Author Archives: kristen

Technical Difficulties

For some reason, our Akismet spam filter has gotten a little overly aggressive lately. Please don’t get offended if your comment spends a while in filter purgatory. :o/

Weekend Project

Front Porch 1

Polyurathaning our new porch furniture. Another photo.

Housekeeping: A Novel by Marilynne Robinson

I expected great things from Housekeeping and Marilynne Robinson did not disappoint. I read her second novel, Gilead, last year and thoroughly enjoyed it but Housekeeping surpassed it by its gratifying use of language and description. Robinson has an breathtaking ability to write in a way that is plain but wonderful, in the true sense of the word.

If you prefer novels with gripping plots, you might find Housekeeping plodding. It’s a coming of age story about two sisters, narrated by the older of the two, that centers on loneliness and loss, two centerpieces of the human condition. Despite its themes and dreary setting, I didn’t find it to be a depressing book, likely because of the thoughtful, interesting prose and the way the story drew me into Ruthie’s world and made me see things from her perspective as the very best novels do.

The exceptional beauty of this book restored my faith in contemporary literature and gave me hope that great fiction is still being written, but it wasn’t lofty or condescending. The sparse simplicity made me want to write, to use the English language, to edit and edit again until I could find a small bit of beauty in my labor and Marilynne Robinson has created on every page. (10/10, from the library.)

IMPORTANT: Infant Car Seats *UPDATE*

Consumer Reports did some extensive testing of infant car seats with alarming results using a 35-mph frontal crash test and in a 38-mph side crash test, which is still not *that* fast. Car seats flew off their bases, rotated too far and would have caused grave injuries as measured by the test dummy.You can read their report here: it won’t be free for long.

Here’s a quick summary for shoppers: only two performed well in all tests: the Baby Trend Flex-Loc and the Graco SnugRide with EPS. The Chicco KeyFit, Compass I410, Evenflo Embrace and Peg Perego Primo Viaggio SIP passed if used with vehicle safety belts but not with LATCH. Three seats outright failed – the Evenflo Discovery, the Graco SafeSeat, and the Britax Companion, the Evenflo being the worst as it did not even pass the 30-mph retest, which is the federal safety standard. Consumer Reports is pushing for a recall. If you own that seat, I would call Evenflo and demand they recall it so you can go buy a better seat!

UPDATE: They recalled their report.  http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/cu-press-room/pressroom/2007/2/0702_eng0702ccs.htm

Southern authors, y’all?

In spite of the fact that I had all of my literary education in the South, there is a huge hole where Southern literature should be in my soul.  I have never read a book by William Faulkner, Walker Percy, Thomas Wolfe and many of the other great Southern authors.  I did have the opportunity to do so at Carolina but I spent my literature classes with Shakespeare and Dante instead.  Where ought I start, y’all?

Overheard, travel edition

We returned yesterday from 12 days of traveling (2000 miles, 8 states.)  Anyhow, here are some signs you’ve been hitting the drive-thru Starbucks a little too often.  When your two and a half year old (a) knows that the St. Arbucks drive-thru does not have fries and doesn’t even bother to ask for them and (b) upon hearing “Welcome to Starbucks, what can we get started for you?” says “I’d like a grande mocha, please!”  (NB she has never, ever had a mocha.)

TCL Reading Challenge 2007

Plan better. Read more. Share more. That’s the 2007 reading challenge here at This Classical Life. It’s simple and flexible and you are cordially invited.

I really like using lists of bests to help plan. When I think of a book I’d like to read, I add it to a list of books to read this year. I always have that list so I know what to reserve from the library and it helps me to visualize what I have finished and am working on quickly. It’s easy to add and delete books. This year I want to work on planning for more GOOD reading (classics, etc.) and not just planning to make sure I continue to read.

If you are up for the challenge, leave a comment so we all know and use the button if you wish.

Books Read in 2006

(loosely classified) 

CLASSICS:
Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre
G. K. Chesterton, Orthodoxy
C.S. Lewis, The Great Divorce
Flannery O’Connor, The Violent Bear It Away
Chaim Potok, My Name Is Asher Lev
Edith Schaeffer, L’Abri
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovitch
E.B. White, The Trumpet of the Swan

EDUCATIONAL/SPIRITUAL: Continue reading

Under Construction…

Still tweaking the new look.  Mike is doing most of the heavy lifting, as usual.

EDITED TO ADD: The drop down menus don’t work well in the new IE.  They do in the older versions and in Firefox.  Any other browsers that are having trouble?  Anyone NOT using Firefox?

TCL 2007 Reading Challenge

I have several inter-connected goals for the new year regarding reading. 

  1. Read more books.
  2. Write more reviews (at least for 1/3 of the books I read) to post on the blog and amazon.com
  3. Keep track of books I’d like to read and actually read them.

Anyhow, anyone want to join in the fun and read/review more in 2007?   If several people do, perhaps I can make a little graphic and we can check in regularly.  If not, I will go it alone ;o)

Merry Christmas!

(a cropped version of our Christmas card, 2/3 of the photos by the lovely and talented Brooke Jared.)

Velvet Elvis

Velvet Elvis: Repainting the Christian Faith is the first book by Rob Bell, pastor of Mars Hill Bible Church in Grand Rapids and featured speaker in the NOOMA videos.  I read straight through it today and was genuinely surprised at how much I liked the book.  It is an excellent call for Christians to think outside the box of cafeteria evangelicalism and to live a life that fully embraces God in all its aspects.

My prejudice against the book was based on my limited exposure to Bell.  I saw one NOOMA and I wasn’t that impressed and I recall hearing faint rumors about his “bad theology.”  Honestly, I didn’t find his theology to be bad upon reading.  Arminian at points, but certainly within the bounds of orthodoxy and also more precise than most emerging writers.  (The statement of faith of his church can be found here.)

Velvet Elvis is not a memoir.  It does include a lot of personal stories and has a personal tone, but it has a flow and purpose.  It’s a book that wonders about the vastness of God, how little we can understand.  It’s a book that encourages readers to reflect about their own faith.  It discusses the main points of the Christian faith in a way engaging to a postmodern generation, particularly those who grew up in the church, both the accepting and the cynical. 

Rob Bell is not a messianic Jew, but he has a healthy obsession with setting the Bible in its original context.  I think many readers will glean interesting insights from what he writes about Jesus’ world.  Bell certainly wants to be relevant, but he also demonstrates a commitment to the truth.  Personally, I enjoyed his endnotes because I love seeing what books authors like enough to cite, Bell certainly passed my test in that department.

I wouldn’t say Velvet Elvis was life-changing for me, I’ve read enough from the emerging church that I am over that bubble in some respects, but I certainly think it is helpful and would recommend it to people who are curious about the emergent church, suddenly aware of their obsession with systematics and apologetics and also young people who are wondering about the faith they grew up with and the culture they are discovering in the rest of the world.  (8/10, borrowed from my sister Janelle.)Â