on decades of life because of guilt, secrets, fear, shame, . . . it just seems such a waste!

 

We have book club in a few hours and this book is due back, so I'm glad to have blogged it! 

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Drawdown: The Most Comprehensive Plan Ever Proposed to Reverse Global Warming

Edited by Paul Hawken

Hennepin County Library paperback 221 pages plus methodology, charts, contributors' bios, acknowledgements, and index

Published: 2017

Genre: non-fiction, science, environment

 

This book is amazing, but it's overdue and someone's waiting for it! I got it after reading Inconspicuous Consumption. That book was discouraging, but this one offers hope via solutions! 

 

It is broken into sections: Energy, Food, Women and Girls, Buildings and Cities, Land Use, Transport, Materials, and Coming Attractions. Within each of those sections are possible things we could do to reduce carbon dioxide, what it would cost, and how much money and energy could be saved. 

 

The solutions are well-researched and well-thought out. Each solution is given a ranking for its efficacy and the back of the book has lists with the rankings by overall ranking ( #1 is refrigeration within Materials and #80 is retrofitting within Buildings and Cities.) The lists in back also include solution rankings within each sector.

 

I have only read through biomass, but I love this book! It makes me think of possibilities and choices (individual and on a policy level). I would gladly buy this book . . . but I need to return it now and put it on my TBR list for when I have more time to read and fewer books.

 

I have three post-it notes on page xiii! This page is titled "Language" and it makes some excellent points.

 

...terms such as "combat," "battle," and "crusade" imply that climate change is the enemy and it needs to be slain. Climate is a function of biological activity on earth, and physics and chemistry in the sky.

 

Addressing, slowing, or arresting emissions is necessary, but insufficient. If you are traveling down the wrong road, you are still on the wrong road if you slow down.

 

What we measure and model in Drawdown is how to begin the reduction of greenhouse gases in order to reverse global warming.

 

The whole entire foreword is really fantastic! These three snippets give just a taste of the thoughtfulness that went into making this book.

 

This is from the "Wind Turbines" section:

The International Monetary Fund estimates that the fossil fuel industry received more than $5.3 trillion in direct and indirect subsidies in 2015; that is $10 million a minute, or about 6.5 percent of global GDP.

 

Ugh. Big money and power. 

 

The ways and means for the United States to be fossil fuel and energy independent are here. What is often missing is political will and leadership.

 

I feel as though we are going backwards . . . The Kyoto Treaty, the Paris Agreement . . . and now a president who wants to take us back to the 1950s with more coal mining and drilling for oil. Sigh. We are not being wise stewards, America.

 

I tried to get my husband to read the sections on Solar Farms and Rooftop Solar, but he wasn't interested. "We already know we want to do solar at the lake." 

 

This book is fascinating. I might need to put it on my books to buy list . . .  

 

 

 

  

 

Tuesday, April 28, 2026

The Fault Between Us

By: Stephanie Landsem

Hennepin County Library paperback 336 pages plus author's note

Published: 2025 (that's what the book says, but online has 2021 . . . )

Genre: Christian historical fiction

 

I really enjoyed this book! In fact, I stayed up later than I intended finishing it because I couldn't put it down. I did take a little chunk of time to research the Yellowstone earthquake of 1959. It was fascinating!

 

Our main characters are three sisters - Claire, Bridget, and Frannie Reilly along with their dad Daniel and Claire's husband Red. The prologue shows us the girls' mother leaving the family . . . and we don't learn more about that until the end of the book. The title has multiple meanings and that was very cool.

 

Page 69 (ch. 13 Frannie): Her sister sure looked pooped. If this was what having a baby did to you, she was never going to have kids. 

 

There are too many younger people that I've heard express this perspective recently! Actually, more of them talk about babies being too expensive and/or not wanting to bring children into our messed-up world. I actually think Frannie's teenage perspective is pretty healthy. It's hard to remember that a TV show about teen moms was a "thing" not that long ago! Parenthood should not be taken lightly. It is a lot of sacrifice and work . . . but so very worth it!

 

Page  97 (ch. 18 Frannie): It was still dark when Frannie came awake, her nose cold from the bite of the morning air. A mosquito whined near her ear and she pulled the blanket over her head. Just a few more minutes of blessed sleep. The singing and dancing after dinner were terrific, but the thought of another day emptying ducks wasn't thrilling.

 

"Ducks" is the park's term for chamber pots used in the cabins. Frannie getting the job of emptying these made me laugh! But her desire for just a little more sleep . . . I can relate!

