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(group member since Jan 25, 2015)
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"To mark the paper was the decisive act."
Let's be decisive!

Let's go! It's the perfect Valentine's Day gift.

My off-the-wall read for January came in the form of
The Shadow of the Wind by
Carlos Ruiz Zafón. This period piece set over 20-30 years in Civil War-torn Barcelona uses the story of one boy's maturation by way of an investigation in his favorite author's life and disappearance. There are some great one-liners sprinkled throughout the work and Zafón does a fine job of bringing his characters to life. Stephen King provides an endorsement on the cover that sums it up: "One gorgeous read."
Evan Thomas's
The War Lovers: Roosevelt, Lodge, Hearst, and the Rush to Empire, 1898 was a fun read. I love Teddy Roosevelt and Thomas captures the build up to the Spanish-American War in great detail. He weaves the thoughts and experiences of several major players during that time period (T.R., Sen. Lodge, and W.R. Hearst are the main ones) while also commenting on the larger national zeitgeist as the country shifted from isolationism to banging the war drums.
Ellen Raskin's
The Westing Game holds up after all these years, if only as a homage to the weirdness of the late 1970s. I read it to see if it would be good for my 9 year old, but decided there are other books out there I'd rather him tackle first.
Erik Larson paints a detailed picture of the Lusitania and early submarine warfare in WWI in
Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of the Lusitania. For this history buff, I ate it up. This was my first Larson book, but I've moved his other works up on my to-read list.

If you're a fan of U.S. History and the Revolutionary War period,
Joseph J. Ellis adds to his collection of works that focus on the key founders with
The Quartet: Orchestrating the Second American Revolution, 1783-1789. In this book, Ellis argues that the Declaration of Independence and the Articles of Confederation were but the first two acts in the American Revolution. The final act in making us a nation rather than a loose confederation of states was the drafting and ratification of the Constitution.
The Guilty by
David Baldacci was a great diversion during exam week. In this fourth installment of the Will Robie story, Baldacci has Robie, who is a trained assassin for the U.S. government, return home to Mississippi to deal with some daddy issues and find out that his father has been charged with murder. The story has some entertaining, if not predictable, plot twists, but all in all, it's classic Baldacci.

As a fan of Braveheart the movie, I was intrigued by its screenwriter Randall Wallace's book
Living the Braveheart Life: Finding the Courage to Follow Your Heart, which recounts his process of discovering the story of William Wallace and the making of the movie. He uses his life story to share the insights he's learned about how his faith guides his life. There are a lot of echoes to John Eldredge's
Wild at Heart: Discovering the Secret of a Man's Soul, though the writing is not as good.

Ted Dekker followed up
A.D. 30 with
A.D. 33, which follows the same cast of characters through the Arabian desert, to Petra, to Jerusalem, and back. Interesting read that has the protagonist grapple with the teachings of Jesus, and what his crucifixion means to his followers.

With few exceptions, John Grisham's body of work has generally been on a downward trend from his first and best novel,
A Time to Kill. Grisham's latest,
Rogue Lawyer, reads like a compilation of cast-off plot lines jumbled together in an attempt to meet a yearly deadline from the publisher. It also lacks the philosophical or emotional conflict that made readers chew through his earlier works.

If you love Pixar movies, business, leadership, and/or creativity, check out
Creativity, Inc.: Overcoming the Unseen Forces That Stand in the Way of True Inspiration by Ed Catmull, the founder of Pixar. The book centers on Catmull's vision to make a feature length computer animated movie, which started back before computers could display pictures. Catmull helped design the infrastructure and programming that would ultimately lead to the creation of Toy Story and beyond. He recounts the successes and failures that helped shape Pixar's culture of creativity. There are great takeaways for any organization that desires its employees to innovate without fear of failure.

Since school started, my reading pace has slowed. In the first quarter, I've been able to knock out the following:
The Demon Under the Microscope: From Battlefield Hospitals to Nazi Labs, One Doctor's Heroic Search for the World's First Miracle Drug by Thomas Hager
The Men Who United the States: America's Explorers, Inventors, Eccentrics and Mavericks, and the Creation of One Nation, Indivisible by Simon Winchester
Enduring Courage: Ace Pilot Eddie Rickenbacker and the Dawn of the Age of Speed by John F. Ross.
All three were good reads, rich in details and content (as can be seen in their extended titles). And they all intertwined biography of the people with the "biography" of inventions that shaped the modern world.

