So, this month I've been featuring all things to do with books and Christmas.
In case you missed any of the posts, here they are:
Why not share some of your Christmas posts with us in the comments
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MeditateI read Romans in as many translations as I could find. My aim was to read 4 translations. In the end I read 4 whole translations (NRSV, Youth Bible, Today's NIV, and The Message), plus up to the end of chapter 13 in The Good News Bible. I also got up to the end of Chapter 14 in the study guide 'Romans for Everyone' by Tom Wright. My online journalling didn't quite happen, however.
OK, this part didn't go quite as well. I did pray at the end of each bible passage I read; but I didn't pick them at random, write about them, or meditate on them. This is possibly something I need to work on more.
I aimed to read 3 non-fiction Christian books. I thought I'd done well with this, but looking back at my records I seem to have only managed to read Just:Imagine (which I did in January).
"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was with God in the beginning. Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made. In him was life, and that life was the light of men. The light shines in the darkness, but the darkness has not understood it."
John 1:1-5 NIV
A chance reading of a newspaper ad will send 16 year old Thomas Byrne into the world within our world.
Following the ad he will find Guardians Incorporated. A seven thousand year old organization charged with protecting the balance between Magic and technology.
Through their guidance technology has kept Magic at bay since the Renaissance, but the balance is shifting and soon all those creatures we've driven into myth and legend will come back with a vengeance.
To protect the present, Guardians Incorporated needs to know the future.
A simple adventure story featuring a range of magical creatures, this book feels like an alien-based comic-book TV show.
The main character, Thomas Bryne, comes across as younger than his stated age of 16. He is unusually naive and trusting, despite his troubled background. We learn a lot about his past, but little of it appears relevant to this part of the story.
The fight scenes were dramatic and fast-paced. They left you on the edge of your seat. In fact the whole of the book happened quite quickly, sometimes too quickly for my liking.
The ending was a real cliff-hanger. It made me not so much want to read on to the next book, but with an unsatisfied feeling.
This book would appeal mostly to the younger end of the YA market. For them it would be an exciting adventure story, full of fights and drama. Thomas Bryne would be someone to look up to, and they would no doubt envy his escape from humdrum everyday life. And the cliff-hanger would leave them wanting more.
For an YA audience this book is...
The one shown above is magnetic, but that requires magnetic tape which is not easy to find. If you don't have some then you could use photos, old Christmas cards, or your own drawings to add a personal touch to a 'normal' one. Add a ribbon and you have a lovely addition for someone's stocking.
Use some photos of last year. Either use a computer or cut them out and stick them onto card. Attach together and voila. Why not add family birthdays and occasions for an added personal touch.
If you have a video camera and have recorded events throughout the year, then why not put the best bits onto DVD. A great one for grandparents.
Buy and download some of their favourite songs. Put them onto a CD (or straight onto their MP3 for a lovely surprise).
What is your partner or your parents always wanting you to do? Make a booklet which vouchers that allow them to make you do those useful things you would rather not do. (Just make sure you're willing to actually do them when they cash them in).
Isn't it great to finally have that time to read the book you've been waiting to get to all year. When family gets too much I love to retreat into my 'reading zone'- its a brilliant way to escape the stresses that Christmas can bring.
I've already started this one. I've been reading from a chronological version of the bible and its been amazing to see how the different gospel accounts vary and to get a better idea of what really comes first in the Xmas story.
I'm going to this one tonight and am very intigued to see how it goes.
You know, the kind that only come out at Christmas and in the middle of summer. And then there are those which are really only appropriate at this time of year.
But don't worry- I'll be setting up automatic posts to amuse you all throughout the festive period.
At Christmas we celebrate gift and generosity and open expressions of love. You don't need religion to understand that all those things make life worth living. The Christian story suggests that gift and generosity and love are basic to what God does at Christmas, but also that religious people sometimes need to relearn this truth from others who have the Christmas spirit, even if they don't know the Christmas story.
Much could be said in contrast about the "real Mary" of the biblical narrative: the teenage girl from Nazareth who gave birth on a dirty stable floor; the terrified mom who scurried frantically through the streets of Jerusalem looking for her lost little boy; the woman who had enough influence over Jesus to convince him to liven up a wedding with his first miracle of turning water into wine; the grieved mother who wept in the shadow of the cross."
"A Wayne in a Manger" includes some wonderfully funny and touching nativity play anecdotes, including children forgetting their lines, ad-libbing, falling of the stage, picking their noses and showing their knickers. One hilarious anecdote tells of an innkeeper who generously says there's plenty of room for Mary and Joseph, while another child, jealous of Joseph's starring role, allows Mary to come in but not Joseph, who can 'push off'...There's the baby Jesus who suddenly pipes up with 'My name is Tammy, are you my Mommy?' and funniest of all, Mary who tells Joseph, 'I'm having a baby - oh and it's not yours'.
The perfect read for a Christmas holiday, this book have me chortling and "ahhhh"ing all the way through. Anyone who had ever had contact with young children will recognise the antics and anacdotes told in these chapters. It made me want to read it outloud to all around me. In fact, I shared so much that my Auntie wanted to read it as well. Despite not usually being a book reader, she found it hard to put down and finished it within two days.
Okay, I'm just going to come right out and say it: A lot of women secretly hate Christmas.
Now, don't get me wrong. We love that picturesque moment in which the tree is lit, the fire is crackling, and children outfitted in matching candy-cane pajamas dance around the living room to Tchaikovsky, showing off armfuls of new toys while a twenty-pound ham bakes in the oven; we just hate the anxiety disorder we developed while trying to produce it.
There seems to be some kind of universal agreement that the advances achieved through women's liberation need not apply during the holidays. It's as though the first trumpet peals of "It's the Most Wonderful Time of the Year" sent blasting over the PA at Bath & Beyond are designed to trigger an internal short that shocks us all into Stepford mode, donning aprons and strained smiles and sweaters that have no business surviving another decade.
In a secret laboratory hidden under the desert, a covert bioengineering project--codename "Exodus"--has discovered the gene responsible for the human soul.
Somewhere in the neon sprawl outside the nation's collapsing economic core, a group of renegade monks are on the verge of uncovering a secret that has eluded mankind for centuries.
In a glittering tower high above the urban decay, an ascendant U.S. Senator is found dead--an apparent, yet inexplicable, suicide.
And in the streets below, a young man races through an ultra modern metropolis on the verge of a violent revolution....closing in on the terrible truth behind Exodus--and one man's dark vision for the future of mankind.
Welcome to Tiber City.
Fast-paced, full of both action and tension, Kingdom tumbles the reader through a dystopian world both recognisable and yet immensely different.
At times the descriptions in this book were almost too intense, the scenes too graphic to bear. And yet this horror was never out of place with the world in which it was set, always there for a clear purpose. Its this imagery that really gives life to the book and propels the reader on in the hope that things might become better.
There was never a dull moment in this story. Events just kept coming, mirroring the fast-paced world in which the plot is set. At no point did I want to put the book down and pick it up another time. On the contrary, given the chance I was able to read half this book in one sitting.
Its not an easy read, but this is a boo which I thoroughly recommend to fans of dystopian worlds. I comes with only one warning though- this is not one for the young or the feint of heart!