The Weekly Wrap: January 11-17

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The Weekly Wrap: January 11-17

Adjusting to the New

I wrote awhile back about our impressive new Barnes & Noble store that replaced the old standby located nearby. However, I didn’t mention that it just didn’t feel like–well, home. I have to confess that there have been times when I just felt bewildered. Not only that, there were several times I walked out without any books.

That old store just felt so familiar. I knew where everything was and was accustomed to the way they displayed books. Basically, the store was laid out with rows of shelves with a center aisle with a help desk. There was a separate area for children’s books. The new store seems a bit more like a maze of sections.

We ended up there the other day when a scheduling mix-up gave us a couple hours to kill. And for the first time, it began to feel a bit more like home. For one thing, it was the slowest day in terms of business I’d seen. There was time to linger and read the shelves without feeling you were in someone’s way. I explored some new sections to see what they had. And my wife and I enjoyed a lovely time at the cafe, something we always enjoyed at the old store.

I’m wondering if I’m the only one who has experienced the feeling of displacement when a new bookstore replaces an old favorite. One expects everything to be novel at a new store one is exploring. But when the new store becomes one of your “defaults,” I think that is different. But I’m always reminded that every store was new to us at one time. And I’m glad that there is a new store, and not simply an empty reminder of what was once there.

Five Articles Worth Reading

This week, three of the articles feature reviews I thought interesting.

First, imagine Moby Dick with a female narrator. Xiaolu Guo has done just that with Call Me Ishmaelle. William Giraldi reviews this audacious attempt in “A Retelling of ‘Moby-Dick,’ With a Young Woman at Its Center.”

Second, imagine a novel based on the online life of a family and its real-life repercussions. In “The Unhappy Literary Families of the Internet Age” Gideon Leek reviews Lost Lambs by Madeline Cash. Leek thinks the novel need a few wolves.

The third review is of a book on my “to read” pile, The Last Supper: Art, Faith, Sex, and Controversy in the 1980s by Paul Elie. My friend Byron Borger, at Hearts and Minds Bookstore recommended this book, an analysis of the crypto-religious modern art of the 1980’s. I won’t get around to reading it for a while, so I thought I’d pass along Stephen Westich’s review: “Jesus in the Junk Shop.”

On a different note, Ted Gioia contends we are witnessing the rise of a new Romanticism. He defends that idea in this article which offers “25 Propositions about the New Romanticism.”

Finally, did you know that Wikipedia just turned 25? In “Happy Birthday, Wikipedia: We need you now more than ever,” Troy Farah argues why, amid the advent of AI and Elon Musk’s “Grokipedia,” an attempt to replace Wikipedia, Wikipedia is a uniquely valuable resource.

Quote of the Week

Essayist and novelist Susan Sontag was born January 16, 1933. She explains why I have never liked taking photographs at events:

“The camera makes everyone a tourist in other people’s reality, and eventually in one’s own.”

Wonder what the implications of this insight are for our Instagram age.

Miscellaneous Musings

Another of Byron’s recommendation is Beth Macy’s Paper Girl, a memoir of growing up in Urbana, Ohio, an hour west of me. In her opening pages she introduces us to a tenth grade dropout and to a high school grad, a young trans male weighing suicide when his plans for welding training fell through because his car blew a head gasket. She asks how her community has changed so much since the 1980’s. Riveting so far.

Oh, and I forgot to mention that I walked out of Barnes & Noble with 1929 and Gemini. The latter book reminded me of my love for the Gemini program back in the 1960. I even built a model of the Gemini capsule that I had in my room. As for 1929, I approach this one with some trepidation because I sense the author will argue that it can happen again.

After a lull over the holidays, five more books for review have arrived this week at my doorstep. Not only that, at least a couple more are due to arrive today. Well, I’m more than ready in the reading department for the next snowstorm or cold stretch to come our way!