 

Page 105 (ch. 20 Claire): "Pick me up at noon." She said goodbye and hung up.

Frustration welled in Claire's throat. Why did Bridget have to be so bossy?

 

Ugh! Just tell her NO, Claire. Yes, Bridget was a fusspot and bossy to boot. But Claire could defy her the way she defied her father. The dysfunction in this family was strong!

 

Page  111 (ch. 22 Claire): She climbed into the truck, throwing a glare at an elk lying in the shade next to the hospital doors. "I don't know why they let those beasts lounge wherever they wish."

"Hello to you, too," Claire said, putting the truck in gear and pulling away from the hospital. "And they were here before we were."

 

Yes! It's maddening how some people want nature to conform to their expectations, rather than adapting to the natural world. Bridget had a bit of a control freak fussiness that was challenging.

 

Page 119 (ch.23 Bridget): Frannie's questioning gaze rested on her, and seemed to take in more than Bridget wanted her little sister to see. "Just tell him I'm fine," she said. "I'm fine, Claire's fine, we're all fine. Isn't that what we always say, no matter if it's the truth or not?"

 

"I'm fine" is typically the biggest lie! This family spent too much of their lives hiding their pain and pretending to be okay. So very sad.

 

Page 121 (ch. 24 Claire): Finally, Claire stopped hoping, because hoping hurt too much. 

 

This is when she is thinking of all the times her dad had emphasized that they didn't need Claire's mom. "We're fine without her" was a painful story this family told.

 

Page 122 has a whole scene with Claire and Red that is just heart-breaking. These people love one another so much, but are letting their own ideas of what's right get in the way of talking through their issues.

 

Page 125 (ch. 25 Bridget): A caring heart is the best medicine.

She looked at Jesus on the cross above the altar. She hadn't told Dr. Sampson the real reason she wanted to become a nurse. As a child, she'd loved the Bible stories about Jesus healing the sick - the paralyzed man picking up his mat and walking, the blind man given his sight. Every time she heard about Jesus healing someone who was hurting, she felt a tug at her heart. She wanted to heal people, to ease people's pain like Jesus.

 

I liked how the author developed each of these three women's stories. It was lovely to see Bridget start to loosen up and remember why she wanted to go into nursing. I love that it was Dr. Sampson's promptings that got her to consider this.

 

Page  172 (ch. 35 Bridget): The light-green Thunderbird was the only car in the parking lot. She slid into the driver's seat and stared at the steering wheel for a long moment. She'd seen people drive plenty of times. It couldn't be that hard. Then why was her heart hammering like she was about to take off in a space rocket?

 

It's hard to believe someone as straight-laced as Bridget would take a car that belonged to someone else without permission when she didn't even know how to drive a car! It was pretty funny, though.

 

Page 187 is where the earthquake starts . . . and it gripped me! I briefly took a break from reading the novel to look up the history of this 1959 earthquake in Yellowstone. Fascinating!

 

Page 239 (ch. 50 Red): "Son," Father Donahue said, "that's not how it works. The important thing is to trust him." The priest pinned Red with his sharp gaze. "Then do your best. He'll work with what you give him." 

The advice seemed backwards to Red, but now he thought maybe he understood a little better. Here, on a trail in the dark, on his way to a canyon that might be flooded, his wife and daughter missing. He'd do what he thought best, and trust that God would make it the right thing.

 

I loved that Red showed growth through the story as well! And I'm glad that he had Father Donahue speaking life into him. This was in response to Red saying God didn't answer his prayers.

 

Page  243 (ch. 51 Frannie): If this was faith, she'd take all God had to give her, because they needed it tonight. They all needed it.

 

From the moment Paul asked her to pray with him and she was able to rescue him with Mel's and Roberts' help, I was so glad to see the change in Frannie's heart. Her self-centeredness evaporated as she was occupied with the needs of others around her.

 

Page 254 (ch. 53 Claire): The stars vanished, but the light of hope remained, as if one of the crystal stars had fallen from the sky and now burned brilliant and hot in her heart. What do you believe, Claire? Did she only believe that God was to be found in a beautiful waterfall or a sunset or the love in Red's eyes? Or was he there even in the dark and devastation of the night? He was with her now. In the water, in her fear and weakness. He was still with her, like the stars behind the veil of clouds.

He never left her. And he had given her hope of her own.

 

I love that Claire held on, even when she didn't think she could any more! I love that she didn't let Beth give up. I loved this story.

