The Weekly Wrap: December 1-7

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On Giving Books as Gifts

Giving books to a bibliophile can be a fraught enterprise. Ask my family! We have such particular tastes and we read so much! The book gifter runs the risk of buying something we’ve read, or buying something that is not of interest.

The latter is not as much of a danger. Many of us like to stretch and get out of our ruts. My son often seems to find books like this. But this takes knowing your reader and maybe researching what they’ve read. Fortunately apps like Goodreads make this easier. Some create Amazon wish lists. If you want to buy me a book, search my blog to see if I’ve read it. Along the way, you will learn a lot about the kinds of books I’ve read and liked.

Take heart. In every genre, there are so many good choices. Again, my son is good at this. He knows I like baseball books and try to read at least one a year. This year, he found a great book on the World Champion 1948 Indians team. As one who suffered through many years of losing seasons and dashed hopes, it was a delight to read about the year it all came together. He knows I like crime fiction, and he introduced me to the works of Giles Blunt–a real find.

So the pro tip is to do your homework. If you are going to dash out at the last minute, a gift card to your bibliophile friend’s favorite store might be a better choice. And it is always fun to go book shopping when you are spending someone else’s money. With that, I’ll leave you to your holiday shopping!

Five Articles Worth Reading

The New York Times ‘By The Book” interviews are often fascinating glimpses into author’s lives, including what they are reading. I devoured Braiding Sweetgrass and so was delighted to come across an interview with Robin Wall Kimmerer, “Robin Wall Kimmerer Is Learning From ‘Rest as Resistance’“. She made this comment about her new book, The Serviceberry, that put it on my buy list: “It’s an invitation to question the values that underpin our current exploitative relation to the living world. Why do we tolerate an economy that actively destroys what we love?”

Speaking of writers talking about the books they are reading, The Millions runs a compilation of contributions by writers and others that posted this week: A Year in Reading: 2024. This is one I always look forward to.

In “Shakespeare the Suicide?” Larry Lockridge considers the evidence that Shakespeare might have taken his own life. Suicide figures in many of works. Perhaps he decided “not to be.”

Simone Weil was a philosopher, activist, and person of deep faith whose writing and life pose demanding questions of those who read her. In “Whose Weil?,” Jack Hanson discusses the ways modern commentators try to make her more “palatable.”

Finally, Phil Christman, a professor at the University of Michigan, poses the question. “Does Teaching Literature and Writing Have a Future?” Particularly, he considers the closure of English programs and the rise of AI and raises important questions about what a university is for.

Quote of the Week

Joan Didion, born on December 5, 1934, made this trenchant observation:

“You have to pick the places you don’t walk away from.”

I think she is right. These watershed moments define who we are.

Miscellaneous Musings

While reading Quentin J. Schultze’s You’ll Shoot Your Eye Out!, in which he draws life lessons from the movie A Christmas Story, I re-watched this classic, filmed in Cleveland while we lived there. There’s a lot of wisdom in that movie and it reminded me of Christmases of my youth (and a few schoolyard bullies).

And while I’m on the subject of Cleveland, one of the great bookstores on Cleveland’s East Side is Loganberry Books. They are celebrating their thirtieth anniversary TODAY! I’m thrilled that this indie has survived and thrived by serving the bookloving community of Cleveland. Congratulations and Happy Anniversary!

This week also brought news of a new bookstore in Columbus, Clintonville Books, located in the neighborhood of the same name. If you know Columbus, you know that Clintonville is a bookstore kind of place. Can’t wait to visit! I doubt I’ll be around to celebrate their thirtieth anniversary, but I hope they enjoy a good long run in Clintonville.

Next Week’s Reviews

Here’s what I expect to be reviewing next week. I may also do a special post on my “Best of the Year” books.

Monday: Stuart Murray, The New Anabaptists

Tuesday: Stuart M. Kaminsky, Lieberman’s Day

Wednesday: Matthew Desmond, Poverty, By America

Thursday: Quentin J. Schultze, You’ll Shoot Your Eye Out!

Friday: Jason Landsel, Richard Mommsen, and Sankha Banerjee, By Fire: The Jakob Hutter Story

Well, that’s The Weekly Wrap for December 1-7, 2024!