Next Week’s Reviews

Monday: Michael B. Shepherd, How Did They Read the Prophets

Tuesday: Gregory Boyd with M. Scott Boren, God Looks Like Jesus

Wednesday: Justin Whitmel Early, The Common Rule Youth Edition

Thursday: Daniel K. Williams, The Search for a Rational Faith

Friday: Siddhartha Mukherjee, The Emperor of All Maladies

So, that’s The Weekly Wrap  for January 11-17.

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

The Weekly Wrap: August 24-30

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The Weekly Wrap: August 24-30

Old Reviews

Earlier this month I marked twelve years of blogging. Consequently, I’ve written a lot, and its all still here! This is my 3,846th post. Over the 12 years my posts have been viewed over two million times.

I don’t often think about what I was writing about in 2015. But I’ve been going back through my old posts, aware that there are a number of broken links. And I’ve been staggered by how many of those links I am finding.

The saddest experience is discovering bookstores that I wrote about that have closed (on the other hand, I wrote about Barnes & Noble when it looked like it was in trouble). The second saddest thing is to discover books that I reviewed, some newly published at the time, now out of print.

It makes me wonder about the value of reviewing. Why bother when a number of these books will go out of print within ten years?

Part of the answer is that reviews matter most close to the time of publication, when authors and publishers are launching the book. Yet a number of books have caught on over time by word of mouth. When I review backlist books, I’m part of that chain.

Another part of the answer is that past reviews serve as a reference point in the discussion of works that continue to have a readership. I consult other reviews of backlist books when I write mine and try to add to the discussion.

In the end, I can live with reviews being ephemeral. The book is the thing. I love pointing people to books I thought worth reviewing and encouraging a reading culture. In the end, it really doesn’t matter where they heard about the book if they profited from it.

Five Articles Worth Reading

One of the big book launches of the week is R.F. Kuang’s Katabasis, in which two graduates go to Hell to retrieve the soul of their Ph.D. advisor. “In ‘Katabasis,’ R.F. Kuang Takes Readers to Hell“, is Kiersten White’s take for The New York Times

This is hardly the first time a descent into Hell has been the subject of a literary work. Perhaps the most famous is Dante’s Divine Comedy. In “Digesting Dante” Richard Hughes Gibson traces the history of the work’s reception and shows that its success was not always a given.

Another aspect of Katabasis is that the students are studying “Magick.” Richard Cytowic, in “When Your Father Is a Magician, What Do You Believe?” describes the influence growing up with a real-life magician had on him.

For some of us, reading Moby Dick was a kind of descent into Hell, particularly if we had to read it in high school. Caleb Crain describes what fresh insight came when he read the book when he was Ahab’s age in “Another cruise.”

Finally, on a lighter note, many of us have read Shakespeare’s plays or seen them performed in other venues. Through “Take a Virtual Tour of Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre in London” you can get a 360 view of the theatre and see a clip from Julius Caesar, staged in the theatre.

Quote of the Week

Poet Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. made this observation that I hope to fulfill in serving as a guest preacher in my church;

“Speak clearly, if you speak at all; carve every word before you let it fall.”

Miscellaneous Musings

Katabasis raises an interesting question. For what would you forfeit thirty years of your life? That is the price of admission for entering Hell.

I had one of my rare experiences weekly of walking out of a bookstore bookless. I went to Barnes & Noble to check off their 50% off hardcovers sale. A few near misses but nothing that said “buy me.” I was probably aware of the queue of books in my TBR pile.

For the theologically oriented, Michael J. Gorman’s I Corinthians is one of the best recent commentaries I’ve read. His concluding reflections and questions in each section of the commentary combined with his clear exegesis make this a great commentary that brings knowledge and devotion together. I’ll be reviewing it next Friday. Speaking of which…

Next Week’s Reviews

Monday: The Month in Reviews: August 2025

Tuesday: Malcolm Foley, The Anti-Greed Gospel

Wednesday: Christopher Sadowitz & Jim Harries eds., Paul Planted, Apollos Watered, but God

Thursday: John W. Miller, The Last Manager

Friday: Michael J. Gorman, 1 Corinthians

So, that’s The Weekly Wrap for August 24-30!

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