Happy Birthday Bob on Books!

One of my TBR piles

One of my TBR piles

Bob on Books is two years old! The picture above is the one that adorned my very first post. Since then, I’ve read most of those books but some never managed to work their way to the top of the TBR pile, for reasons known only to my subconcious, if that. Looking back on that first post, I had no idea where this blog was going to lead! The one thing that has been true is lots of conversation on books, reading, and life.

Bob on Books by the numbers. This is my 689th post. One or another page on the blog has been viewed just under 100,000 times (I expect to hit this milestone later this week). The growth of the readership has been slow and steady–I write for a bit of a quirky audience–booklovers, university geeks, people of faith, and surprisingly, a loyal audience of people from my home town of Youngstown. In 2013, I averaged 23 views a day on the blog. Last year, this went up to 124, and this year so far, I’ve been averaging 227. Currently 2,229 “follow” the blog in some form, but the viewership is far wider because of posting in a number of groups and re-posting on other blogs. WordPress tells me that people have visited from 150 countries, the top five outside the U.S. being Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, Brazil (!), and India. Altogether, I don’t think this is too bad for a “toddler”!

Bob on Books — the conversation. I wrote early on that my hope for this blog was that it would be “a meeting place for anyone who cares about good literature, who loves books and reading, and wants to talk about ideas that matter.” It has been that and so much more. We’ve talked about what we liked and disliked about books, about what makes for a good society and a good life, and even a good pizza! We’ve explored this activity so many of us love and take for granted, the act of reading and what makes for good reading. We’ve talked about what we do with all those books once we’ve read them, and what we do about the ones we haven’t read.

A big surprise has been the continuing conversation with the unique tribe of people who, like me, grew up in Youngstown, Ohio. What began as a few posts to answer the question of what it was like to grow up in working class Youngstown has become a rich conversation about what made this such a good place. I’ll never forget a post from last fall in which I posted a picture of a cigar box, which many of us used for pencil boxes, only to get a flood of comments from others who did the same, and who, in some cases still had them. I’ve come to understand something I’d only dimly intuited–that growing up working class was an incredibly rich experience that has shaped my life more than I knew.

Bob on Books — On reviewing. I don’t think I anticipated when I started this blog that I would become far more reflective on the art and ethics of reviewing. One of the things I’ve discovered is that authors are engaging us in a conversation, and reviewing and discussing books via social media can be a wonderful way of turning monologue into real conversation, mostly with other readers, but sometimes with the authors. We don’t always agree, but what I hope for is that they can say, “you understood what I wrote and were fair in representing the book.”

I’ve come to realize that reviewers, and not just the ones in the New York Times, play an important role in connecting authors to readers and promoting a literate society. Fundamentally, we help people answer the basic question of “why should (or shouldn’t) I read this book when there are so many others?”

Bob on Books — The Vision. Years ago, a leader I respected said, “you may be a reading Christian without growing, but you cannot be a growing Christian without reading.” In an age of busyness and visual media saturation, I hope to encourage the rediscovery of ways the reading of good works may nourish our souls, deepen our intellects, and elevate our aspirations. There is more to life than reading, but I am firmly convinced that the best books point us to that “something more” and that the richest conversations in life are about that “something more.” I look forward to more of those as long as God grants me to write!

A New Enhancement to Bob on Books

Book reviews are still the core of this blog, as much fun as the other posts have been. A new category has been added to make access to all the past reviews easier. On the homepage of Bob on Books, you will now find a category link on the left hand side of the page titled “The Month in Reviews” which will take you to the archived “The Month in Review Posts” This will allow you to skim through the books reviewed since February 2014 (eventually I may index those prior to then) and follow links to any of those reviews. This will serve as kind of a “cumulative index of reviews” for the blog.

This is a minor “tweak” but I hope one those of you who have discovered the blog as a resource for good reviews will find useful.

P.S. Fun sidenote: WordPress just informed me that this is my 500th post to this blog! Cool!

A Break From Blogging

Over the last six months, I believe I have not missed a day posting on “Bob on Books“. During that time, it has been delightful to interact with people around the world and in the blog’s first eight months, I’ve had over 7,000 visits.  Thank you!

Due to upcoming work and other responsibilities, and perhaps to re-charge the writing batteries, I will be taking a break from the blog for the next week. If time, and a compelling idea arise, you may see a post, but I plan to be back on Thursday April 17.

In the meanwhile, check out past blogs for what I hope you will find to be good ideas about books, reading, and life!

 

February: The Month in Reviews

One new feature I would like to try (and get your feedback on) would be to do a post summarizing all the reviews I did over the last month. This can serve as a kind of index for my reviews and hopefully, if you missed one or more when it was first posted, gives you an easy way of finding what I reviewed in the last month.

I actually read quite a bit during February, so here is a good list. Enjoy!

A theology of the crosschina WakesGlorious War

A Theology of the Cross by Charles B. Cousar. This work does a good job of summarizing Paul’s “theology of the cross” using the Pauline epistles most widely accepted as being authored by Paul.

China Wakes: The Struggle for the Soul of a Rising Power by Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn.  This is a fascinating chronicle of Kristof and WuDunn’s stay in China during Tiananmen and the rise of China as an economic and political power.

Glorious War: The Civil War Adventures of George Armstrong Custer by Thom Hatch. Most of us only know the story of the end of Custer’s life at Little Big Horn. Hatch helps fill in the picture, showing the key role Custer played in several Civil War battles, including Gettysburg, as well as chronicling his early years and marriage.

resilient ministryconsequential leadershipReading scripture

Resilient Ministry: What Pastors Told Us About Surviving and Thriving by Bob Burns et al.  These researchers discovered five factors contributing to pastoral excellence through summits with pastors as part of a Lilly research grant.

Consequential Leadership: 15 Leaders Fighting For Our Cities, Our Youth, Our Poor, and Our Culture by Mac Pier. Pier directs the New York Leadership Center and in this capacity is able to profile 15 leaders from a variety of walks of life whose faith and leadership is having a decisive impact in society.

Reading Scripture Together: A Comparative Bible and Qur’an Study Guide by Barbara J Hampton. Out of numerous Christian-Muslim dialogues, Hampton developed this resource to promote a comparison between Christian and Muslim scriptures exploring key areas of belief and key differences as well as similarities between the two faiths.

QuietHoly is the Day

diversityQuiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking by Susan Cain. This best-selling book argues that introverts are simply different, not inferior or superior but rather offering unique gifts to the world that arise from their temperament.

Holy is the Day: Living in the Gift of the Present by Carolyn Weber. Weber shares her narrative of learning to live in the present as a mom of three under three who is also a college professor.

When Diversity Drops: Race, Religion, and Affirmative Action in Higher Education by Julie J Park. Park looks at the efforts of an InterVarsity Christian Fellowship at “California University” to increase ethnic diversity and the impact on these efforts that Prop 209 that led to steep declines in ethnic diversity at this campus.

Pilgrim

The New Pilgrim’s Progress by John Bunyan. This is Bunyan’s classic work in an updated edition (which includes only Christian’s journey) with helpful notes and commentary.

I hope you like this recap of what I’ve read that might point you to one or two books you might read in the next month. Tell me what you think.