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July 30, 2012

Book List : "Fahrenheit 451"

I just finished Fahrenheit 451 this afternoon, and I have to say– it was brilliant!

Although Ray Bradbury used a lot of flowery, distracting metaphors and imagery, he still accomplished what he wanted: a meaningful story. The novel is set in a dystopian, futuristic society where technology has stolen the will to think from the human race. Firemen burn books instead of preventing fires, and the oncoming war does very little to worry the endlessly entertained population. Guy Montague, a fireman who doesn't understand why he steals books, meets an abnormal teenager and an unemployed professor, and the terror of the society finally dawns on him through these outstanding people. His suicidal wife turns him in for owning books, then promptly leaves him, while his fire-chief taunts him into committing murder. Guy finally runs away, meeting a group of renegade scholars who keep copies of all the burned books in their minds, hoping to one day pass on the texts to future generations.

July 28, 2012

Book List : Introduction

I've decided to start a book-club! As I look around at stacks of unread classics in my bedroom, I ask myself– what am I waiting on? I have finally come to the conclusion that I don't need someone to read them with, nor do I need a teacher to tell me to read them, nor do I need an instructional institution to assist me in gleaning information from them (that's what the internet is for!) So, I've decided to take a serious plunge headfirst into a commitment to classic literature.

Now don't get me wrong! A few of these books have been read by me at one point or another, because I've always been an avid reader–since I first picked up a book! But now I feel a need to organize my reading and attack with force– to engage in learning information and expanding my mind through these classic works. I am going to divide and conquer the ever-growing list of novels that I have yet to read. I refuse to allow these great works to pass me by!

July 27, 2012

The Secrets of Eden

Imagine a group of six high school seniors going on a three-week hiking trip through the Appalachian Mountains. No adults, no laptops, very scarce electricity, and a ton of miles between where you started and where you're going. Imagine spending that kind of time with your closest friends, just exploring God's masterpiece endlessly and forever, with the sunlight filtering through the trees, and the clouds lilting over golden wheat fields all around you–falling asleep beneath the Universe every night nestled beside the people that meaning everything to you, without a single worry in the world. Doesn't that sound like perfection? What could be better than that?

July 18, 2012

We Are The Battlefield

There's an old gospel hymn that says,

"Oh when the Saints, go marching in! Oh when the Saints go marching in! Oh Lord I want to be in that number, when the Saints go marching in!"

This song was used for funeral marches, as a procession would escort the deceased to the cemetery for burial. It offers the beautiful thought of joining the Lord's host of Saints and Believers after death, and becoming one of God's Army once we return home.

July 13, 2012

The Donkey And The Lion

He looked a little like Golom, from The Lord of the Rings, or maybe Yoda from Star Wars, but he was completely black. He was permanently hunched over, like his spine was molded to the inside of a crescent moon. His skin was dark and scaly like a snake’s, his eyes were glowing a dull yellow-brown, and his pupils were as narrow as a cat’s. He sat clinging to the foot of my bed, watching me with his glowing eyes. In the darkness, I could make out his eery silhouette against he moonlit window behind him.

He had been there every night for the past month. The first night, I had started screaming. My parents had come in and assured me that nothing was there– even though I could see his eyes following me the entire time. They simply couldn’t see him, and told me to ignore it and go back to bed. The second night, I had tried to talk to him, but he just hissed and growled at me, mumbling sharp words in a language I’d never heard before. The third night, I tried to move him, but the moment I laid a finger on him, my skin started to burn. I couldn’t touch him without searing pain, even while wearing gloves. After the first week, I gave up trying to get rid of him. I left him there, staring at me for hours as I tried to sleep.

July 12, 2012

Mercy


     A moment before, Mercy was standing there. I turned around, and suddenly she wasn't. I was afraid to look down out of the window, to the bright green lawn outside. I just stared out of the open window, at the clear blue sky, and the apple tree orchard. Nadia came in behind me, but I didn't hear what she asked me. A second later, an aching screech unmistakably from our mother's throat echoed up the hallway, followed by shouting. I was rooted to the spot, my brain frozen.
     She had been in an irregular mood lately– wandering through the large house aimlessly, as a ghost. In fact, she had been pale as a ghost, too. She didn't speak much, but had begun to stare at nothing, as if in thought, much of the time since her return to the estate. Her normally effervescent voice would be so welcoming in the mornings, and quite animated after a glass or two of her favorite deep red wine from the Kenworths' vineyard. More recently, however, she was lackadaisical and solemn. We had all wondered furtively what had occurred at the Women's College to have affected her, but we didn't ask in the case that she might be offended. Her sudden introversion had put the house in a pensive mood, and we were all hoping that she might surface at some point, and perhaps awaken her usual self, never the wiser that she may have acted strangely at all. As this was not the case, however, I regret not questioning her reservedness immediately upon her homecoming.