The Weekly Wrap: July 27-August 2

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The Weekly Wrap: July 27-August 2

Reading Logs

The story began with a post from the Columbus Metropolitan Library about one of their patrons who recently passed. What was extraordinary about Dan Pelzer was that he kept a hand-written log of all the books he read between 1962 and 2023, 3599 in all! His family created a website reproducing the log. The story was subsequently picked up in the national media including The New York Times and Smithsonian Magazine (one of the five articles below).

I was intrigued in part because Dan Pelzer was from my home town of Columbus. But also, I have kept a reading log since the early 1980’s, when it was a hand-written list like Pelzer’s and since 2011 on Goodreads. And since February of 2014 my Month in Reviews posts list all the books I’ve read. And from the running tally I kept on the hand-written list and my Goodreads tally, I think I may have Pelzer beat! I need to do some work since the lists may overlap.

The value of the reading log, in whatever form is not only that it reminds me of what I’ve read (sometimes saving me from re-buying a book I’ve read). It also is a kind of record of my life. Looking back at what I’ve read reminds me of what we were talking about at the time.

Part of me wishes I’d kept up the hand-written tally. This would allow me (and perhaps my family) to have this all in one place. I don’t expect a Times story. I also wish I’d begun this practice earlier. I’ve always been a reader.] I would love to reconstruct my reading list from the 1970’s!

Five Articles Worth Reading

This Man Kept a Meticulous List of All 3,599 Books He’d Read Since 1962. When He Died, His Family Published It Online.” This article tells Dan Pelzer’s story, includes local coverage and interviews with family and link’s to Dan’s list. Perhaps this will inspire you!

Speaking of lists, “W.H. Auden’s 1941 Syllabus Asked Students to Read 32 Great Literary Works, Totaling 6,000 Pages.” Educators complain about not being able to get students to read a complete book. For a sixteen week semester, students probably needed to read 400 pages a week. And this was for one class!

In Defense of Laughter” explores the humorist art of Dave Barry and how challenging it is to be funny in print.

In “Colony, Aviary and Zoo,” David Denby, a literary critic, explores the distinctive brand of literary criticism featured in The Partisan Review. He described their editorial approach as “a demand for intellectual toughness, for originality and force, for an end to rote position-taking and inane redemption narratives.” The article gives a flavor of the New York intellectual scene in the mid-century.

Finally, Sadie Stein writes about “My Love-Hate Relationship With Hans Christian Andersen.” And I agree. The Little Match Girl” might rank among the saddest of stories.

Quote of the Week

Emily Brontë was born on July 30, 1818. She made this pithy observation that we might use to evaluate the actions of all our public officials:

“Honest people don’t hide their deeds.”

Miscellaneous Musings

I used to be able to read with instrumental music in the background or in noisy coffee shops. That is not so true anymore. With all but the lightest reading, I need silence. Perhaps it is because I’m operating on fewer brain cells. But writing is different for some reason. I have Gilbert & Sullivan’s Pirates of Penzance playing in the background as I write this post.

Self-knowledge, both of what we do well and enjoy doing, and what we do not do well, is a gift. For example, Mark Twain was a great humorist and writer and a great lecturer. Had he stuck to that he would have enlarged the fortune his wife Livy brought to their marriage. Sadly, he tried to be a publisher and entrepreneur pursuing an ill-begotten typesetting machine. He did not have good business sense and imperiled his family’s finances. One of the lessons from Chernow’s biography of Twain.

I won’t be purchasing this but The Folio Society is selling finely bound and illustrated sets of Jane Austen’s six major works. Only 750 will be published at $250 per set, to celebrate her 250th birthday. You can read about it in “The Folio Society Celebrates Jane Austen’s 250th Birthday with Limited Edition Box Set.” Perhaps this is as good a time as any to confess that I’ve never read Austen. Maybe I ought to get onto that!

Next Week’s Reviews

Monday: Jerome W. Berryman, Teaching Godly Play

Tuesday: William Kent Krueger, Tamarack County

Wednesday: Charles McNamara, Learning to be Fair

Thursday: Georges Simenon, The Late Monsieur Gallet

Friday: Walter R. Strickland II, Swing Low: An Anthology of Black Christianity in America (Volume 2)

So, that’s The Weekly Wrap for July 27-August 2!

Find past editions of The Weekly Wrap under The Weekly Wrap heading on this page

The Month in Reviews: July 2025

Cover image of "Cutting for Stone" by Abraham Verghese.

