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Showing posts with label Book Reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book Reviews. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

On my reading list

This one is waiting for me at the library and I can't wait to pick it up!

Just picked this one up.  We all know this will result in plenty of tears.

My new bible!  Thanks :)


I might have put this one on my last reading list - still need to get through it.  Unfortunately it's late back to the library.  I think I'll have to return and re-order. 

 Seems like I read the first one but I can't remember what it was about.  Hoping this one is good!

If you've never read his first book - heavenly man - your missing out.  I hope this one is similar.

NOT a Christian book but informative and heart breaking.  I've only gotten through the first couple of pages and have already had to take a break.

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Freedom's Stand Book Review

Freedom's Stand is a book I've been reading for the past week now.  I didn't realize what an impact it was having on me until I went to the mall today.  Let me explain.

Freedom's Stand is a fictional book based in Afghanistan.  The product description on cbd.com says this:

"Jamil renounced a life of jihad when he encountered the life-changing message of Jesus Christ, but villagers and authorities in the hills of Afghanistan respond with skepticism . . . and even violence.
Relief worker Amy Mallory is shocked by the changes in her organization-changes with dire implications for the women and children under her care. And concern for her former assistant, Jamil, weighs heavily on her heart.

Former Special Forces veteran Steve Wilson faces off against the riots and corruption of Kabul's upcoming election. He's looking for something that will give his life purpose but is confident that he won't find it in Afghanistan.All three are searching for love and freedom in a country where political and religious injustice runs rampant. But when religious freedom becomes a matter of life and death, they discover that the cost of following Jesus may require the ultimate sacrifice."

The underlying theme is about the plight of women in a country such as Afghanistan - a country under Sharia law.  The book is a bit long-winded and at times, I have struggled through it.  The print seems sooo small - or is it that I'm getting older??  Lol.  I probably need glasses.

Anyway - the first time I spoke in tongues was over this same issue - the plight of women in these countries.  I had been watching something on TV about it and suddenly, in the privacy and darkness of my bedroom, I cried out to God in a foreign tongue unknown to me over these women.

It makes me mad.  I know, I'm American.  What could I possibly understand of another person's country, it's laws, it's traditions, it's religion?  I don't know - but my heart breaks over the lack of women's rights.  I'm no feminist by any stretch of the imagination and I fully believe in submitting to my husband.  My husband who mutually respects me and my opinions.  One who treats me better than he treats himself.  But the treatment of women in these places - I find inexcusable.

We were at the mall today when a lady and her family walked past me.  There had to be 10 kids with her, boys and girls.  Her husband was with her - well dressed.  She, on the other hand, was in a black robe - I don't know what they are called officially - Chador's?  Burqa's?  I'm not sure.  All you could see was her eyes.  It was all I could do not to go smack her husband upside the head.  I mean really - here he was all dressed comfortably, colorfully - free - and she - restricted - unknown - faceless.  It made me angry.

I don't know how accurate this book is - and I'd like to know.  I'll be doing some research.  If it is based on fact - it's just sad.

Anyway - this wasn't much of a book review I guess - more of a "personal opinion" kind of thing.  I'm enjoying the book even though it does run a bit slow sometimes.  There are quite a few characters to keep straight which is made tough only in that these aren't names we are necessarily familiar with here in America.  I would recommend reading it :)





Wednesday, August 10, 2011

On my reading list

I don't know about y'all but I switch back and forth between reading fiction and non-fiction.  I'm in a fiction mode right now.  Have I mentioned how much I LOVE my local library??  Do you know I can get online and order ANY book I want - and if they don't have it - they will get it for me (most of the time)??  (as long as your account is in good standing - they will do the same for you!!).  Well, I'm flooding my local library with Christian books!!  I'm like a kid at Christmas some days.  I literally could spend hours requesting books from the library.  Sometimes I wonder what they think of me over there....

Anyhow - I was hoping to get this stack BEFORE vacation but as life goes - I ended up with no reading time anyway.  Now I have a nice stack to finish off before school starts and my life goes back into the chaos mode.  Half of these books were ones the library didn't have and they generously got them for me.  Again - love, love, love my local library.  One day I'd like to meet that wonderful person who orders them for me...

Okay - lets move on 'cause there is a STACK to share with you.  Hope you enjoy my reading list (in alphabetical order 'cause I'm just cool like that ;) ) - now what's on yours?


