Archive for the 'Reviews' Category

61nhd8vcrbl_aa240_.jpgI am really enjoying Mike’s series on knowing God. It is coinciding with a time of renewal in my own spiritual life, which is also cool.

Anyway, during Mike’s sermon today on reading the Bible, he mentioned various Bibles that are easy and helpful to read. I wanted to tell you about a children’s Bible that I think absolutely wonderful. My parents gave it to one of my daughters for Christmas, and I’ve learned so much from reading it to them.

The Jesus Storybook Bible talks about God’s Never Stopping, Never Giving Up, Unbreaking, Always and Forever Love for us. The author uses each Bible story to show God’s redemptive love for us. I found myself often in tears as I read the stories to my kids.

a_thousand_splendid_suns.jpgI didn’t know I loved historical fiction until I read The Kite Runner a few years ago. Since then, I’ve read a lot of it because I feel like my knowledge of non-Western history is very limited, but I’m not into reading textbooks on the various dynasties of China, for example. I’d much rather learn my history in the context of a well-written story. Often this is a somewhat sad story, and for me it’s a good thing. I need to be reminded how blessed I am (otherwise I take my privileged life for granted and start seeing my blessings as rights instead of blessings), and how much this world – in all ages – has needed and will need the salvation and restoration our God brings.

If you’ve read The Kite Runner, you know the talent of Khaled Hosseini – his ability to tell an engaging, powerful, personal tale against the backdrop of Afghanistan’s heart-breaking history. A Thousand Splendid Suns is Hosseini’s second and latest novel, and one I highly recommend. I loved The Kite Runner, but I think I liked this one even more only because the main characters are women, and while I can in no way relate to their circumstances, I feel more connected to them just because they are women, and I think you will, too.

The story is of two women of very different backgrounds, generations, and even cultures in some ways, being thrust together in an unexpected way I hope you will not see coming. The book has several twists, and I don’t want to rob you of the pleasure of discovering them on your own.

The first part of the book focuses on Mariam, the older of the two women, who was born an outcast and married off at a young age to an, ahem, undesirable man. In the second part of the book we meet Laila, the second of the women, who at the time is an 8-year-old girl living a relatively privileged life on the same street that Mariam and her husband call home. They are brought together through an act of war and spend many years together, at first disliking each other but growing in love and hope together.

One aspect I appreciate about Hosseini’s books is the way they capture the reader’s attention and make Afghanistan’s sad, confusing history come to life through personal experience. Both of his books span decades. This one starts in the 60s and ends in 2003. It gives us insight on the war with the Soviet Union, the rule of the warlords and then the Taliban, and how the hope of the people rose with each new regime and then fell as life went from bad to worse every time. Even though Hosseini’s work is historical fiction, the characters and events are completely believable and none of the events seem sensationalized. A Thousand Splendid Suns is a quick read because it’s so enthralling. So, give it a chance! Order it from the Orange County library, which delivers to your door, by the way. You’ll be glad you did.

“Action News”
September 11th, 2007

Ever since Friends, Seinfeld, and Frasier went off the air I’ve felt a void in my sitcom heart. An emptiness that only a GOOD sitcom can fill. I don’t want any of these lame, low budget, dumb comedies. I want a good, laugh-out-loud comedy to make a come back. I’ll admit that “The Office” does that for me.

heaton_grammer.jpg One I'm looking forward to is Action News on Fox. This sitcom pairs Emmy-winners Kelsey Grammer of Frasier and Patricia Heaton of Everybody Loves Raymond. They play reunited news anchors in Pittsburgh.

Here’s an excerpt from a blog I found called Televisionary

“Grammer is magnetic as fallen anchorman Chuck Tatham, in the role of a womanizing blowhard light years away from Frasier Crane. He’s egotistical in an entirely different sort of way, a preening alpha male who doesn’t quite realize that, in returning to the Buffalo news station where he got his start, he’s admitted that he’s a has-been. Heaton plays his co-anchor Kelly, who had grown used to having the spotlight since Chuck left for greener pastures. It was awfully cold there in his shadow, after all.

When Chuck returns to Buffalo after a widely disseminated on-air meltdown (involving unleashing a torrential storm of obscenities onto a moronic weatherwoman, which pops up on YouTube), the two are forced to work together again, but naturally the past has an uncanny way of catching up to everyone.”

I hope this meets and exceeds all our expectations!