The Month in Reviews: July 2025

Introduction

Looking over the books I read this past month is a bit like looking at a wildflower planting in full bloom. There is such a wide variety represented, among which are a number of books to engage the mind and delight the heart. My reading ranged from American intellectual history to oral histories of early major league baseball players. I began the month with a marvelous history of Black Christianity in America and finished it with an exquisitely illustrated children’s book on the theme of caring for God’s creation.

My readings explored both a narrative of someone who remained a Christian while interviewing numerous skeptics and of a pastor who has come to doubt orthodox Christian beliefs. I read biographies of John Hancock and St. Teresa of Avila. Then I reviewed a couple of well-researched and written books on marriage and sexuality. While reading some longer books, I appreciated a concise commentary on 1 and 2 Thessalonians, a booklet on faith and science, and a novella by Graham Greene. So walk with me through this garden of reviews!

The Reviews

Swing Low, Volume 1: A History of Black Christianity in the United StatesWalter R. Strickland II. IVP Academic (ISBN: 9781514009369) 2024. A history of African-American Christianity tracing stories of social uplift and the lives of faithful Black Christians. Review

Kingdom through CovenantPeter J. Gentry and Stephen J. Wellum. Crossway (ISBN: 9781433553073) 2012, 2018. (My review is of the first edition, the link to the 2nd edition with revised and updated content.) A biblical-theological exploration of covenants, how they are related and unfold the reality of God’s kingdom. Review

1 & 2 Thessalonians: A Life in LettersJohannes W. H. van der Bijl. Langham Global Library (ISBN: 9781786410962) 2025. A narrative commentary based on Acts and 1 and 2 Thessalonians, on the first half of Paul’s second missionary journey. Review

John HancockWillard Sterne Randall. Dutton (ISBN: 9780593472149) 2025. A biography going beyond the flourishing signature to the critical role Hancock played in the American Revolution. Review

Corridors of Power (Strangers and Brothers, 9), C. P. Snow. Open Road Media (ASIN: B0DCPBFBZT) 2024 (first published in 1964). An ambitious member of Parliament challenges Britain’s nuclear policy in the aftermath of the Suez crisis. Review

The Marriage You WantSheila Wray Gregoire and Dr. Keith Gregoire. Baker Books (ISBN: 9781540903761) 2025. Building a rich marriage partnership marked by balance, affection, responsibility, and emotional connection. Review

The Glory of Their Times, Lawrence S. Ritter. Harper Perennial (ISBN: 9780061994715) 2010 (first published in 1966). Oral histories by twenty-six former players from the early days of baseball, playing from the 1900’s to the 1940’s. Review

Sexuality and Sex Therapy, Second EditionMark A Yarhouse and Erica S. N. Tan. IVP Academic (ISBN: 9781514010976) 2025. A resource for Christian therapists, counselors, and the church affirming the blessing of our sexuality. Review

The Life of the Mind in America: From the Revolution to the Civil War, Books One Through Three, Perry Miller. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich (ISBN: 9780156519908) 1965. The first three books of an intellectual history of the influences that shaped the American mind. Review

Cutting for StoneAbraham Verghese. Vintage Books (ISBN: 9780375714368) 2010. Twins Marion and Shiva were born amidst tragedy involving their mother’s death and father’s flight. Review

Why I’m Still a ChristianJustin Brierly. Tyndale | Elevate (ISBN: 9781496466938) 2025. After two decades of interviews with atheists and skeptics, the author explains why he still follows Christ. Review

Black Coffee(Hercule Poirot 7.5), Agatha Christie (stage play), Charles Osborne (novelization). William Morrow (ISBN: 9780061739323) 2004 (Stage play, 1930; Novelization, 1998). Poirot is too late to help Sir Claud, who has been fatally poisoned and his secret formula stolen by someone in his household. Review

Becoming the Pastor’s WifeBeth Allison Barr. Brazos Press (ISBN: 9781587435898) 2025. Examines the connection between the decline of female ordination and the rise of the role of pastor’s wife. Review

The Divine MilieuTeilhard de Chardin. Harper Perennial Modern Classics (ISBN: 9780060937256) 2001 (first published in 1957). How we grow into godlikeness in our active work and our passive diminishment, toward the uniting of all things in Christ. Review

Black Knight in Red Square, (Inspector Porfiry Rostnikov, 2), Stuart M. Kaminsky. Mysterious Press/Open Road Media (ISBN: 9781453269589) 2012 (first published in 1984). Rostnikov’s team races to stop a terrorist organization from causing mayhem at an international film festival. Review

True ConservatismAnthony T. Kronman. Yale University Press (ISBN: 9780300277036) 2025. A call to a humane conservatism that embraces enlightenment ideals without enlightenment prejudices or oversimplification. Review

