Christian Book Awards 2015

“The highest honor of Christian Book of the Year™ went to The Daniel Plan by Pastor Rick Warren (with Daniel Amen M.D., and Mark Hyman M.D.). The New York Times bestseller with a strong and regular presence on the ECPA Bestseller list, is described as “creating a health plan” that adds faith, focus, and community to the usual “food and exercise” approach to weight loss and health. The plan is credited for helping 15,000 of Warren’s church members lose 250,000 pounds in the first year.”

The Christian Book Awards from The Evangelical Christian Publishers Association have been announced. Again from the press release: “The Christian Book Award® winners not only represent the best books in our industry, but in their variety they represent the transforming power of Christian content that impacts all of life,” explains ECPA President/CEO Mark Kuyper. “Our industry continues to produce ‘Good Books that Feed the Soul’ for all ages, seasons, and interests.”

Does Thinking Guard Us Against Evil Deeds?

Could the activity of thinking not only condition us against evil-doing but predispose us towards right action?” This is a question in Hannah Arendt’s last and unfinished work, The Life of the Mind. It seems to be one of those unanswerable questions, even if the asker believes he has provided one. When such questions are segregated from ultimate goodness, from the purity of Eden to which man can never return on his own, we will not find satisfactory answers. We might as well ask if we can clean our faces in mud.

Idris Elba Breaks Speed Record

From our automotive and world records desk: Idris Elba can fly. “Driving a Bentley Continental GT Speed, Elba averaged 180.4 miles per hour over the full mile and hit a top speed of 186.4 miles per hour as he shot past the second marker,” breaking a ninety-year-old UK record for the “flying mile,” reports CNN Money. The drive was made as part of a feature on the actor for Discovery Channel. Commenters remain focused on Elba’s potential as 007.

‘Bolg P.I.: The Bolg and the Beautiful,’ by Dave Freer

One of many things that irritate me in this world is reviews that say, “This book just didn’t work for me.” I’m sure I’ve written some myself, but it seems a pointless exercise. Reviews should be reserved for people who understand what’s going on, whether they love it or hate it. If it just disappoints you for reasons you can’t articulate, why bother reviewing at all?

Still, here I am reviewing a book written by a friend of several friends, who is acclaimed by all as a good guy and a fine writer. And yet about all I can say is that it didn’t really work for me.

Bolg P.I.: The Bolg and the Beautiful is a comic mashup, a combination of hardboiled detective story and fantasy. A “bolg” is a kind of Irish dwarf, and our hero/narrator, who is generally just known as Bolg, has survived (like the characters of Gaiman’s American Gods) into the modern world. Surviving with him are a number of mythological beings, including a wizard, the goddess Freya and some family members, and the dwarfs of the Rheingold.

When Freya, who is quite old now but still retains the power to dazzle any normal male, is robbed of her savings by a con man (who is immune to her charms because he swings the other way), Bolg is called in to try to recover the money for her. He employs natural and supernatural means to accomplish this task, and there’s a lot of comedy along the way.

I did laugh sometimes, and the author now and then made comments on the world with which I agreed profoundly. But the mix didn’t satisfy me. It didn’t entirely work either as drama or farce, for my taste.

I won’t deny, however, that the prose was good and I got some laughs out of it. So your mileage may vary, and likely will.

Honoring Lane and Ebeth Dennis of Crossway

“On behalf of the ECPA, Crossway, and the entire Christian publishing industry, we thank Lane and Ebeth for their faithfulness to God’s Word; their love for the gospel of Jesus Christ; their service to his church; and their commitment to bear witness to God’s truth, beauty, and holiness through their lives and the publishing ministry of Crossway.”

The Evangelical Christian Publishing Association recognized the leaders of Crossway Books, Dr. Lane T. and Mrs. Ebeth Dennis, with a lifetime achievement award. Crossway Books emerged from Good News Publishers in 1979. They are the publishers of the English Standard Version of the Bible and published Frank Peretti back in the 80s. They’re good people, as we say.

Pushing Back the Status Quo

Jared C. Wilson’s new book, The Prodigal Church: A Gentle Manifesto Against the Status Quo, urges churches to seek Jesus and his mission over all other people or missions. “I think the stakes are too high to simply preach to the Amen corner in the ‘young, restless, and Reformed’ movement. My hope for this book is that it may challenge the status quo outside my own tribe…”

Are we effectively looking to the nations to see if we can worship our God the way they worship their gods? No Christian wants to do that, but many have not been circumspect enough to recognize how they are doing it now.

ocaso de reyes y dioses │twilight of kings and gods

Photo by jesuscm/Flickr (CC 2.0)

Planting Trees

Jonathan Rogers tells a brief story about vision. “My father-in-law loves his native country; no wonder he planted longleaf. If they take forty years to grow to maturity–well, then, they take forty years. He is a man of imagination and hope.”

Longleaf Pine (Pinus palustris)

How Important Are a Writer’s Connections?

The Blunt Instrument answers questions about the necessity of an MFA and how well-networked a writer must be to succeed. Among other things, he says,

Writing and reading and doing the rest of the administrative work required to get published take up a lot of time, most of which is uncompensated, especially at first.

You can do all of this (find a community, carve out dedicated writing time, etc.) without getting an MFA, but an MFA is a structured system that makes these things easier to achieve in a short time period. In my opinion, that’s what you’re paying for, more than the largely useless degree.

"Scripts from Crypt" writers group

How Fantasy Films Disrupt Our Imagination

“Too often the movie takes the place of the book,” Dwight Longenecker writes, “and when this happens there is a curious change of direction and affection. The dynamic of interaction is totally different when viewing a film as opposed to reading a book.”

He says fantasy is best when it isn’t as materialized as it is in film. When a movie locks our minds into the way a story looks, sounds, and feels as it moves, then we coast with it instead of imagining it ourselves. That dulls our imagination, which is something we need.

“The imagination is the tool not only of creativity, but of worship. It is through the imagination that we meditate and dream and contemplate and pray.”

Orson Welles’ Comeback That Didn’t

“The Other Side of the Wind” was supposed to be Orson Welles return to power or something close to it, but Josh Karp tells the story of what happened to leave it unfinished in the end.

During production many people asked Welles what his movie was all about. To his star, John Huston, he once replied, “It’s a film about a bastard director…. It’s about us, John. It’s a film about us.”

The answer, however, was different one evening when comedian Rich Little, who was also in the cast, found Welles propped up in bed, making script revisions.

“Orson,” Little asked, “what does The Other Side of the Wind mean?”

Looking down over his reading glasses, Welles, in his rich baritone, said, “I haven’t the foggiest.”

Book Reviews, Creative Culture