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Lena's Blog
Welcome to my blog. Here you can find new information about the book, answers to frequently asked questions, and reviews of books that might be of related interest. Enjoy!
Archive for August, 2006
Wednesday, August 30th, 2006
Ehrman was just a teenager when he had a born-again experience that led him to devote his life to the study of Christianity. Hoping to help defend the Bible as the true word of God, he focused his studies on the origins of the Bible, only to discover that the history of a book whose words many faithful take as infallible truth is nowhere near as clear as most people would like to believe. It seems that God suffered the same fate as many great writers and had his words altered by numerous editors, from sloppy scribes to church leaders seeking to make the Bible support their particular interpretation the gospel. Ehrman details with convincing clarity how earlier versions of the Bible vary greatly on such teachings as the role of women in the church and even the divinity of Christ himself. Highly recommended for anyone affected by the idea that the Bible is the true and unaltered word of God.
Check out this book here
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Tuesday, August 29th, 2006
Mission to America tells the story of two young men raised in an obscure, isolated Montana religious sect and what happens when they leave their cloistered world to recruit new blood for their unhealthily inbred clan.
I liked this book, though not for reasons I would have expected. Many of the reviews described it as laugh out loud funny. Though I did find myself smiling from time to time at the author’s wry perspective on life, I was more impacted by the thoughtful way in which he describes what happens when people’s cherished beliefs are tested in an unsympathetic environment. While some may find the Montana communities religious beliefs outlandish, I found them to be no more ludicrous than many religious systems I have encountered, and Kirn’s juxtaposition of this oddball faith against both a mercenary brand of fundamentalist Christianity and a greater world that just didn’t care really very much was thought-provoking. I found his choice of ending within this context to be really quite fascinating.
I’m afraid, however, that I must take exception with a scene in which Kirn sends the main character sets off to become a mystery shopper at a Boulder store thinly disguised as a Wal-Mart. Had Kirn spent any time in Boulder, he would know that our fair city would hang itself with its declining sales tax receipts before allowing such an abomination of mass retail culture to sully our pristine utopian landscape. But, I will admit, this is only a minor complaint in an otherwise fine novel.
Check out this book here
Posted in Book Reviews, Cults | No Comments »
Monday, August 28th, 2006
David Thibodeau was a young LA musician when a chance meeting with the charismatic David Koresh led to his involvement with the Branch Davidian community outside Waco, Texas. This book is a well-written, articulate account of his life within that community and the events leading to the tragic 1993 inferno that claimed the lives of all but nine of the members.
Thibodeau honors his community by putting a human face on a group of people who have been badly demonized by the media. The author does a decent job of explaining the group’s appeal, but he is also unflinchingly honest in his descriptions the darker sides of the group. He appears, however, to remain a true believer in his path. While he does address the discomfort he felt that Koresh chose to engage in such behaviors as having sex with underage girls in the community, he falls short of asking the hard questions that observing such behavior in a spiritual leader should require someone to ask.
It’s easy to get distracted from those tougher questions, however, by the chilling depiction of the government siege against the Branch Davidians. While it was clear that Koresh himself had broken some laws, it is equally clear from this account that the government’s heavy-handed approach to the situation contributed to the horrific deaths of many people who were entirely innocent of any crime other than believing in something unorthodox. Thibodeau’s account of the facts surrounding the siege, the fire, and the resulting investigation is deeply, deeply disturbing, and is crucial reading for anyone who is concerned about the state of civil rights in the US. Check out this book here
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Friday, August 25th, 2006
The basic concept of this book is that people who have a certain version of a specific gene consistently test higher on subjective scales of self-transcendence than people who don’t. I find this idea thought provoking, as it sheds a scientific perspective on a subject that is so often clouded in myth. Hamer’s book is far from perfect, however; I got bogged down in his detailed descriptions of his original studies, and no further studies I am aware of have yet confirmed or expanded on his findings. But the book asks some interesting questions and points to the possibility of even more interesting answers that hopefully other scientists will continue to explore.
Check out this book here
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Thursday, August 24th, 2006
This novel tells the story of two young British women who go to India to backpack around the country. Friends since childhood, they have grown apart over the years and the main character, Esther, is hoping the trip will help reconnect them. On their journey, her friend Gemma befriends an odd woman named Coral who is part of an obscure religious sect. Suspense builds slowly and deliberately as Esther finds herself in the role of third wheel and the gap between the two lifelong friends widens into a suddenly uncrossable chasm.
Gardener is a good storyteller and draws you deeply into the adventure of these two young women. But it was the ending that got to me the most. It is a stark reminder of how profoundly our lives can be affected by beliefs about reality that, once held up to the light of scrutiny, are not even true.
Check out this book here
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for August, 2006.
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Book Reviews
- A Mind of Its Own, by Cordelia Fine
- A Place Called Waco, by David Thibodeau and Leon Whiteson
- Brain and Belief, by John McGraw
- Brainwashing by Kathleen Taylor
- Breaking the Spell, By Daniel Dennett
- Collision With the Infinite by Suzanne Segal
- Cults in our Midst, by Margaret Singer
- Demian By Herman Hesse
- Dragon Thunder, by Diana Mukpo
- DVD: Marjoe
- Eat, Pray, Love, by Elizabeth Gilbert
- Leaving the Saints, by Martha Beck
- Losing Gemma, by Katy Gardner
- Madame Blavatsky’s Baboon, by Peter Washington
- Misquoting Jesus, by Bart D. Ehrman
- Miss American Pie, by Margaret Sartor
- Mission to America, by Walter Kirn
- Paranormal Claims, by Bryan Farha
- S. by John Updike
- Six Impossible Things, by Lewis Wolpert
- Spiritual Enlightenment: The Damndest Thing, by Jed Mckenna
- Sun at Midnight, by Andrew Harvey
- The Blank Slate, by Steven Pinker
- The End of Faith, by Sam Harris
- The God Delusion, by Richard Dawkins
- The God Gene, by Dean Hamer
- The Guru Papers By Joel Kramer and Diana Alstad
- The New Age, by Martin Gardner
- The Program, by Greg Hurwitz
- The River Why, by David James Duncan
- The Sorcerer’s Apprentice, by Amy Wallace
- Why People Believe Wierd Things, by Shermer/Gould
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