Doubting FaithfullyKeith Long. Independently published (ISBN: 9798553814663) 2020. A memoir by a pastor who came to doubt Christianity and how he has proceeded from there. Review

Loser Takes All, Graham Greene. Penguin Classics (ISBN: 9780140185423) 1993 (first published in 1955). On a honeymoon in Monte Carlo, Bertram’s gambling successes force a choice between love and money. Review

Paul, Apostle of GraceFrank Thielman. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. (ISBN: 9780802876294) 2025. An introduction to the life and world of Paul based on Acts, his letters, and other sources including archaeology. Review

Does Science Make God Irrelevant? (TGC Hard Questions Series), Hans Madueme. Crossway (ISBN: 9781433597978) 2025. Proposes that science and faith may coexist as allies and that Christian assumptions make science possible. Review

The Life of Saint Teresa of Avila (Lives of Great Religious Books), Carlos Eire. Princeton University Press (ISBN: 9780691164939) 2019. An account both of St. Teresa’s life and of her autobiography recounting her encounters with the divine. Review

Abigail and the WaterfallSandra L. Richter, illustrated by Michael Corsini. IVP Kids (ISBN: 9781514008928) 2025. Abigail’s family hikes to a waterfall, sees the creatures that live there, and learns to care for their home. Review

Best Book of the Month

I chose Abraham Verghese’s Cutting for Stone, a book from 2010. I loved his more recent The Covenant of Water. This story involves tragedy, betrayal, and redemption, set in Haile Selassie’s Ethiopia. Verghese has a distinctive “voice” and an ability to evoke a sense of place.

Quote of the Month

After coming across him most of my adult life, I’m finally reading some Teilhard de Chardin. I came across this quote in The Divine Milieu:

“God, in all that is most living and incarnate in him, is not far away from us, altogether apart from the world we see, touch, hear, smell and taste about us. Rather, he awaits us every instant in our action, in the work of the moment. There is a sense in which he is at the tip of my pen, my spade, my brush, my needle – of my heart and my thought.”

What I’m Reading

Speaking of de Chardin, I’ve moved on to his The Phenomenon of Man, his effort to integrate evolution and Christian eschatology. I’ve just begun, but I sense I will find this less “orthodox” than The Divine Milieu. I’m also reading a new book by Meryl Herr, on When Work Hurts. Specifically, she discusses various workplace struggles and disappointments and how we might think Christianly about work and calling in light of them. I’m also reading a couple of mysteries: Agatha Christie’s Peril at End House (Poirot and Hastings!) and Michael Innes’ What Happened at Hazelwood.

Finally, my BIG reading project is Ron Chernow’s Mark Twain. I’m 400 pages into this 1000+ page work. I had not realized the grief Twain brought on himself and his finances in his various business ventures, something he would have better avoided. Nor had I realized how significant his part was in the publication of Grant’s autobiography. I expect I’ll be reviewing this book late in August.

The Month in Reviews is my monthly review summary going back to 2014! It’s a great way to browse what I’ve reviewed. The search box on this blog also works well if you are looking for a review of a particular book. Thanks for stopping by

Review: Abigail and the Waterfall

Cover image of "Abigail and the Waterfall" by Sandra L. Richter, illustrated by Michael Corsini

Abigail and the Waterfall, Sandra L. Richter, illustrated by Michael Corsini. IVP Kids (ISBN: 9781514008928) 2025.

Summary: Abigail’s family hikes to a waterfall, sees the creatures that live there, and learns to care for their home.

Abigail’s family hikes in the nearby forest on the first Saturday of the month. This Saturday, they are hiking to Abigail’s favorite place! They walk through a thick forest, noticing the birds and animals that make their home there. Then, she notices the mist in the air and dragonflies flitting about. They are getting close!

But as they run ahead, mom encourages them to stay on the trail. Creek banks are fragile environments, and creatures shelter under vegetation, which also filters the water. Finally, Abigail’s favorite place comes into view, a freshwater creek with a waterfall! The darters in the water are a sign of the creek’s health.

Then they enjoy the delicious lunch mom packed while enjoying the sound of the water, the coolness of the air and the way the sun’s light filters through the trees. Butterflies and ducks look on. Afterwards, they are careful to pick up all their trash, remembering the time they rescued three darters caught in a plastic bag.

After lunch, it’s time to climb the rocks by the waterfall. As they peek over the top of the rocks, they see something “slimy and scary with BIG googly eyes!!” Dad identifies the creature as a Mountain Dusky Salamander. Abigail gets eyeball to eyeball but doesn’t touch and notices how beautiful is this creature who loves the waterfall.