 

Page 272 (ch. 57 Bridget): Bridget looked at the suffering around her, and thought again about how Jesus had healed the sick. He hadn't done it form some lofty perch in the sky. He'd been beside them, in the dirt and dust. He'd held their hands, touched them, and treated them with love. He'd wept with them. She'd felt the call on her heart to heal since she was a little girl . . . but could she risk the heartbreak of really caring?

 

I love that Bridget tapped into the more personal, sensitive side of herself to minister to people injured by the earthquake and flooding. The transformation was wonderful.

 

We had a good discussion last night at book club. I enjoyed this book very much.

 

 

 

Sunday, April 12, 2026

From Cradle to Stage: Stories from the Mothers Who Rocked and Raised Rock Stars

By: Virginia Hanlon Grohl (foreword by Dave Grohl)

Hennepin County Library hardcover 214 plus bibliography and acknowledgements

Published: 2017

Genre: non-fiction, motherhood, rock stars

 

I don't know how this title came across my radar, but it was so interesting! I love how she focused on the moms of these stars. It was nice to learn about the mothers who raised these famous musicians.

 

Mary Weinrib was one of the interviewees. Her son Gary Lee "Geddy Lee" was in Rush. Her story was amazing! She was a Holocaust survivor.

 

Page 84: Mary shakes her head at the memories of those difficult times. She was in the middle, trying to keep peace between her hard-rocking son and her kosher-keeping mother. "I survived the war and the concentration camps," she recalls. "But I also survived the war in my house. When I was a kid, I didn't know I'm gonna come out alive. But I knew I'd come out of this alive . . . bruised, but alive!"

 

Turbulent teenagers . . . can definitely be a challenge! 

 

Hanlon Grohl included several vignettes throughout the book of interviews with other moms. One of them really caught my attention.

 

Page 89 (Vignette #5): My favorite event is the Kennedy Center Honors annual presentation. On one prestigious evening each year, a few of our best and brightest artists are chosen to be honored for their lifetime of work in the arts. Other artists perform their music and sing their praises as these icons receive medals. The event is filled with newsmakers and newswriters. . . . After these, all eyes turn to the first balcony, where the president and his wife are seated next to the honorees. There are many standing ovations.

 

Ugh. I feel sorry for artists under our current administration. What a farce the "Donald J. Trump and John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Arts" has become. I'm glad that it used to be an amazing experience to participate in the honors.

 

A LOT of these moms recognized that their talented children were struggling in regular school classrooms. A LOT of these musicians were seen as underperforming and "not working to their potential."

 

Page 127: Val fairly simmers as she tells the story. She and I have both been through this territory many times. It is hard to forgive school programs that can't find ways to generate interest from kids who show great talent and commitment to artistic endeavors. It is my profound hope that someday, somehow, our school systems will begin to reflect the diversity of their student population.

 

In this section, the author is talking with Val Matthews, mother of Dave Matthews (of the Dave Matthews Band). The moms of many, many rock stars are included in the book. Kelly Clarkson, Pharrrell Williams, Dr. Dre, Miranda Lambert, Zac Brown, and so many more are included. Very cool.

 

Page 139: Zac is still grateful for the dinners the Meekses and other families cooked for him and for his Christian faith for keeping him "solid" during that time. 

 

This is when Zac Brown's dad and stepmom relocated but let him live in his own apartment to finish his senior year of high school.

 

Page  141: As my afternoon with Bettye came to an end, I was more convinced than ever that the things mothers are most proud of are the magnanimous efforts our sons and daughters make that reach far beyond their music and their fame.

 

This idea that the parents are most proud of their famous kids when they are good human beings. I can relate! (Not with the famous kid part, but of being thankful that they are wonderful people.)

 

Page  174(Vignette #10): It should be noted, though, that most of us secretly value unreported acts of generosity and kindness even more than prestigious trophies. We are most proud of commitments to family or community that reveal the real essence of the man or woman our child has become, that show us "It's times like these you learn to live again . . . / It's times like these you learn to love again," as the songwriter I'm so proud of put it.

 

Again, she addresses the pride and love she has for Dave AND her daughter Lisa a lot in this book. It really is a beautiful testament to mothers' love. She included Kurt Cobain's mom and Amy Winehouse's parents in this, acknowledging how the darker side of fame can be painful.  

 

Page 201: She says her philosophy of good parenting is quite simple: "Anybody in the world can raise a child well if they pay attention to him. That's my theory. you really have to listen, to pay attention."