Healing Promises by Amy Wallace






And the only non-fiction of the bunch - Zealous Love by Mike and Danae Yankoski - this is actually my second time reading this one.  Love it!






Sunday, April 10, 2011

On offense


I think I mentioned previously, I'm in the process of reading the book "Bait of Satan" by John Bevere.  Can I say something?  This book is irritating me - lol.

Seriously.  I think this must be something I need to work on - because I find myself irritated the entire time I'm reading.  I find myself annoyed with everyone around me.  It seems the offenses keep coming when I consider dealing with this in my life.  

Today is a beautiful day outside.  Blue skies.  79 degrees (rarity in the middle of April in this part if the country!), sunny, windows open, breeze blowing through the house.  It's gorgeous outside.  The kind of day that makes you oh-so-quickly forget the long hard winter.  

Yet, I am irritated.  With the mess in the house.  With the animals.  With people and circumstances.  With myself for having no motivation to do anything around the house.  With..... - well that's the entire point.  I'm irritated.

And again.  I think it has to do with this book.  I think I'm going to have to stop reading it just so I can stop being irritated with everything around me!

Has anyone else read this book and found this to be true?? I'm curious.  I know lots of people have read it and said it to be a life changer.  The jury is out for me just yet.  I'm still trying to figure out if it's REALLY a sin to be offended when people - well - offend!  It's a book I'm going to have to read from front to back before I give my opinion :)

Seriously though - who else out there has read it and what was your take on it?  I'd love to hear from you!


Monday, March 21, 2011

Lioness Arising - Lisa Bevere - Book Review

I am lion, hear me roar.   That's what I wanted to title this, but I was afraid people looking for a book review wouldn't be able to locate this.

WOW!  A wonderful friend gave me this book and I don't believe they had any idea how much it would speak into my heart at this point in my life.  It's right on with what God has been speaking to me already.  I read - a lot - and most books, although I enjoy them - don't meet me where I am in life at that moment.  This one has.

You know this means quotes people - right??  I think I have half the 60 pages I've read already highlighted!  However, before I share some quotes that have touched my heart - let me say this one thing.  This book is giving me freedom.  Freedom to be who I am and stop thinking in my head I'm too - I don't know - too bold.  So much of my life, I've felt a Christian woman should be meek and mild, barefoot and pregnant, quiet and reserved.  Nothing like who I am (although I have been both barefoot and pregnant before) - and it has always made me feel as if I am somehow less of a Christian woman because of it.  I don't know where I got these ideas from - but my boldness has always left me feeling I am not what people think a Christian woman should be.  Maybe it has come from the many times people make me feel as if I should be silent and not share my mind, my opinions, my feelings - so publicly.  Anyway - that doesn't matter.  What matters is in reading this book, I am finding myself.

Onto the quotes - and there will be many!

Right at the start:  "To all of my lioness sisters who feel something wild, fierce, and beautiful stirring within them.  You are stunning.  You were born for this moment.  Don't be afraid of your strength, questions, or insights.  Awaken, rise up, and dare to realize all you were created to be."

"I was a cancer survivor and a stay-at-home mom with a dysfunctional past...Was it possible that God thought I was destined for more?  Was something powerful and slightly fierce waiting to be awakened inside me?  Maybe I'd wear courage well."

"I was tired of being thought of as weak and whiny...Tired of wearying my mind with so many things that didn't matter.  Tired of pretending.  Rather than nice and safe, I was ready to be seen as slightly fierce and definitely focused."

"I was almost at the point of drowning in my day-to-day life.  I was so caught up in my ever-expanding and increasingly demanding to-do list, I'd forgotten who I was.  I was full of self-doubt.  My life was small, self-centered, isolated, petty, safe, and ineffective.  I remembered my name, whom I was married to, and who my kids were, but what I did and who I was responsible for overshadowed my sense of being God's daughter."

"To everyone else I had a name that was attached to a job description.  I was mother to my children, wife to my husband,  .... but to God Most High, I was simply daughter.  As I focused on just being his and what all that meant, life and strength flowed into my days, and rest entered my soul.  My heart enlarged. .... I began to step out of the shadow of my insecurities, fears, comfort zone, and failures and began to reach out to others."