Then it’s time to leave. As they return to their car and look over the forest valley, their hearts are full of thanks to God and a resolve to care for the home of all the creatures they’ve seen–especially the Mountain Dusky Salamander!

This delightful story invites us all to care for God’s world and the creatures who make it their home. Implicit in the story are things like limiting plastic use, caring for creek banks, and the self-purifying mechanisms of waterways. The author mentions these in the back.

The text is set against the lush, verdant illustrations of Michael Corsini. Children may be encouraged to look for creatures on each page, which are identified. The one thing you’ll have to watch if you read this with your children is that they may want to go on a hike like Abigail’s family takes. Prepare to plan one together!

___________________

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher for review.

Review: The Life of Saint Teresa of Avila

Cover image of "The Life of St. Teresa of Avila" by Carlos Eire

The Life of Saint Teresa of Avila (Lives of Great Religious Books), Carlos Eire. Princeton University Press (ISBN: 9780691164939) 2019

Summary: An account both of St. Teresa’s life and of her autobiography recounting her encounters with the divine.

The Life of Saint Teresa of Avila, or as it is often known, the Vida, is one of the great works onf the spiritual life, tracing the religious progress of Saint Teresa of Avila and her encounters, some quite ecstatic, with God. It was so controversial at the time that it was not published for two decades. In this volume of the Lives of Great Religious Books. Carlos Eire not only offers an account of her life and the composition of the book. He also traces its after-history of reception and interpretation, down to the present.

Eire begins with her life story. He emphasizes the place of good books in her life. She entered the convent at age twenty and nearly died of an illness. However, it would be another twelve years of convent routines before Teresa’s transformation. This came when venerating a new image of Christ brought to the convent. From here, she rapidly evolved into a mystic, experiencing instances of union with God that included visions, raptures and even levitations. Eire also notes the influences of other mystics, including Francis Borgia and Pedro de Alcantara. This awakening resulted not only in mystical experiences of union with God, but a series of writings beginning with the Vida, and her leadership of efforts to reform the Carmelite order, resulting in establishing the Discalced Carmelites.

The origin of the Vida was less her desire to get her story out than a directive of her spiritual advisors, a kind of confession to answer questions about her experiences. This was the time of the Spanish Inquisition. Her unusual experiences raised eyebrows. It was fascinating to see how the work developed under her advisors oversight, which she heeded, which probably saved her from outright condemnation as a heretic. She had both defenders and opponents. She both remained free while the Inquisition succeeded in suppressing her work.

Eire then walks us through the content of the Vida. He sets the book in the context of her reading. He also discusses major themes, including mental prayer, the Four Waters, the prayers of quiet and union, and mystical phenomenon.

Then he turns to the afterlife of the Vida. Teresa died in 1582. He discusses both the lingering opposition to the work and its spread, including numerous translations. He also traces the representation of the Vida in art, which underscored the rapturous character of some of her experiences. The final chapters explore her treatment in modernity and in post-modern criticism. This includes those skeptical of her accounts, those who psychoanalyzed her experiences, and even Spanish fascists who sought to appropriate her for their cause. The book concludes with her elevation as a Doctor of the Church by Paul VI. Eire notes how her treatment as doctor orationis (Doctor of Prayer) remains in conflict with modern and post-modern readings of her life.

I’ve read Teresa’s Interior Castle but not the Vida. Eire’s account made me want to do so. And his commentary makes this an ideal companion that I’ll want to have on hand should I do so.

__________

Thanks for visiting Bob on Books.  I appreciate that you spent time here. Feel to “look around” – see the tabs at the top of the website, and the right hand column. And use the buttons below to share this post. Blessings! [Adapted from Enough Light, a blog I follow.]

Review: Does Science Make God Irrelevant?

Cover image of "Does Science Make God Irrelevant?" by Hans Madueme

Does Science Make God Irrelevant? (TGC Hard Questions Series), Hans Madueme. Crossway (ISBN: 9781433597978) 2025.

Summary: Proposes that science and faith may coexist as allies and that Christian assumptions make science possible.

“Does science make God irrelevant?” In my experience, that is not even a question for many. Rather, they assume it is a settled fact. For such people, they do not object to belief, if you need this to get through life. Rather, they make sense of the world just fine without God, thank you. It’s also my experience that many of these people have high moral standards. After all, integrity is a high value if you are doing good science.

Hans Madueme, in this concise little book, proposes that pursuing science, and living by faith may walk hand in hand. He begins by debunking the idea that science and faith have been at war. Many of the earliest scientists were believing Christians, including Galileo. Galileo got into trouble more because of the politics of the religious establishment rather than a conflict between science and scripture. The Scopes trial was as much about promoting the town of Dayton as it was a faith-science conflict. John Scopes was put up to it by the ACLU.

