Saturday, February 22, 2025

Like Him: A Thoughtful, Intentional Pursuit to Becoming As Christ Is

 

8/10

I read this a little over five months ago. Gave this one a looksie because my old man is one of the contributing authors, bringing the book home with the final chapter in the book, smashing it out of the park as per usual. His was the best one, obvy. It was a good book overall and I liked the concept. It's a collection of short chapters on 12 core attributes of Christ: Godliness, Hope, Brotherly Kindness, Patience, Temperance, Virtue, Love & Charity, Diligence, Faith, Humility, Knowledge, and Obedience. There were two chapters from different authors per attribute. So my Dad's was on obedience and he tells a cool story about the "Wherever He Leads Me" painting of Christ overlooking Jerusalem before entering knowing full well that he will soon be laying down his life, but he will be obedient and go wherever he is led. There were some other good chapters in there as well, such as the one from S. Michael Wilcox who always crushes it, and Susan Easton Black, among others. The artwork is a big part of the book. I'm not much of an art guy. Some of the art seemed pretty good but a lot of it was of a certain style that was "different" and not in a good way. But that's from a guy who knows nothing about art, so take that for what it's worth.

Sunday, February 9, 2025

Aftermath: Life Debt by Chuck Wendig

 

8/10

I read this one a little less than five months ago. I ended up liking this one pretty well. It got off to a slow start, mostly because it had been a few years since I had read the first book in the series, and I couldn't really remember who was who. But the storyline ended up being quite interesting and a major upgrade to the first Aftermath story. Some classic Star Wars characters play a major part in this book, such as Leia, Han Solo and Chewbacca, so that was fun. I also wasn't as bugged by Wendig's writing style as I was with the first one. Glad I stuck with this series and am now looking forward to finishing the series off, hopefully in the not-too-distant future.

Star Wars book rankings:

1. Lost Stars

2. Aftermath: Life Debt

3. Battlefront: Twilight Company

4. Aftermath

Sunday, February 2, 2025

The Duel and Other Stories by Anton Chekhov

 

6/10

I read this one a little less than six months ago. It's been a while since I've read Russian literature, and this was my first experience with Chekhov. This has six short stories: The Duel; My Wife; Murder; The Black Monk; Terror; and The Two Volodyas. The Duel was easily my favorite, probably a solid 8/10, and I was very satisfied with my intro to Chekhov. But the others weren't nearly as good, in my opinion. My Wife and The Black Monk were fine. Murder was ok. And for the life of me, after less than six months, I can't remember almost anything about Terror or The Two Volodyas, which likely means that I had checked out at that point and was ready to move on from Chekhov until another time. Also, they were super short, 12 and 11 pages respectively. Far too short to really be worthwhile. The Duel was 100 pages while My Wife was 40, Murder 30, and The Black Monk 30. In most cases, I do prefer a story that is long enough to allow it to develop. And that's the case here where the longer the story, the more I ended up liking it.

Quotes from The Duel:

"I have an uncle, just an ordinary parish priest, whose faith is such that when he goes into the fields to pray for rain during a drought, he takes his umbrella and a leather coat to avoid a soaking on the way home. There's faith for you!"

"'The boat's tossed back,' he thought; 'it makes two movements forward and one back, but the oarsmen don't give up, they swing the oars tirelessly and have no fear of the high waves. The boat moves on and on, now it's disappeared from view. In half an hour the rowers will be able to see the ship's lights clearly and within an hour they'll be alongside the ladder. Life is like that ... As they search for truth people take two paces forward and one back. Suffering, mistakes and life's tedium throw them back, but thirst for the truth and stubborn willpower drive them on and on. And who knows? Perhaps they'll arrive at the real truth in the end.'"

Quote from Murder:

"But a little later, when I was at confession, the idea suddenly dawned on me: that priest's married, he doesn't keep the fasts and he smokes. Then why should he hear me confess, what authority did he have to pardon my sins, with him more of a sinner than me?"