 

This comes from Mary Morello, mother of Rage Against the Machine's Tom Morello. For a woman born in 1924, she was quite the traveler and free thinker. It was fascinating to read about all these different women.

 

Page  207 (Vignette #12): "Food Fighters?" people asked me for years. "No, Foo," I explained, trying to sound patient. "From the World War II flying squadrons that thought there were UFOs waiting to invade European fronts." There are varying interpretations of the name, but all agree that foo was the mispronounced French word for fire, feu. That's really all I know about it. I wasn't consulted on naming the band, and that's probably a good thing. Weird as it was, Foo Fighters sounded a lot better to me than the names of some of David's earlier groups: Dain Bramage and Freak Baby. Band names mystify me. The Beatles, for example. Misspelled by young lads who were playing their guitars when they should have been doing their lessons? Or a word cleverly coined from the noun "beat"? Pink Floyd. What's that about?

 

I think my favorite parts were all the photographs and the interview with Pharrell's mom. This book was a delight. But I still don't really know why I requested it from the library . . .  Oh! And Dave Grohl was in Nirvana until Kurt Cobain's death. Then he formed the Foo Fighters. It's a pretty cool story. His mom (the author) died in August 2022, five years after publishing this book.

The End of Reason: A Response to the New Atheists

By Ravi Zacharias (Foreword by Lee Strobel)

Donated hardcover 128 pages plus notes and index

Published: 2008

Genre: non-fiction, theology

 

This was perhaps a bit too theological for me. I'm not really interested in Christian apologetics, (Grace Theological Seminary defines it as, "Christian apologetics is the intellectual, reasoned defense of the Christian faith, derived from the Greek word apologia (a formal defense or answer). It seeks to provide logical justifications for Christian beliefs, remove intellectual obstacles to faith, and counter objections, usually based on 1 Peter 3:15, which calls for gentleness and respect in dialogue.")

 

But our pastor had mentioned this author a few times and when someone was donating books, I grabbed it out of curiosity. It's pretty well-written in terms of clarity. I especially liked when the author related what he was teaching to something in his own life. 

 

Page 39: As individuals and collectively as cultures, we humans long for meaning. But if life is random, we have climbed the evolutionary ladder only to find nothing at the top.

 

I would be curious to hear how an atheist would respond to this, but I really do not enjoy that type of dialogue / debate. I know why I believe in Jesus, but I also understand some of non-believers' barriers to belief.

 

Page  41: Pleasure without boundaries produces a life without purpose. That is real pain. No death, no tragedy, no atrocity - nothing really matters. Life is sheer hollowness, with no purpose.

 

I think my teenage brain would have enjoyed wrestling with these ideas more. The meaning of life is a big deal and raises lots of questions! (It did for me, anyhow.) Part of the reason Douglas Adams' Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy appealed to me as a teen is because of this wrestling about the meaning of life. Trying to re-read it as an older adult, it just seemed inane. The pursuit of pleasure for pleasure's sake does not provide fulfillment.

 

Page 55:   

  • When you assert that there is such a thing as evil, you must assume there is such a thing as good.
  • When you say there is such a thing as good, you must assume there is a moral law by which to distinguish between good and evil. There must be some standard by which to determine what is good and what is evil.
  • When you assume a moral law, you must posit a moral lawgiver - the source of the moral law.

 

This was one of those places where his arguments seemed so logical and straightforward. He goes on to anticipate the challenges an atheist would make to these points. It gets very confusing for me. My aging brain does not love the mental gymnastics.

 

Page  63: Isn't it ironic that when Islam is in a position of power, Islamic beliefs are forced on everyone, and that when atheism has the upper hand, atheistic beliefs are enforced on everyone? Only in Christianity is the privilege given both to believe and to disbelieve without any enforcement.

 

This is part of why I think many non-believers are rejecting the new Christian Nationalism that some people are espousing. People want to be free to believe or disbelieve without coercion. That said, I'm glad I live in America and enjoy more freedoms than many other humans on Earth.

 

Page 77: Using his same argument, he may as well say that the problem in the world is males - if we could just eliminate all males under twenty-five, we would have a better world.

 

This seems out of context, but Zacharias is responding to Sam Harris' assertion that Muslims are responsible for a long list of ills. Zacharias is extrapolating his remarks to other groups and pointing out that Harris wouldn't be able to be published if he said such things about African-Americans, for example. But I started thinking about it . . . if the United States got rid of one population to make the world a better place, which would it be? I'm not sure males under the age of 25 would be the place to start. (Plus, I would defend my grandsons with my own life.)