In fact, Madueme argues, Christian assumptions undergird science. The Creator-creation distinction encourages investigation of the cosmos because it is not divine. Christian assumptions that the world is knowable, rational, and dependable are basic to science. Even the fall is related to science in providing a basis for empiricism rather than the assumption that one may simply philosophically “know” the world.

Rather, the problem for Madueme lies with “scientism,” the belief that “nothing but” science is needed for all human knowledge. Ironically, that assertion is not scientifically demonstrable. However, although Madueme argues against ideological naturalism, he notes that most Christians have no difficulty embracing methodological naturalism, seeing it as the way we study the book of nature.

Having argued that faith and science may be close allies, he discusses the challenge of evolution and the different ways Christians approach this challenge. While he tries to clarify some language, like “creationist,” he doesn’t propose a resolution in this short booklet. Rather than encourage an anti-science response to instances of bad science, he affirms the commitment Christians and most scientists share to integrity, to following the data where it leads. I would like to have seen Madueme address the anti-science stance in some parts of the church and the politicization of science.

Finally, Madueme concludes the book with a brief description of the “fine tuning argument.” This is the idea that there are some particular stringent conditions under which life may arise and that the odds of this happening are incredibly high. The presence of an intelligent creator is certainly consistent with this reality, although this does not constitute proof. He notes the multiverse theories proposed as an alternate explanation. However for the believing scientist, the incredible order of the world, its intricacy, and beauty all move one to praise.

Madueme does all this in 65 pages of text. Of course he offers brief summaries of much longer discussions you can find in his notes. But I’ve found in many conversations about such things, most people are not that interested (at least initially) in wading through a technical text of several hundred pages. A brief, cogent summary is often what is needed and what Madueme has provided.

___________________

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher for review.

Review: Paul, Apostle of Grace

Cover image of "Paul, Apostle of Grace" by Frank Thielman

Paul, Apostle of Grace, Frank Thielman. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. (ISBN: 9780802876294) 2025.

Summary: An introduction to the life and world of Paul based on Acts, his letters, and other sources including archaeology.

The sheer number of books on Paul, discussing aspects of his life and theology, attest to his continuing importance to our understanding of the early Christian movement. But often, these discussions focus on a particular book or theological theme. In addition, many of these discussions reflect the narrower scholarly consensus regarding the Pauline corpus. Many relegate Acts to secondary status.

Frank Thielman has written an overview to Paul’s life and world that sets his travels, mission, and writings in a wider historical and cultural context. Unlike some works, Thielman bases his account on all thirteen canonical letters of Paul as well as Acts. He also draws upon non-canonical sources and archaeology to round out this chronological account of Paul’s life, mission, trials, and death.

Beginning with Paul prior to the Damascus road, Thielman traces his travels and the context of each city and region in which he worked. He notes the theologically formative aspects of his training, his early meeting with Peter, and the developing vision of God’s grace for Jew and Gentile alike, formed at Syrian Antioch and elaborated throughout his ministry.

For example, Thielman develops the Jewish opposition Paul encountered in Syrian Antioch, Asia Minor, and Achaia over the inclusion of Gentiles without circumcision. For Paul, their inclusion, and table fellowship as one new people was essential in testifying to the grace of God in Christ. Likewise, Gentile solidarity with the Jerusalem church drove Paul’s collection.

Also, Thielman helps us understand the role and movements of Paul’s companions, notably Prisca and Aquila, Silas, and Timothy. And he fits the composition of each of the letters into Paul’s travels, and later, his imprisonment. He discusses the concerns occasioning each letter, how Paul responds, and how the letters may have been carried to their recipients.

Thielman argues for the reliability of Acts as a source and Luke as a historian and creates a chronology drawing both on letters and Acts. He does take positions on the chronology of Paul’s life that he describes as “outliers.” He equates the Jerusalem conference of Acts 15 with that described in Galatians 2. Thielman argues for Galatians as the earliest of Paul’s letters and affirms a southern hypothesis. He also argues for 1 Timothy, Titus, and 2 Timothy being written within the time covered by Acts. Thus, he argues that Paul was not released from his imprisonment and later re-imprisoned.

Thielman defends his reliance upon Acts and all thirteen canonical letters in his first appendix. And he discusses the imprisonment and the timing and manner of Paul’s death in appendices two and three.

The strength of Thielman’s work is that it reflects a scholarly account that reflects conservative convictions. He accepts the full Pauline corpus and the reliability of Acts. More than that, his account sets Paul’s ministry amid Jewish opposition, imperial concerns, and religious and commercial culture.

