Today I received a $15 Christmas gift card to Borders (thanks Ernest and Tammy!). Since I only have t-minus 20 days until my next Fuller-online class, I decided I needed to make this non-academic reading purchase pronto. I brought a stack of books to my table to peruse, grabbed a cup of Seattle’s (probably not the) Best decaf, and spent a half-hour choosing my pages of prey.
I was an English major in college. For the thousands I paid (mmmm..am still paying) for my education, one of the nicest things I learned was how to figure out what’s worth reading. You’ve just gotta have a plan, honey. And you gotta know how to read the reviews and skim the stuff real fast.
A Shepherd Looks at Psalm 23 (Phillip Keller) $4.99
I’ve heard many say this little one is an overlooked classic. I wanted to read the whole thing while I was there. Borrow this from the church library, baby.
Velvet Elvis (Rob Bell) $14.99
One Velvety idea: Our relationship with God is a trampoline that we invite others to jump on. “I am far more interested in jumping than I am in arguing about whose trampoline is better. You rarely defend the things you love. You enjoy them and tell others about them and invite others to enjoy them with you.” Borrow this from a friend cause Rob Bell is so hot these days that everyone’s who’s feeling groovy and “emergent” has it, baby.
Praise Habit: Finding God in Sunsets and Sushi (David Crowder) $14.99
Yes, David Crowder wrote a book. It’s a reflection on the Psalms (Remixed) by Eugene Peterson, replete with zany illustrations and wild Appendices. I want to read this. But I don’t need to own it. Read this while you’re at Onething 2006 next week! It’ll surely be in the IHOP bookstore with the cushy chairs. You can just read it in there and not buy it. Boo yah, baby.
The Story $24.99
About 380 pages of the Bible in Narrative form, with the new (and happily inclusive speaking) TNIV translation. Try to borrow this from the public library, baby.
Martin Luther King, Jr., On Leadership $4.99
“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” -MLK Dec 1960 Although King is phenomenal, this doesn’t look like the most phenomenal book about MLK.
There’s a reason why bargain books are bargain books. Find a better MLK bio at the library, baby.
To Be Told: God Invites You to Coauthor Your Future (Dan Allender, PhD) $13.99
Dan is the Christian counselor guru man. I like him. (Too bad his publishers made the sub-title of his new book so cheeseafied.) To Be Told encourages people to look at their lives as a big sloppy whole, and consider writing it all down to remember all the whacky redemption God’s done. I wanna do that. And I know other people who ought to do that, too. The book was given sweet reviews by Brian McLaren, John Eldredge, and Tremper Longman, III! (I think I sat in on this Tremper’s class when I was visiting Westmont College last month. He pretty much has an amazing name.) Buy this one and then pass it on, baby.
you are a funny little bookstore geek. i stil get a buzz in bookstores. i don’t care how electronic we go, the smell of new books makes me hungry and a little wild-eyed. speaking of books, let me digress to authors and films, we watched Capote last night and he was (at least portrayed as) super creepy! talk about using people! agh! and back to bookstores, i went to the fuller bookstore with byron and purchased some things and had a coffee with that boy i like so much and it all made me think of you.
I get an even bigger buzz in used bookstores, though! I haven’t seen Capote yet, but I do like his writing. Fuller’s bookstore is heavenly. Esp cause they serve good fair-trade coffee and have a good (“crazy”) charismatic section. Can’t wait to be back there for that 2-weeker class in Feb near you, Lisa. forever your words geek.
we can have clandenstine meetings there at the fuller bookstore. we can sneak away from what we should be doing and talk about GOD and life and sufjan and stuff. btw, grant loves the Christmas album!