 

Page  82: The boundary-less life of sensual pleasure is a field of landmines, fraught with the real risk that even the very possibility of pleasure might be blown away.

 

That idea of boundaries again. I don't know if I've ever really known a true hedonist, but to be so focused on your own wants and pleasures seems incredibly selfish and ego-driven.

 

Page 88:  It seems to me that the gospel writers understood the likes of atheists better than atheists understand themselves or, should I say, better than atheists care to understand themselves. Those of us who have spent half our lives wrestling with these kinds of arguments recognize hostility for what it is and know when arguments go beyond the boundaries of what is believable.

 

I think I flagged this because I don't want to wrestle with these arguments! And that's okay. God has a plan and a purpose for me, but I don't think it's to become a theologian.  I sometimes worry that I'm dumbing down my own thinking, but there are only 24 hours in each day and there are so many things to do! I'd rather read those gospels and ponder God's Word than dig into argumentation.

 

Page  99: Jesus worked by changing the heart, not by legislating. Legislation can only force compliance. It can never produce the love necessary to change an attitude.

 

Praise God! Jesus has changed my heart. And He's still working on me. 

 

Page 123: I plead with society to allow the diversity of religious beliefs to be heard in the marketplace of public dialogue. Let the individual weigh the facts for himself or herself and see where the truth lies.

 

 I enjoyed reading this book and appreciate his approach (He used to be an atheist himself!) in sharing the reasons to refute Sam Harris' book The End of Faith. This entire book is basically refuting Harris' book. I'm fine with donating this. I won't re-read it.

 

 

Friday, April 03, 2026

Send for Me

By: Lauren Fox

Libby audiobook 7 hours

Read by: Natasha Soudek

Published: 2021

Genre: Historical fiction

 

This book sounded promising, but after investing two and a half hours in listening, I decided to call it quits. I don't usually blog about a book I didn't finish, but I think my quick notes show my confusion.

 

Julius and Clara (?) - daughter Annalisa - 15 y.o. / 18 y.o. 

Max ("mocks") and Katerina and their 7 year old . . . killed in Auschwitz (Annalisa reads about them sixty years after . . . )

Ugh! Time bouncing around too much!

"Secret society of the life givers" and "sisterhood of the swollen ankles"

Annalisa noticing other parents and children once she gets pregnant

 

Sudden switch to Claire! And Ruth? Who are these people? Why are we suddenly in the United States? 

 

Claire / weddings / mothers and daughters

"The house you grew up in was your psyche's excretions. . . . "
 

This is where I gave up. We've learned a lot about Clara and her relationship with her daughter Annalisa . . . and Annalisa's infatuation with Max, then her marriage to the shoe salesman. Then as she is becoming a mother, there is an abrupt change of protagonist. From reading the book's blurb, I can see where this is going, but I have no more patience for it. There's nothing to indicate that switches in time and place are being made. It's too chaotic to jump around in time. 

Thursday, April 02, 2026

Heartwood Hotel: A True Home

By: Kallie George

Libby audiobook 2 hours

Read by: Amy Melissa Bentley

Published: 2017 (this version )2024

Genre: Children's fiction, talking animals

 

I had checked out a few short kids' audiobooks for when I took my grandson to Pizza Ranch and a play at NPMS (right before the blizzard started a few weeks ago). He chose this one to listen to. We only got halfway through, but I had him finish it the next week while I tried to get his brother down for a nap. Then I finished listening.

 

Mona is a little mouse whose house got flooded in a big storm. She came across the Heartwood Hotel and was taken in to help as a maid. Tilly the squirrel is not very kind to her, but Mona tries her best to help out and she appreciates the seed cakes and having a safe place to stay.

 

I like how brave she is in talking with the bear and coming up with a plan to foil the wolves. Cute little story. Apparently the author is working on book six in the series! 

The French Kitchen

By: Kristy Cambron

Dakota County Library paperback 362 pages plus author's note and acknowledgments

Published: 2025

Genre: Historical fiction, WWII

 

I won't be able to attend our book club discussion tonight (3.30.2026), but I'd probably be a bit of a wet blanket anyhow. I didn't enjoy reading this book. There were too many time jumps (both in year and in which month of the year) and those made it challenging to follow the story line. There were also too many double identities. I made a cheat sheet . . . and there may be spoilers in this entry. There were positive aspects to the story as well; I just didn't care for this book. 