Thielman admits at the outset:

“Writing a book about Paul’s life is like putting together a puzzle of a thousand pieces, but a puzzle whose pieces can fit together in different ways. The best one can hope for, perhaps, is a picture that is reasonable and that, at least in some cases, is probable.”

On one hand, Thielman succeeds admirably in putting all the pieces together. However, this book is touted as a successor to F. F. Bruce’s Paul: The Apostle of the Heart Set Free. As a cohesive reckoning of all the details in a theologically conservative account, that certainly is the case. Thielman incorporates scholarship to which Bruce did not have access. But, in comparison to Bruce, this account seemed too concerned with all the puzzle pieces. While Thielman gets the theology of grace right, I felt the book lacked the overarching vision of grace’s liberating power for Paul and his ministry that I found in Bruce.

Nevertheless, this book is a great resource to read alongside Acts and the letters of Paul. It offers the “big picture” of Paul’s life. We see Paul’s ministry and his letters in context rather than just as disparate biblical passages. Thielman lays a good foundation for anyone pursuing further studies of Paul, the apostle of grace.

___________________

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher for review.

Thanks for visiting Bob on Books.  I appreciate that you spent time here. Feel to “look around” – see the tabs at the top of the website, and the right hand column. And use the buttons below to share this post. Blessings! [Adapted from Enough Light, a blog I follow.]

The Weekly Wrap: July 20-26

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The Weekly Wrap: July 20-26

Reading While Retired

I received a number of unexpected responses when I asked people how they found more time to read in a recent Facebook page post. One of the top responses was “retirement.”

That makes sense when you think about it. Work and work-related activities take a huge chunk out of our days. I retired last fall, and I read more. I enjoy getting a second cup of coffee and leisurely reading rather than logging onto a Zoom call or heading out for a meeting. And we’ve all heard how reading can keep us cognitively sharp!

This made me wonder if booksellers and publishers have “retirees” on their radar. I don’t see that in most of the newsletters I read. Not only do we have more time to read. We also have more time to shop for books!

My hunch is that most are less interested in the trendy than writers who tell a good story or help them make sense of their lives and our changing society. But I have not studied this systematically. Google’s AI tells me:

“Retirees’ reading interests are quite diverse, often including historical fiction, mysteries, classics, and books that explore themes of aging, relationships, and personal growth. They also enjoy literature that sparks conversation and engagement, like those often selected for book clubs.”

That tracks with my impressions. And I’m left wondering whether this is an untapped, or at least, unheeded market.

Five Articles Worth Reading

Among the classics of literature are books written in languages other than English. In “A Question of Purpose,” Gary Saul Morson considers the challenge of translating Russian works and argues that the most important factor is the purpose of the translation. He also contends that some of the recent well-received translations “are a disaster.”

I’ve seen recent ads featuring a star basketball “reading” but in reality playing a videogame. But there are athletes who read. “‘Literature has completely changed my life’: footballer Héctor Bellerín’s reading list” chronicles the soccer player’s impressive reading habits. But speaking of translations, he needed to read Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights in Spanish. Frankly, I’m impressed with someone reading that in any language.

Universities have been in crisis in recent years. This precedes the most recent administration’s attacks, which I believe are only worsening the situation. “Eight Books That Explain the University Crisis” is a helpful list to understand what has been happening in higher education over the last fifty years. While universities can’t do everything, they are a cultural “pillar” that must not be lost but strengthened and renewed.

You might have accessed this blog on social media. But for some people, social media occupies an outsized and unhealthy space in their lives. “Living a Life of Appstinence” is a conversation with Gabriela Nguyen about the Appstinence collective she leads and her 5D Method for getting off social media.

Finally, many of us know of bookstores for which one of their most endearing qualities is the bookstore cat or dog. Elizabeth Egan embarked on a cross-country journey to chronicle this phenomenon. In her photo-rich essay, “More Purring, More Buying? Why Bookstores Showcase Their Pets,” we learn the pets go far beyond just cats and dogs!

Quote of the Week

Poet Robert Graves was born on July 24, 1895. He commented:

“There’s no money in poetry, but then there’s no poetry in money, either.”

Some contemporary poets have confirmed the truth of his observation!

Miscellaneous Musings

Book clubs are perennially popular ways for gathering people. In recent years, various kinds of reading parties have gathered folks. Bookriot featured an article yesterday on “Everything You Need for a Reading Picnic.” With our torrid summers, I wonder whether spring or fall are better seasons to try this idea.

Well, I’ve taken the plunge–not into a pool–but into Ron Chernow’s Mark Twain. I’m a hundred pages in with over 900 to go. Like everything else I’ve read of Chernow’s, it’s an engrossing read. Look for my review of it in about a month!

