Thursday, August 14, 2014

The Idiot by Fyodor Dostoevsky

7/10

I just finished reading this book tonight. It is my third Dostoevsky book (Crime and Punishment and The Brothers Karamazov are the others and have already been posted on this here blog). It is my third favorite of the three. That being said, I enjoyed this book. Dostoevsky is just so, so good.

The book is about this guy who, as one character in the book explains, "anyone who chose could deceive him, and...he would forgive anyone afterwards who had deceived him..." I think that line sums up the hero of this novel best. Another line, from the same character, describes him as "Don Quixote, only serious and not comic."

Dostoevsky stated in letters to others while writing this book that he was attempting to create "a perfectly beautiful man." He is a "holy fool" and a Christ-type figure. Everyone views him as an idiot because of his simpleness. But at the same time everyone recognizes his compassion and tendency to sympathize with all and see the good in others no matter what. He is viewed as an idiot because he is different than the rest of society. He seemed to me to be quite intelligent and a man with a pure heart.

There were ups and downs in the book. The book is split into 4 parts. All of Part One is simply fantastic. It started so good that I thought that I would maybe like it as much as or more than the other two books of his that I have read. Part Two dropped off a bit for me as our hero takes somewhat of a backseat to other characters. I really liked the last few chapters of Part Two and the first few chapters of Part Three. The book ends tremendously as the second half of Part Four is very well done. That's how I see it anyway.

There is also this extremely tremendous bit of a guy describing a painting he saw of Christ in the tomb and how it made him feel. It is pure Dostoevsky awesomeness. I want to quote it in here verbatim but it's pretty long. It's just something that you won't read in any book anywhere else other than in a Dostoevsky book. Oh, and here's a picture of the painting:
 I guess Dostoevsky saw this painting in a museum and stood there and stared at it forever until his wife had to finally pull him away.

There's also interesting parts about what goes on in the mind of a man who is on the verge of being executed. Dostoevsky would know because he was sentenced to death when he was 28 and was let off the hook at the last second. And by let off the hook, I mean sent to a prison in Siberia for four years and then forced into the Russian military for six years.

This is a good book and worth a looksie. But if you haven't read Dostoevsky then I would recommend you read Crime and Punishment and The Brothers Karamazov first.

I've gone on surprisingly long, so I will limit the quote selections:

"Grown-up people do not know that a child can give exceedingly good advice even in the most difficult case.... The soul is healed by being with children."

"God has just such gladness every time he sees from heaven that a sinner is praying to Him with all his heart, as a mother has when she sees the first smile on her baby's face...; that is the whole conception of God as our Father and of God's gladness in man, like a father's in his own child"

"[F]rom my numerous observations, our Liberals are never capable of letting anyone else have a conviction of his own without at once meeting their opponent with abuse or even something worse."

"In scattering the seed, scattering your 'charity,' your kind deeds, you are giving away, in one form or another, part of your personality, and taking into yourself part of another; you are in mutual communion with one another, a little more attention and you will be rewarded with the knowledge of the most unexpected discoveries. You will come at last to look upon your work as a science; it will lay hold of all your life, and may fill up your whole life. On the other hand, all your thoughts, all the seeds scattered by you, perhaps forgotten by you, will grow up and take form. He who has received them from you will hand them on to another. And how can you tell what part you may have in the future determination of the destinies of humanity?"

Saturday, August 9, 2014

Out of the Silent Planet by C.S. Lewis

4/10

This was one of the first books I read after my mission. I remember because it is the book that I brought with me to Zion's National Park which I went to two weeks after coming home. I remember being really excited to read it and had extremely high expectations. Unfortunately, my expectations turned out to be too high and I was a bit disappointed overall with this book.

It is the first book of a science fiction trilogy (science fiction has never really been my thing for the most part). I have read the second book (which I will post about in a future day) but have still not gotten around to reading the third one. Mostly because of lost interest I believe.

The book is about this guy who is abducted by aliens and brought to some planet. He spends most of the book on the run and there are interesting parts here and there. And, as always with C.S., there is some interesting Christian allegory woven in.

I wouldn't necessarily recommend this book to anyone, but wouldn't persuade anyone to avoid it either. It's a quick 160 pages, so a person could give this book a try without much commitment and then decide if they want to move forward with the other books in the series.

Thursday, August 7, 2014

The Gunslinger by Stephen King

1/10

I read this over nine years ago and I disliked it so much. The best part about having read this book nine years ago is that I no longer remember anything about it. But even while I was reading it and immediately afterward I still had no idea what I was reading/had just read. It was pure gibberish to me from the get-go. It was just two guys chasing each other around in the wilderness and mountains or something. The story was just super jumpy and disorienting. Weird. Pointless. This is definitely one of my least favorite books of all time. Probably bottom 5. Or even bottom 3. And it is to this day the only Stephen King book that I have read. Swing and a miss Mr. King, swing and a miss.

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith

9/10

I read this many years ago. I selected the most common book cover photo above because I couldn't find anywhere online a picture of my more obscure, classic book cover. Oh wells.

So Joseph Smith is the man. This is a chronological compilation of his quotes from his sermons and writings, put together by Joseph Fielding Smith. He talked about so many things. But one thing that stood out is how often he spoke about obtaining knowledge and how important that is. And it is impossible to read this book and not recognize how incredibly knowledgeable Joseph Smith was. So intelligent. I love reading his words and learning from him. My book is marked up on pretty much every single page where I underlined great quotes.

Quotes, some of the many:

"He that can mark the power of Omnipotence, inscribed upon the heavens, can also see God's own handwriting in the sacred volume: and he who reads it oftenest will like it best, and he who is acquainted with it, will know the hand wherever he can see it"

"Men who have no principle of righteousness in themselves, and whose hearts are full of iniquity, and have no desire for the principles of truth, do not understand the word of truth when they hear it."

"Ever keep in exercise the principle of mercy, and be ready to forgive our brother on the first intimations of repentance, and asking forgiveness; and should we even forgive our brother, or even our enemy, before he repent or ask forgiveness, our heavenly Father would be equally as merciful unto us."

"It is no more incredible that God should save the dead, than that he should raise the dead."

"Suppose that Jesus Christ and holy angels should object to us on frivolous things, what would become of us? We must be merciful to one another, and overlook small things."

"Nothing is so much calculated to lead people to forsake sin as to take them by the hand, and watch over them with tenderness."

"Happiness is the object and design of our existence; and will be the end thereof, if we pursue the path that leads to it; and this path is virtue, uprightness, faithfulness, holiness, and keeping all the commandments of God."

"He never will institute an ordinance or give a commandment to His people that is not calculated in its nature to promote that happiness which He has designed."

"There is no salvation between the two lids of the Bible without a legal administrator."

"No man can receive the Holy Ghost without receiving revelations. The Holy Ghost is a revelator."

"[T]here are so many fools in the world for the devil to operate upon, it gives him the advantage oftentimes."