If you like
The Chronicles of Narnia or
The Lord of the Rings, check out
A Hobbit, A Wardrobe, and a Great War: How J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis Rediscovered Faith, Friendship, and Heroism in the Cataclysm of 1914-18 by
Joseph Loconte. In this book, Loconte explores how the war experience during WWI reshaped European thought and culture, save for a few individuals like
J.R.R. Tolkien and
C.S. Lewis. Rather than become disillusioned by the attack on humanity from the rise of industrialization and the killing fields of Europe, Lewis and Tolkien used the experience to forge a friendship, deepen their Christian faith, and write some of the best-loved stories in the English language.

Wow.
Best book I've read in 2015.
The Boys in the Boat: Nine Americans and Their Epic Quest for Gold at the 1936 Berlin Olympics was a phenomenal tale of a group of ordinary boys who did extraordinary things. Even knowing what the ending would be, tears still clouded my eyes in the final pages.
This would be a great book for high school boys to read.

Harper Lee's
Go Set a Watchman brings the characters from
To Kill a Mockingbird back to life about 20 years later. I've read that Lee actually wrote this book first, but her publisher told her to go back and write about when Scout was a young girl, which gave us To Kill a Mockingbird. This novel sat unpublished for over 60 years collecting dust and only now has been released to the public (with some controversy over whether this was Lee's desire to do so). I'm conflicted about how to review this work having just finished it. The first third of the book read like a first draft. I'd need to go back and reread it to determine if that is actually the case or if it was just me reading into it based on the controversy surrounding its publication (did Lee actually finish the book back in the 1950s? Did she return to it to polish up after the success of TKAM? Did another hand touch the pages to get it ready for print since Lee's faculties are now diminished?).
I found myself constantly comparing this narrative to TKAM. The publishers were correct back in the 1950s. If one were to read GSAW first, the reader would miss a lot by not having been exposed to the characters and events in TKAM. That being said, I also read it looking for a deeper commentary on race relations in the South or some grand battle that packed an emotional punch. Rather, GSAW focused on the jarring juxtaposition of Scout's return from her life in New York City to Maycomb, looking at how things had changed...and how they stayed the same. There are lots of flashbacks to her time growing up, both pre- and post-TKAM, that allow us to see the growth of some of the main characters in both novels. I'll need a few days to process the novel's implications on our present day social milieu.
All in all, fans of TKAM should read this one, if only to say that they did. If I were to compare it to TKAM as a sequel (even though it was written first), I'd say it was more Rocky II than Godfather II--entertaining, but not as good as the original.

After sinking my teeth into Stephen King with
Under the Dome and
11/22/63, both of which were great reads, I decided to venture into yet another King novel,
Mr. Mercedes, with some trepidation. It was a little darker than the other two King novels I've read, and at times I was uncomfortable with King's weirdness (sickness?). I wouldn't recommend it for high school students as I think there are other novels that would be a better use of their time. I just saw that it's the first of a trilogy with the key characters; I'm not sure I'll be reading books #2 and #3 unless I run out of other things to read.

I found it entertaining, but I love historical narratives. :)
Maria wrote: "Parker wrote: "If you enjoy exploration in the vein of Indiana Jones, you'll like The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon by David Grann. This work traces the li..."

I rarely fail to finish a book, but after getting two-thirds of the way through Stephen Greenblatt's
The Swerve: How the World Became Modern, I made the decision to set it aside to get to the next book on my list. I struggled to get through that much of the book, because I wanted it to be better than it was as the concept had lots of promise. Greenblatt recounts the story of a papal secretary who traveled to remote monasteries in the early 1400s in search of lost Greco-Roman texts. His momentous find is a copy of Lucretius' "On the Nature of Things," which resurrected an Epicurean philosophy on the cusp of the Renaissance. Greenblatt dives into both the political and religious history of the 1400s, as well as the earlier time period of Lucretius (circa 40 B.C.). While it is fascinating material to work with, Greenblatt's writing is that of the Harvard professor that he is (dry and full of himself). This is the second book by Greenblatt that I have not finished (the first held the same initial promise--
Will in the World: How Shakespeare Became Shakespeare). There will not be a third attempt.

I read Scott Sauls'
Jesus Outside the Lines: A Way Forward for Those Who Are Tired of Taking Sides in about a day. It's a quick read that gives some guidance on how we as a faith community can engage in cultural debates that have a history of dividing us. Well worth the afternoon to read for yourself.