An article by Danika Ellis caught my eye yesterday. “All 50 of the Most Read Books on Goodreads This Week are by White Authors” wonders why more people aren’t reading works by people of color. I would agree with her that there are some incredible writers. But for those of us who are white, it means some intentional effort to learn about them–but one I’ve found well worth the effort.

Next Week’s Reviews

Monday: Frank Thielman, Paul: Apostle of Grace

Tuesday: Hans Madueme, Does Science Make God Irrelevant

Wednesday: Carlos Eire, The Life of Saint Teresa of Avila

Thursday: Sandra L. Richter, Abigail and the Waterfall (a children’s book!)

Friday: The Month in Reviews: July 2025

So, that’s The Weekly Wrap for July 20-26!

Find past editions of The Weekly Wrap under The Weekly Wrap heading on this page

Review: Loser Takes All

Cover image of "loser Takes All" by Graham Greene.

Loser Takes All, Graham Greene. Penguin Classics (ISBN: 9780140185423) 1993 (first published in 1955).

Summary: On a honeymoon in Monte Carlo, Bertram’s gambling successes force a choice between love and money.

Mr. Bertram is getting married. Neither he nor Cary are affluent. He’s a low level accountant in a business firm, with few aspirations for advancement. But they are excited to share a frugal life with each other, beginning with a modest honeymoon in Bournemouth.

All that changes one day when he is called on to resolve some accounting problems for the firm’s director, Mr. Dreuther. He does so in short order. Bertram mentions his wedding plans and Dreuther insists on what is an enticing alternative. He invites him to go to Monte Carlo to get married, and then join him on his yacht for a sailing honeymoon. How can he and Cary say no to that!

They arrive in Monte Carlo. But there is no Mr. Dreuther. Bertram and Cary marry and enjoy their honeymoon suite. But they had not planned to stay. Bertram visits the casino in hopes of winning enough to afford it. They are living on snacks. At one point, the hotel even fronts him a loan as a member of Dreuther’s firm. He keeps losing until his “system” starts working and he wins enough to pay back the loan. He keeps winning, and at one point gains the balance of controlling shares in his firm from another firm director who has been losing at the tables.

But as he spends all his waking hours gambling or thinking about it, he loses something else. He loses Cary, who loved the hungry and poor Bertram, not this rich stranger. It all comes to a head when Bertram discovers Cary has moved out of their suite to be with a hungry young man she has met during all those days Bertram left her alone.

Then Dreuther shows up, pleading a breakdown to excuse his delay. He finds Bertram alone and hears the sad tale. Instead of counselling him to accept a failed marriage, Dreuther suggests a plan to win Cary back, a plan suggested by the book’s title.

The story is a kind of parable on the saying, “One cannot serve two masters.” In this case, Bertram must choose between love and money, and he chose poorly. Fortunately, we do not have to wait long in this short novel to discover whether Dreuther’s plan will allow him to redeem his poor choice.

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Thanks for visiting Bob on Books.  I appreciate that you spent time here. Feel to “look around” – see the tabs at the top of the website, and the right hand column. And use the buttons below to share this post. Blessings! [Adapted from Enough Light, a blog I follow.]

Review: Doubting Faithfully

Cover image of "Doubting Faithfully" by Keith Long

Doubting Faithfully, Keith Long. Independently published (ISBN: 9798553814663) 2020.

Summary: A memoir by a pastor who came to doubt Christianity and how he has proceeded from there.

I will be candid upfront. Of late, it has become heroic to question, doubt, and abandon Christian faith for a variety of reasons, write books about it, and be valorized for one’s ‘courage,” “authenticity,” and “vulnerability.” Doubting Faithfully is one such book, although as I will conclude, I take issue with this title and what it reflects of the author’s approach.

The writer is a pastor in the Evangelical Lutheran Church of America who came to faith through an evangelical ministry, and later attended a denominational seminary before becoming a pastor. He describes the experience that shook his faith. It was the death of his atheist friend Carl from ALS. Carl’s motto had been think strong, be strong. His death made Keith “think strong” about what he believed about God.

This led to a process of questioning. He became an atheist for Lent and doubted much of the creed. He came to deny that Christ died for our sins or bodily rose. Long grew skeptical of the trustworthiness of the gospel accounts. From what I can tell, he read skeptical authors. But it doesn’t appear he read Gary Habermas or Richard Bauckham. Respectively, they give rigorous defenses of the resurrection and the gospels.

