Favorite Reads for August ’23

I’ve read several times lately that the blog is dead. I do listen to more podcasts than I read blogs, but there have been several blogs I enjoyed following and the writers have quit for different reasons. Most of the blogs I follow are about reading; book reviews especially. I suspect that one reason there are not as many of these can be pointed to the rise of the YouTube channels where people review, recommend, and highlight books. Personally, I don’t have the patience to watch these, though I have tried several. I can listen to podcasts while driving or doing dishes, etc. As I much prefer to read the reviews and thoughts of others concerning what they’re reading, I’m going to post my own thoughts monthly rather than just once or twice a year. No spoilers here. My reviews are brief and do not include major plot details or synopses. So, without further ado, my reviews for August.

I completed fourteen books in August, but I will only share reviews of my top six. For a more complete picture, you can always check out my goodreads profile.

Bloomsbury Girls by Natlie Jenner. Historical fiction taking place in London in 1950. Bloomsbury Books has been in business for a hundred years and not much has changed in that time. It is run and guided by men, but changes are coming with several key women leading the charge. When the manager becomes ill, they get their chance to prove their worth and work hard to do so. Some well-known literary figures of their time (including Daphne Du Maurier and Ellen Doubleday) appear and help the women in different ways to prove that women have a place in the publishing and writing industries. I listened to the audio narrated by Juliet Stevenson who did a fabulous job. 4 stars

I really loved this book and looked forward to watching the adaptation on Netflix. I couldn’t get past the first thirty minutes. Curious if anyone who hasn’t read the book would like it. Helen, a kindergarten teacher, age 32, has been divorced for a year and she wants to do something different. Something to change her life. So, she signs up for a wilderness course even though she has not even gone camping before. When her younger brother’s best friend practically hijacks her for a ride, she is less than pleased to learn he is going on the same course. Even though she wants them to act like they don’t know each other, the attraction is undeniably there and to Helen’s further disgruntlement, Jake is everyone’s favorite and he manages to save her life more than once. 5 stars

Martin Luther: The Man Who Rediscovered God and Changed the World by Eric Metaxas. I’ve read a couple of books about Luther. Probably my first was in college for a world history class. I wish I could remember the discussions we had and my professor’s comments but far too long ago. Luther was a complex and controversial man, but no one can deny his place in the church and in the world. Metaxas covers Luther’s life and comments on what has become legend and how much truth there may be in some of the stories. Hearing some sermons about Jesus and his dealings with the Pharisees at the same time I was reading about Luther and his conflicts with the Pope and Catholic church made me see quite a few similarities. Though I don’t agree with everything Luther said (and he said and wrote a lot!), his story is fascinating and we all owe a great debt to him.

Olive Again by Elizabeth Strout. Following the Pulitzer prize winning, Olive Kitteridge, we meet Olive again in later life. Though Olive has mellowed somewhat, she is still her prickly, yet honest self, as we meet different people who cross her life in a small town in Maine. This is a novel which reads as a group of short stories that revolve around one woman. Though some people find Olive unbearable, there are others who admit they always kind of liked her. Me, too. 4 stars

Her Lost Words by Stephanie Marie Thornton. Historical fiction. A tale of two women, a mother and daughter. Wollstonecraft escapes from a abusive home and becomes a champion of women’s rights in the late 1700’s. Her “A Vindication of the Rights of Woman” was published by a man who supported and encouraged her as a woman writer when many others wouldn’t. Refusing to marry because she believed marriage was just another form of bondage, she became involved with a man, bore his child, and was soon deserted. Her daughter, Mary Shelley, never knows her mother but longs to emulate her and follow her in her footsteps. She falls in love with the married Percy Shelley and follows him in spite of being shunned by family and society. Though she doesn’t believe she has the writing talent her mother had, she is challenged to write a story and begins to write what we know today as “Frankenstein”. I enjoyed reading about both of these two women as I knew very little about either. Thornton brings to life, not only the two women, but the times they lived in. 4 stars

A Necessary Evil by Abir Mukherjee (Sam Wyndham #2). India, 1920. British Captain Wyndham and his sergeant Banerjee (better known as Surrender-Not) are in a car with a Maharajah’s son when the prince is assassinated before their eyes. Even though they quickly track down the killer, Wyndham is not satisfied that the murder has been solved. He manages to convince his superiors to let him go the kingdom of Sambalpore to further investigate. Was it the work of a religious fanatic? Or what about the prince’s playboy brother who is now next in line to the throne? Even the wives of the Maharajah are not above suspicion. I enjoyed this second book as much as the first and look forward to continuing the series. 4 stars

Christianity Today’s 2018 Book Awards

I subscribed to the magazine Christianity Today and one of the features I look forward to every year is their list of book awards. (No real surprise there). I invariably find, not only books I’ve never heard of, but also authors.  Not just the authors of the books, but also the reviewers who usually have their own books and/or blogs. Last year my favorite find was: Crossing the Waters by Leslie Leyland Fields. https://pmgilmer.com/2017/07/01/crossing-the-waters-by-leslie-leyland-fields/

CT awards books in several different categories. I will not try to cover all the categories or all the books, but will point out the ones I’m most interested in and hope you will read the whole article for yourself. The categories include: Apologetics Evangelism, Christian Living/Discipleship, CT Women, Fiction, and Spiritual Formation.

I have read a book from the category of CT Women the last few years. This year the winner of that category is You Carried Me by Melissa Ohden. Ohden was adopted into a loving family, but eventually wants to learn more about her biological family. When she learns that she was the victim of an unsuccessful abortion, she becomes more determined to find out what happened and why. Ohden uses her testimony to reach out to others who may be victims of abortion or other types of violence.

This year’s fiction winner is by Katherine James, Can You See Anything Now?  which is a debut novel for James. The award of merit goes to Daniel Taylor for Do We Not Bleed? A Jon Mote Mystery. Taylor’s first Mote mystery, Death Comes for the Deconstructionist, won the fiction award last year. If you’re interested in a rather lengthy review by John Piper: https://www.desiringgod.org/articles/who-killed-postmodernism

Among the many books that came out about Martin Luther this year, the winner for the History/Biography category was Martin Luther: A Spiritual Biography by Herman Selderhus. Using Luther’s own words, Selderhus follows Luther on his spiritual journey as a monk, a husband and father, a preacher and writer.

The overall Book of the Year winner comes under the category of Beautiful Orthodoxy. Liturgy of the Ordinary: Sacred Practices in Everyday Life by Tish Harrison Warren. Warren takes the common incidents of our day and reminds us of their spiritual significance. From one reviewer: “Warren takes you through a single ordinary day, from waking up in the morning to going to sleep at night, and manages to make connections to just about every important aspect of the Christian life. She is a gifted writer whose stories, rife with humor, teach you deeper things without ever making you feel like you’re being instructed.” (Stan Jantz) An article taken from the book is included in CT and this alone has made me anxious to read this book.

If you like to read about the other winners: http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2018/january-february/christianity-todays-2018-book-awards.html

Have you already read any of these books? Ready to add them to your TBR?