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xenoc_1

xenoc_1@books.theunseen.city

Joined 2 years ago

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Tish Harrison Warren: Liturgy of the Ordinary: Sacred Practices in Everyday Life (2016, IVP Books) No rating

Reading this slowly, so as to take in the observations on everyday life as holy without it being a firehouse. Mother Tish has some deep understandings of how all of life can be considered holy. Even, maybe especially, the "boring" everyday things.

As a progressive Christian, both/and Episcopalian (the actual Anglican Communion church in the USA)/United Methodist in an affirming parish of both, I'm aware of the Rev. Tish Harrison Warren being from a non-affirming breakaway Anglican denomination. But I'm also aware that her faith journey started in the very gender-rigid, non-women-ordaining, fundamentalist, say-the-prayer-or-burn-in-hell, Southern Baptist Church. So I see her being in the ACNA with its (somewhat) openness to non-rigid interpretations, as being perhaps as far as she could follow the Spirit at this time. And I've found her writing, both in this book and in her NY Times column, to be inspiring and helpful on my own often …

Louise Penny, Hillary Rodham Clinton: State of Terror (Paperback, 2022, Simon & Schuster/St. Martin’s Press) 4 stars

Simon & Schuster and St. Martin’s Press are proud to publish a novel written by …

Review of 'State of Terror' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Very engrossing political thriller, with the obvious insider knowledge of Secretary Clinton's years at State, in the Senate, and as First Lady. I enjoyed this far more than I first expected from the early chapters, which did seem a bit of a typical potboiler thriller with some "purple prose" - but it promptly took off and didn't stop being a thrilling read after that, all the way to the end, with some twists upon twists.

The scenario for this story is very real. I can imagine it, quite unfortunately and with some fear, really happening.

Several of the characters leading countries, factions, terror groups etc. are obvious stand-ins for easily identifiable real-life individuals in those or similar roles. So don't be surprised when you encounter characters who represent Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin, Boris Johnson, and a variety of MAGA-and-Qanon types by other names. But really, don't we all want that …

Matt Haig: Midnight Library (2020, Penguin Publishing Group) 4 stars

Somewhere out beyond the edge of the universe there is a library that contains an …

Review of 'Midnight Library' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Astonishingly beautiful, life-affirming, and fun book, with a protagonist more charming than she realizes. Once you get past the first few short chapters of her countdown to suicide, including discovering her cat died.

I got stuck on those for 2 months, returning the book to the library, then borrowing it again, twice. Maybe rang to close to home. But this week I made myself power through them, and after that I couldn't put the book down before finishing it. Other than to pet my cats, of course.

Those first chapters are well-written and immediately engaging. Just be aware of the suicide, dead cat, and depression issues as potential triggers and/or blockers.