"At other times, they gasp as though they've breathed in the revelation and realized it's okay to be beautiful and fierce."

"Will we supersede the conflicting noise and arguments that say our contribution is not necessary, not God breathed?"  (Oh how I needed to hear this)

"Because of fear, I had forfeited strength, life, and beauty.  I had lost a sense of my true self, and with that loss so much of what God wanted for me was yet unrealized"

"I've seen many women terrified by their own strength.  They recoil in fear if ideas, questions, or passions arise unbidden within them.  Strength is not to be feared; it is to be embraced"

"I see gross wickedness and global injustice exposed and conquered on many fronts by an encounter with God's inescapable light and his unassailable justice.  I see his daughters stretching forth like lionesses preparing to pounce.  I see all this in our future.  Like you, I do not see those things because I read the paper.  I see them because I have eyes to see in the Spirit."  (Can we shout AMEN??)

"It is easier not to have seen or heard.  Because this is true, most turn from those disturbing sounds and images and quickly fill our ears and eyes with distractions" (I wish I could say this is not true - but it is)

"How loud must the alarm of our time become before we are fully aroused and fully awake?"  (I want to shout this statement!!)

"Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves; ensure justice for those being crushed.  Yes, speak up for the poor and helpless, and see that they get justice." - Prov. 31:8-9, NLT

"Yes, that is what they are - our sisters.  They are not prostitutes by choice; they are victims and courageous survivors."

"Well-behaved women rarely make history" - Laurel Thatcher Ulrich

"What would happen if, like the lions, we were dangerous and fully awake?  Then and only then would we pose any threat to the darkness that holds so many captive."

"We are the collective body of Christ, and as such we are destined for triumph, victory, signs and wonders."

That's only 60 pages people - I've still got 3/4 of the book to read!  I am on fire after reading this book so far!  It motivates me to action.  I'm excited to see where God will lead, what darkness he will use me to turn to light.  I'm ready.  It is time.  Who's with me?

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Book Review - Words


It's been a long time since I've read a book which has so grabbed my attention that falling asleep before getting to the end is not possible.  This book - was the book.  Words is a fiction story written by Ginny L. Yttrup about a little girl who is being horribly abused.  Her Mom abandons her and she hangs onto hope that her Mom "has amnesia" and will return soon to rescue her.  She doesn't leave, afraid of what he will do to her - and even more afraid the day she chooses to leave, will be the day her Mom comes back for her.

I was not surprised at the end of the book to read the author's comments and find she shared a similar life story to the little girl in the book.  There are some things you can not write about that accurately without having walked the road.  Was it a difficult read for me?  Yes - I could feel the little girls pain, hear her heart's cry.  I understood her words, and I understood her silence (read the book).

Yet, at the same time, the story of Sierra - the young woman who comes across the little girl in the woods, is also the story of who I choose to be now.  Someone who does not turn a blind eye to abuse, someone unafraid to walk into the middle of it and be the Jesus little girls need to see.  Someone who cares enough to hurt, to cry, to do whatever it takes to bring freedom to little girls enslaved by men (and women) who use them for their own sexual and monetary gain.  I do not say these things to lift myself up - but merely to share with you the passion in my heart for little girls like Kaylee - in desperate need of someone to make them feel safe.  In desperate need of a chain-breaking, freedom- granting, shame-lifting God who loves them far more than they know.

I encourage you to read this book.  It may be fiction - but it is truth.  The feelings Kaylee experiences, the abuse she suffers - ring true for all sexually abused and used girls.  If you have a heart for girls like Kaylee, you know a Kaylee (and all of us do whether we realize it or not), or you are a Kaylee - read the book.

Kudos to the author for speaking the truth,  sharing her heart & story and being unafraid of addressing this issue.  I pray it shines a light in a very dark place for someone out there and leads them to Jesus.

Friday, March 4, 2011

Book thoughts


I picked up this free e-book recently.  It's on politics and Christianity.  I'm not a big politics person and in some ways, find myself on both sides of the fence.  Anti-abortion, conservative - yet find social justice very important.  Lean towards liberal on immigration, lean towards conservative in other areas.  Doesn't make me real popular with either crowd.  I consider it balanced and biblical - but that's just my opinion.  Anyway - here's some thoughts from the book Healing for a Broken World:  Christian Perspective on Public Policy by Steve Monsma that I found interesting.

