I can lose myself in a book, but,
better than that, I can also find myself. This is the list of my favorite books
read during 2016, whatever year they were published in. A few of them fall in
the finding-myself category.
Fiction
Elizabeth
Goudge, The Bird in the Tree (1940): An old book by a favorite author.
The protagonist is an grandmother, and the plot circles around family and
difficult choices of the younger generations. Goudge’s writing is thick with
description of the land, the birds, the forest, and the people, and rich in
insights about human nature. Definitely old-fashioned but worth reading again.
Oliver Potzsch,
The Hangman’s Daughter (2010): A grim but fascinating historical novel,
based on the author’s ancestor who was the hangman (torturer of confessions,
executioner) in a medieval German village.
Anthony Doerr, All
the Light We Cannot See (2015): One of my favorites, this amazing and
beautiful story is set in World War II, on Saint Malo, a city island off the
coast of France that was destroyed by the Germans toward the end of the war.
The story follows the lives of two children, a blind girl in France and an
orphan boy from a stark mining town in Germany. Both have minds awake and a
hunger to learn. Their lives come together on the island. The book stokes the
fires of longing for kindness, grace, and all the light we cannot see.
Emily St. John
Mandel, Station Eleven (2014): A well-written futuristic fantasy of the
survivors of a pandemic flu that kills 99% of the earth’s population. The story
weaves back and forth in time, following the lives of several protagonists who
eventually come together to build a new civilization.
Ruta Sepetys, Between
Shades of Gray (2011): A young adult novel about a 15-year-old Lithuanian
girl in 1941, at the time of the Soviet take-over of the Baltic countries. The
author draws from stories of her own family members. It shows the courage of
the human spirit at its best, human cruelty at its worst, and always hope, like
the line of sun on the horizon after the long Artic winter, showing between
shades of gray.
David
Wroblewski, The Story of Edgar Sawtelle (2008): A remarkable about a
mute boy on a Wisconsin farm and a family that raises and trains dogs. A
coming-of-age story involving an escape from home and a return to face old
tragedies.
Kate Atkinson, Life
After Life (2013): A strange but compelling novel that explores the possibility
of returning to life, after death, to try to “get it right.” The book sashays
back and forth in time from Ursula’s birth in 1910 where in her first life she
dies shortly after birth. Each section takes her on to her death, occurring at
a different point in her life. What stood out to me were the small decisions
and incidents that made all the difference, the gravity of the seemingly
insignificant.
Carol Shields, Unless
(2002): The protagonist is a writer struggling with her second novel and
the real life trauma of her homeless non-responsive daughter. The chapter
titles are all connecting words or phrases such as “unless,” “although,” “not
yet,” “thus,” and so on, giving the idea of being somewhere in the middle,
neither subject nor predicate, a person on hold from life. Beautifully written,
clever observation of detail, stimulating reflections.
Non-Fiction
Scot McKnight, The
Blue Parakeet (2008): Helpful book about hermeneutics, taking into account
how we all pick and choose what we ignore in the Bible. Gives criteria for
reading the Bible in its original context and interpreting it into our
contexts. Especially encourages careful consideration of “blue parakeets,”
those troublesome passages we normally try to overlook—about women, war,
sexuality, etc.” Could be helpful to NWYM at this time.
Hali Felt, Soundings:
The Story of the Remarkable Woman Who Mapped the Ocean Floor (2012): story
of Marie Tharp who fought the odds as a woman to be an oceanographer. I’d never
heard of her before. Between 1950 and into the 1970s, she mapped the entire
ocean floor and in that process discovered the rift valley that circles the
globe, today known as the Mid-Oceanic Rift.
William L.
DeArteaga, Agnes Sanford and her Companions (2015): The subtitle is,
“The Assault on Cessationism and the Coming of the Charismatic Renewal.”
Fascinating history of one of the most important, and unrecognizeed,
theologians of the 20th Century. She is one who brought healing back
to the church. Her work was formative for Hal and me as we started out on our
adventures as cross-cultural servants of the Kingdom.
Eric Metaxas, Seven
Women and the Secret of Their Greatness (2013): Brief biographies of Joan
of Arc, Susanna Wesley, Hannah More, Saint Maria of Paris, Corrie ten Boom,
Rosa Parks and Mother Teresa. Inspiring and informative. I seem to have focused
on biographies of women this year.
Marie Kondo, The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up (2014): Hal and I enjoyed reading this as an exercise in cross-cultural perspectives, noting all the worldview issues coming from an Eastern culture with an animistic background (although the author is a modern urbanite). We chuckled at the idea of rolling up your socks in such a way that they sense your gratitude for all they do for your feet...and so on. But I also found the book helpful and encouraging as we faced the ongoing tasks of decluttering and organizing.
Dallas Willard,
Hearing God: Developing A Conversational Relationship with God (1984,
1999): This is a book I plan to regularly re-read. It encourages me in my
relationship of intimacy with God.
Esther:
I read the biblical book of Esther in November and found it helpful as I looked
back on the whole election year, and now, as I wrestle with the results of the
election and the future of our nation. The story of a capricious, foolish, impulsive,
rich, immoral but powerful political leader and the resulting precarious
position of the people in his realm gives me courage. The book gives insight
about how to be the people of God in such a situation.
Poetry
Margaret Rozga,
Justice Freedom Herbs (2015): Rozga’s poetic reflections on the social
justice battles of the 60s awaken my own memories and feelings from that era.
And the struggle continues. I’m glad some of the “warriors” are also poets and
gardners.
T. S. Elliot: Four
Quartets (1943): I continue basking in the beauty of Elliot’s language,
only intuitively grasping his meaning. Little by little.
Arthur O.
Roberts, Prayers at Twilight (2003): Since Arthur’s death, I find these imaginative
reflections on heaven poignant. More questions and ponderings than actual
reflections, of course, Arthur knows the answers now.
Good news book lovers, All the Light We Cannot See: A Novel Audiobook is available on AudioBooksNow.
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