Then his own questioning transformed his vision of pastoral work. Long determined to lead a questioning church. He delighted in the questions youth in his church would bring. He likens life to an experience of bungee jumping off the bridge above the New River gorge, a step into the unknown, mysterious and exhilarating.

I am no stranger to questioning, either in my own life or with the graduate students I worked with over a couple decades. We struggled together over the core of Christian beliefs, the shortcomings of the church, cultural challenges to the faith, and those of other faiths, including atheism. We fostered a community where it was safe both to believe and to question. And we kept doing the faith, praying, and caring while being honest about our questions, waiting for God in his own time to give further light.

What I question is the author’s use of “doubting faithfully.” This implies to me a person who remains open to how God has revealed God’s self while honestly confessing one’s questions, struggles, and doubts. On a number of questions, it seems to me Long doesn’t doubt, but has chosen on the basis of his own “thinking strong” to no longer believe. This is neither doubt, which, as Os Guinness has described it, is being “between two minds,” nor faithfulness, in the sense of seeking like Job for God to address him.

I think the most honest and courageous thing Long could do is resign his pastorate. Instead of embracing the creeds and catechisms, he shepherds people in questioning them. Rather than dependence on God, he models a kind of autonomous intellectual self-sufficiency. I believe in a church where people may question and doubt. But doubting faithfully is something very different than what Long describes. I cannot commend his approach.

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Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher via Speakeasy for review.

Finally, thanks for visiting Bob on Books.  I appreciate that you spent time here. Feel to “look around” – see the tabs at the top of the website, and the right hand column. And use the buttons below to share this post. Blessings! [Adapted from Enough Light, a blog I follow.]

Review: True Conservatism

Cover image of "True Conservatism" by Anthony T. Kronman

True Conservatism, Anthony T. Kronman. Yale University Press (ISBN: 9780300277036) 2025.

Summary: A call to a humane conservatism that embraces enlightenment ideals without enlightenment prejudices or oversimplification.

Anthony T. Kronman, like many of us, decries the stridency of the left and the reactionary character of modern conservatives. In this book, Kronman makes the argument that true conservatism embraces ideals both have in common without their prejudices. In his preface, he writes:

“A truer conservatism is needed to remind us of the worth of custom and inheritance; the splendor of what is excellent and rare; the expansive solidarity of our friendship for the dead; and the dignity, indeed necessity, of the human longing for connection to the eternal and divine–and to persuade us that these timeless goods are compatible with the modern ideals of liberty, toleration, and reasoned argument.”

Kronman begins by arguing that three prejudices hinder our full embrace of a true conservatism. The first of these is that we make equality the highest value at the expense of excellence and beauty. The second is that we treat the past as a storehouse to which we turn only as needed. Third is a prejudice against belief in God’s existence. Thus we treat it at best a matter of private opinion, which fails to reckon with the basic human longing for eternity.

With regard to equality, he describes “bullied pulpits” from which the egalitarian absolutism denigrates excellence as a cover for power and beauty as a distraction from oppression. Hence, Kronman argues for the sovereignty of excellence. He notes how Christianity tempers excellence with charity and humility.

Kronman invokes Machiavelli, Burke and other past “greats” to urge the value of friendship with the dead. They are models, not monuments. Therefore, we assess both their greatness and flaws, learning from both. We are their friends, not their hagiographers or sycophants. In the following chapter, he applies a similar rubric to our relationship with the character of our country.

Chapter six addresses the perennial tension of the enlightenment ideals of The Declaration of Independence and the tempering, conservative character of The Constitution. He observes Abraham Lincoln’s metaphor of golden apples in a silver frame. Then, he highlights Alexander Bickel’s book, The Least Dangerous Branch. Specifically, he highlights the built-in dynamic of delay in the Constitution, and in the adjudication of constitutional questions.

In chapter seven, Kronman turns to religion, and in the end, affirms Jefferson’s wisdom in both protecting religious liberty for all, while keeping religion out of politics. Then, chapters 8 and 9 explore reason and religion with Kronman proposing Spinoza as the one who reconciles Hume and Kant. As well, he commends the modesty, the caution of Spinoza’s ethics.

Anthony Kronman teaches a version of Great Books with students at Yale. Thus, his deep immersion in these great thinkers is evident throughout the book. He argues that the enlightenment values of equality, reason, and toleration must be tempered by our value of excellence, beauty, friendship with the past, and the importance of the Transcendent. He makes clear that contemporary conservatism falls short of these values.

However, I think he fails to reckon with a politics of power that is neither progressive nor conservative and has no regard for any of the ideals Kronman affirms. Finally, I wonder how Kronman would have us live in such times and how his conservative philosophy helps him live through these times. That would be an interesting conversation!