"Fourth, Wilberforce and his fellow Clapham reformers worked for the greater good of society as a whole.  They were not, as an evangelical special-interest group, out to protect the narrow self-interests of their fellow believers or their social class.  They sought the common good, not their own welfare.  Wilberforce and almost all the Clapham group were people of wealth and social standing.  Yet time and again they took on the causes of the poorest and least of their day.  The Africans, who were the victims of the unimaginably cruel practices of the slave traders, were not fellow Christian believers and were totally dispossessed with no legal rights at all.  Nevertheless, Wilberforce and his coworkers labored for over twenty years to stop this abominable business.  They challenged the exploitation of India even though, if anything, it would hurt their own social class's economic wealth."

"The real issue today is not whether one is a Democrat or Republican, but whether one is committed to justice for all.  This means we must defend the rights of those with whom we disagree.  Suppressing their freedoms in the name of religion is just as wrong as for them to suppress ours."  - Ed Dobson

"But in their political activities, the Clapham group worked for freedom and more equitable treatment of others.  Their primary goal was not to protect their own religious freedom or to promote Christianity by the use of public polities.  Their concern was not to make Britain a great nation.  In fact, their efforts to end the slave trade and the purely exploitative policies toward India were seen in their day as weakening Britain economically and damaging it's great nation status.  Their concern was to be faithful to a God of love, who cares for all of his children of whatever nationality or race."

Monday, January 3, 2011

Captivating by John & Stasi Eldredge



A friend gave me this book and so far I've only read a quarter of the way through.  I think I've picked up this book before from the library - the cover looked familiar - but I haven't read it until now.  Timing was right then I suppose.

So far - I am enjoying the book.  It's good to know some of the things I experience as a woman are universal.  It's a great read and I am impressed with how well they describe things woman experience yet without categorizing us all as the same.

Here's some favorite quotes so far:

"I know I am not alone in this nagging sense of failing to measure up, a feeling of not being good enough as a woman.  Every woman I've ever met feels it - something deeper than just the sense of failing at what she does.  An underlying, gut feeling of failing as who she is.  I am not enough, and I am too much at the same time.  Not pretty enough, not thin enough, not kind enough, not gracious enough, not disciplined enough.  But too emotional, too needy, too sensitive, too strong, too opinionated, too messy."  (Amen Brother Ben)

"There is something fierce in the heart of a woman.  Simply insult her children, her man, or her best friend and you'll get a taste of it"  (LOL - and I thought I was unique in this aspect!)

"Sometimes the idea of living as a hermit appeals to all of us.  No demands, no needs, no pain, no disappointment.  But that is because we have been hurt, are worn out.  In our heart of hearts, that place where we are most ourselves, we don't want to run away for very long" (I'm in hermit mode currently)

"So God endows Woman with certain qualities that are essential to relationship, qualities that speak of God.  She is inviting.  She is vulnerable (I work very hard at not being).  She is tender.  She embodies mercy.  She is also fierce and fiercely devoted.  As the old saying goes, "Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned."  That's just how God acts when he isn't chosen.  "I, the Lord your God, am a jealous God who will not share your affection with any other god!" (Ex. 20:5 NLT).  A woman's righteous jealousy speaks of the jealousy of God for us."  (Never thought of all that before. Lightbulb moment.)

As I said - so far - I'm really enjoying this book.  I usually stick to fiction and have a hard time following through on books like this.  I get distracted easily in the non-fiction world.  However, this one seems to be an exception.  I'll let you know how it finishes up at a later date.  Maybe you should pick up a copy and check it out as well.  At this point, I think it would make a great study.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

What's Your Favorite Book?

Favorite Book

Do you have ANY idea how difficult this is for me?  I have literally read hundreds, if not thousands, of books.  Of course, there is THE book - and that's a give - my BIBLE!!  But outside of that? Goodness - I don't know!!  Here's some goodies I've read along the way.  Warning - this is a heavy reading list - none of these are easy to read (except Crazy Love).  In other words, grab a box of Kleenex or two!  In fact, making this list,  I realize I need to order some lighthearted stuff from the library!!

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What about YOU?  What's YOUR favorite book?  Is it something funny, heavy, serious?  Is it a mystery, an autobiography?  Tell Me :-) 
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