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

The Weekly Wrap: November 17-23

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Listening to Versus Believing the Science

Ever since I was a kid, I’ve geeked out on science. I used to hang out at my local newsstand when the new issue of Popular Science came out. As a psych major in college, one of my favorite classes was the physiological psych class. I spent hours fascinated with the chemistry of nerve synapses and the structures of the brain. I never found this in conflict with my faith but rather delighted that God gave us minds and means to understand his world and the cosmos beyond so that we could take better care of it and ourselves.,

There is quite a conflict these days between science skeptics and those who “believe the science.” As in so many of the binaries created in our divisive discourse, I find myself in neither camp. The very act of writing this piece depends heavily on numerous scientific breakthroughs and the applied technologies that result. On the other hand, “I believe in science” is not part of the creed I profess. I have encountered reductionistic scientism that makes science the be-all and end-all, sometimes as rigidly dogmatic as the most rigid fundamentalist.

My own posture is one of listening to science. Particularly, I am listening to see if the conclusions of scientists are the best explanation of their data. And if it is, I consider the implications of what they propound–for my health and for the welfare of my fellow creatures. My listening leads to prayers for discerning wisdom in the application of scientific findings–which can help or harm.

So I will continue to read, review, and recommend science writing. Contrary to the portrayals of some, I know too many dedicated scientists who have devoted their lives and energies to understand creation, and to turn that knowledge to benefit the common good. They have earned a hearing, at least from me. So I will listen and learn to better understand the real world in which we live.

Five Articles Worth Reading

Speaking of science, I’ve mentioned Nature’s Andrew Robinson who reviews the latest science writing. “DNA need not apply: Books in brief” is his latest installment and offered some interesting recommendations, including a book on AI.

Haruki Murakami’s long-awaited new novel is out. Junot Diaz thinks that dedicated readers of Murakami may have a sense of deja vu, which he elaborates in his review: “Haruki Murakami’s New Novel Doesn’t Feel All That New.”

It has become increasingly common for people who were raised Christian to look beyond the bounds of their traditional religion to find spiritual life. “In Search of a Faith Beyond Religion,” a review of a new book, helped me understand some of the reasons people turn away from institutional Christianity.

Open Culture posted a fascinating clip, “The Final Days of Leo Tolstoy Captured in Rare Footage from 1910.”

Vanity Fair broke a story this week (behind a paywall) that during his forties, Cormac McCarthy engaged in an intimate relationship (statutory rape) with a seventeen year old who served as something of a muse in several of his works. O. Alan Noble, an English professor who uses McCarthy’s work, discusses “When Your Literary Heroes (Inevitably) Fail You” and how he is thinking about McCarthy’s moral failures and using McCarthy in his classes.

Quote of the Week

South African novelist Nadine Gordimer was born on November 20, 1923. This statement defined for me the difference between formal, positional power and moral authority:

“There is no moral authority like that of sacrifice.”

Miscellaneous Musings

I’ve started a new feature at my Bob on Books Facebook page, a weekly “reel”, Bob on Poetry. This past week, I recited William Butler Yeats “The Second Coming.” The poem seems quite prescient for our current day. You may listen here and read the text of the poem here. By the way, if you haven’t discovered it, Poetry Foundation is a wonderful online poetry resource.

I’ve been reading Adam Higgenbotham’s Challenger and came today to the part where Challenger blows up. It was hard to relive that day and the images from 1986. I kept hoping that, this time, the story would be different. What was more sobering was to imagine the engineers who argued vigorously against the launch only to be overridden by senior executives, watching the launch.

It was fun to receive the mail Tuesday and Wednesday. Between those two days, nine books arrived, kind of like Christmas coming early. Among them was Samantha Harvey’s Orbital, Hanif Abdurraqib’s latest, and a graphic biography of the life of Jakob Hutter, an early Anabaptist.

Next Week’s Reviews

Here’s what I expect to be reviewing next week:

Challenger, Adam Higgenbotham

The Year of Magical Thinking, Joan Didion

The Integration Journey: A Student’s Guide to Faith, Culture, and Psychology, by William B. Whitney and Carissa Dwiwardani

Remarriage in Early Christianity, A. Andrew Das

Well, that’s The Weekly Wrap for November 17-23, 2024!

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