Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Sunday, September 11, 2011
On Books: The Help
Whenever a movie based on a novel comes out, I cringe a little bit. Maybe it's a personal bias, but fiction never translates absolutely from the page to the screen. Nevertheless, having recently finished this book, I am REALLY excited to see the movie.
This book was particularly interesting to me because of my family background. My mother is from an Italian immigrant family and was raised in Philadelphia's Little Italy. She attended Catholic school K-12 and can still remember the two girls in her graduating class who did NOT have Italian last names. My father was born and raised in rural New Hampshire. He had 5 brothers and sisters. There wasn't much money. Needless to say, nobody in my family tree ever employed any servants and the Civil Rights movement was news from afar that had little impact on their personal lives.
I guess because of this, I think of it as ancient history. Because it didn't directly affect my family I think of it as something that happened a long time ago. I've even wondered at times why black/white racism is still such a big issue.
This book shed new light on the subject.
I realized while reading that had my mother been born into a different social class and in a different location, she too may have been practically raised by a black maid, like so many of the characters in the book were. Had my father been the son of a Mississippi businessman, he could have been nursed when he was sick and fed breakfast each morning by a servant who was more invested in his well-being than his own mother. And had this been the case, they both would have been taught somewhere along the way that the same person who cared for them as children was less human, less important and less worthy of respect than they, simply because of their skin color.
Which made me realize... this is not ancient history. This is current. This is my parent's generation and so my generation is certainly directly affected.
Call this an obvious realization if you will, but it changed my perspective.
Read the book. It's good.
Wednesday, August 10, 2011
On Books: Mere Christianity
This book is powerful.
I read this book for the first time last year and I'm going to read it again soon. From start to finish, it is a well-thought out explanation of Christianity from a philosophical point of view. I think it's important to note here that Lewis was at one point an athiest. I also think it is important that Lewis addresses only the true essence of Christianity, without taking space to address the differences and arguments that often exist between different Christian churches or denominations. It addresses Christianity in the most basic sense.
My favorite part about this book is that it's written for the layman. There is no haughty theological language or anything that the average person wouldn't understand. It's also not riddled with "church speak" (the "Christian" vocabulary people raised in church are indoctrinated with from a young age).
This book really challenged and changed me. It caused me to pause and think about what I truly believe. I began to draw distinctions between my personal experiences with God and things I believed simply because I had heard it from a pastor somewhere at one point. Christianity is special because it is personal. It is the only religion I know of that allows man and God to commune and have a relationship: a friendship. It is a shame that the one thing that sets Christianity apart is the thing that is often missing when Christianity is taught.
This is a good book, regardless of what your personal spiritual beliefs are. It is well written and I would suggest it to anyone who is interested in the basis of Christian beliefs- regardless of their personal stance on the truth of Christianity. It's worth reading.
Really.
categories:
beliefs,
books,
Christianity,
reviews
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