 

The one theme I did appreciate is "don't look back" and the notion of moving forward into the future rather than living in the past.

 

I did, however, make lots of notes. Because of course I did.

 

Page 18: Decisions - their weight had the ability to sink or save the heart. Trouble was, you never knew which road you'd chosen at the beginning. 

 

Sometimes we weigh decisions carefully and other times we just choose. But each decision we make has impact and Gavin realizes this. 

 

Page 19: A lump formed in her throat and she fought against it, battling to do the thing she'd always been best at - pushing emotion out of the equation until all that was left was the comforting strength of resilience.  

 

This is definitely not me! Stuffing my emotions is not something I'd be accused of doing. Kat is such a strong woman and her strength comes partly from her own resilience. It kind of bothered me that Cambron didn't incorporate faithfulness into this book.

 

Page 58 - the December 1951 scene where Leo / Xandré is presented as Mimi's husband and Kat / Celeste is blown away. This was where my cheat sheet really helped me. It was a bit convoluted, but all my questions were answered by the end of the book. Sadly, it was a bit too late for me.

 

Page 71: She recognized it with every blitz bomb and bullet and beautiful soul they'd wiped from the earth, without justification or certainly without mercy. 

 

I loved Manon! Her heart for innocent people's suffering and her careful threading of resistance while cooking for the German officers was amazing.

 

Page  73: She was struck by what she hadn't felt for so long in their war-torn world, save for when working alongside Valens: unyielding kindness. 

 

Kindness is powerful! I loved that Manon fell in love with Dominique / Gavin. For some reason, I kept forgetting that Valens was her father-in-law and not just a nice old male co-worker. I loved that I recognized so many of the cooking terms from all the time I've spent watching The Great British Baking Show!

 

Page 112: Before he even realized what he'd just revealed, the spark hit touch paper, and Kat rose with a fierceness that cut him to the core. 

 

WHAT DOES THIS SAY? Read this sentence carefully. I did - about twelve times. Is "touch paper" a thing? Did the spark hit or touch the paper? I just did not understand this at all. 

 

Page 125 - August 1943 - Kat is taken for torture as a . . . test? Thrown in a trunk, water boarded, . . . Jeffrey / still in the US! This seemed very out of place, but the scene does show her incredible strength and ability to be an OSS agent.

 

Page 154 - We finally learn why Kat has the scar on her shoulder! She was pierced by a tree limb when she parachuted out of the plane hit before it got to their actual drop point . . . That had been bugging me. There were lots of references to it in the first 150 pages and I guessed it had happened during the war. I finally found out how she got the scar, but now I'm wondering why it was so significant.

 

Page 225 - Gavin. Is Dominique. He and Kat meet in the town near the chateau. Seriously? The biggest driver of the story is Kat wanting to find out what happened to her brother during the war and she just runs into him in town?

 

Page 278 - It was always the hint of something beautiful next to brokenness with him. 

 

There were a lot of places where beauty and brokenness co-existed. The fact that this was in reference to Gavin / Dom made me wish we had learned more of his story (as we learn of Kat's). 

 

Page 338-340 - Kat finding Gavin and Manon. WHY?! The author explains why they were in hiding, but don't tell me they couldn't have found a way to communicate they were alive to their family members within the seven years following the war. This just bothered me a lot.

 

The book just didn't resonate for me. But I liked the food parts! There were lots of codes, secret identities, etc. and I generally like mystery type stories. 

 

 

 

 


 

Sunday, March 29, 2026

How to Twist a Dragon's Tale

By: Cressida Cowell

How to Train Your Dragon book 5 

Libby audiobook 4 hours

Read by: David Tennant 

Published: 2013

Genre: Children's fantasy

 

Again, I enjoyed the story. Again, it was hard to hear at times with the volume being variable and me driving in my car. I love Tennant's vocal work, but I kind of want to read these in print.

 

Hiccup discovers that there are Exterminator Dragons ready to hatch as a volcano is going to erupt. There's only one way to stop the complete destruction, but his father just won't listen.

 

I keep forgetting that in the print books, Hiccup's mom is still alive (though always away on quests). In the movie, she was killed by a dragon. Interesting differences.

 

I liked the new character Humungously Hotshot the Hero . . . and his back story. I mostly love when Hiccup, Fishlegs, and Camicazi go adventuring together. Toothless is both irritatingly reckless and actually heroic (again).