Archive for the ‘Recommended Books’ category

Esquire’s wonderful talk with Roger Ebert.

February 17th, 2010

I was surprisingly touched and moved by the portrait given in this article in Esquire Magazine.  The Pulitzer Prize winning film critic has not been able to talk or eat or drink for three years now.  And yet, he seems to have found a deeper freedom in the power of the word.  He’s become no less of an atheist or a liberal, but he seems to have taken on that wisdom that those for whom had a great deal of suffering, find.  It reminds me of talks with both of my parents before they died.  Not particular conversations, but the drum beat of what they hoped to leave behind for me.  The real value of life.  What loss is, what our responsibility is, and how to be content.

In his dreams, his voice has never left. In his dreams, he can get out everything he didn’t get out during his waking hours: the thoughts that get trapped in paperless corners, the jokes he wanted to tell, the nuanced stories he can’t quite relate. In his dreams, he yells and chatters and whispers and exclaims. In his dreams, he’s never had cancer. In his dreams, he is whole.

These things come to us, they don’t come from us, he writes about his cancer, about sickness, on another Post-it note. Dreams come from us.

Read the article.  I think you’ll find it moving, too.  And I’m reminded again that this is what illness teaches us, when it is our own, or another’s:

There’s not enough time to write down what he’s angry about

Read more: http://www.esquire.com/features/roger-ebert-0310-4#ixzz0fmj6uSmN

Book Recommendation: The Family

August 23rd, 2009

51AqiLkxpRL._SL160_

You’ll see it listed in the box to the right as one of the books I’m reading right now.  I love it.  It is an amazing story about what some very powerful people in our government and in industry are doing in the name of bringing a more Christian country into place.  

Some of you may know that I was a graduate of and Assembly of God Bible College and worked as a gospel singer for some years.  This stuff is real, and it’s frightening.  

Think about buying the book and let me know what you think.  It’s our own Lynch book club.