What book are you reading? #2

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Friends,
I would really like to know how you balance reading fiction and spirtual books. I hope someone sends a reply:shrug:
 
Spin by Robert Charles Wilson.

Summary
“One night in October when he was ten years old, Tyler Dupree stood in his back yard and watched the stars go out. They all flared into brilliance at once, then disappeared, replaced by a flat, empty black barrier. He and his best friends, Jason and Diane Lawton, had seen what became known as the Big Blackout. It would shape their lives.” “The effect is worldwide. The sun is now a featureless disk - a heat source, rather than an astronomical object. The moon is gone, but tides remain. Not only have the world’s artificial satellites fallen out of orbit, their recovered remains are pitted and aged, as though they’d been in space far longer than their known lifespans. As Tyler, Jason, and Diane grow up, space probe reveals a bizarre truth: The barrier is artificial, generated by huge alien artifacts. Time is passing faster outside the barrier than inside–more than a hundred million years per day on Earth. At this rate, the death throes of the sun are only about forty years in our future.” “Jason, now a promising young scientist, devotes his life to working against this slow-moving apocalypse. Diane throws herself into hedonism, marrying a sinister cult leader who’s forged a new religion out of the fears of the masses.” “Earth sends terraforming machines to Mars to let the onrush of time do its work, turning the planet green. Next they send humans…and immediately get back an emissary with thousands of years of stories to tell about the settling of Mars. Then Earth’s probes reveal that an identical barrier has appeared around Mars. Jason, desperate, seeds near space with self-replicating machines that will scatter copies of themselves outward from the sun - and report back on what they find. Life on Earth is about to get much, much stranger.”–BOOK JACKET {copied from my library’s website

==> SIDENOTE <==
I’m reading this which is apocalyptic genre, watching the latest Battlestar Gallatica on DVD which is a dark apocalyptic series and now the swine flu. Talk about messing with my head!
Sounds interesting, Dandelion_Wine.

I read one of his other books, The Chronoliths, which had a very interesting premise, but he drove me absolutely crazy with his heavy-handed foreshadowing on practically every other page. Argh! I’m all for good foreshadowing, but it needs to be subtle. :rolleyes: It was an interesting read, but that was a big annoyance for me. It’s the only thing of his I’ve read, so I don’t know if that’s habitual for him, or not. Are you seeing that in Spin?
 
Friends,
I would really like to know how you balance reading fiction and spirtual books. I hope someone sends a reply:shrug:
Well, I’d be glad to answer, but are you asking how we find time to do both, or does one take away from the other?

For me, I go through stages where I want nothing BUT spiritual books. Then, after I go through a few of them back to back, I’ll suddenly find myself wanting a good interesting novel, so I’ll go find one. 🙂

Other times, I may simultaneously read a spiritual book and a novel … say I’ll read the novel for an hour or two, and then just before I go to sleep, I’ll read a few chapters of the spiritual one, so that I fall asleep in a spiritual frame of mind.

Hope that helps, but feel free to clarify if I didn’t answer what you wanted to know. 🙂
 
Well, I’d be glad to answer, but are you asking how we find time to do both, or does one take away from the other?

For me, I go through stages where I want nothing BUT spiritual books. Then, after I go through a few of them back to back, I’ll suddenly find myself wanting a good interesting novel, so I’ll go find one. 🙂

Other times, I may simultaneously read a spiritual book and a novel … say I’ll read the novel for an hour or two, and then just before I go to sleep, I’ll read a few chapters of the spiritual one, so that I fall asleep in a spiritual frame of mind.

Hope that helps, but feel free to clarify if I didn’t answer what you wanted to know. 🙂
I’m the same way- go back and forth, depending on mood/season/need, etc.
 
OK, this is weird. I was helping a friend with a garage sale. Got bored and wandered around to some other garage sales looking for a book to read. Nothing. One lady had 3 boxes of romance novels but they didn’t look interesting. So I picked up a book intended for middle school girls–entitled “My Secret Boyfriend.”

The plot wasn’t quite what the title might imply. No boyfriend, nothing objectionable, not too vapid, and I read it in a day just to kill some time. I think I’ll give it to one of my nieces of the appropriate age.
 
I’m the same way- go back and forth, depending on mood/season/need, etc.
Yup, count me in for pretty much the same thing. Sometimes I’m in the mood for something lighter, so that is what I’ll read. Other times I want something that will make me think, so I’ll grab something deeper.

I tend to go in cycles, I’ll read TONS of one kind of book on one subject until I burn out and then I do the same thing with the next subject. 😃
 
OK, this is weird. I was helping a friend with a garage sale. Got bored and wandered around to some other garage sales looking for a book to read. Nothing. One lady had 3 boxes of romance novels but they didn’t look interesting. So I picked up a book intended for middle school girls–entitled “My Secret Boyfriend.”

The plot wasn’t quite what the title might imply. No boyfriend, nothing objectionable, not too vapid, and I read it in a day just to kill some time. I think I’ll give it to one of my nieces of the appropriate age.
I read kids books all the time. I work at an after-school program so when the kids sit down to read I’ll pull something off the shelf too. Then I usually end up addicted and have to take it home to finish it. The kids also know I like to read, so will bring me library books from school or let me read whatever book they brought from home that I just happened to pick up for a minute. 😃
 
Oh, and to be on topic, I’m almost done reading MASH. It is about a real guy’s experiences in a MASH in Korea. It is a good book, especially if you like the show. It seems the show is fairly accurate, as sitcoms go anyway, and some of the episodes are based on things that this guy actually experienced.

Next up is an early review copy of a book that I got through LibraryThing. It is about the Holocaust, a subject I’m really interested in, so I’m hoping it is a good book. 😃
 
Yup, count me in for pretty much the same thing. Sometimes I’m in the mood for something lighter, so that is what I’ll read. Other times I want something that will make me think, so I’ll grab something deeper.

I tend to go in cycles, I’ll read TONS of one kind of book on one subject until I burn out and then I do the same thing with the next subject. 😃
That pretty much describes my reading patterns, too. Currently reading Chesteron’s book about St. Thomas Aquinas, “The Dumb Ox”. I’ve probably read at least two dozen books on Catholicism in the last few months, with a sprinkling of general fiction and other non-fiction mixed in.
 
Please let us know what you think. I’ve read American Exorcism and Hostage to the Devil and have wondered about Amorth’s books.
I saw it advertised here at CAF. So far it is very good. Not anything that shocked me …yet.

Kathy
 
The Imitation of Christ along with about 6 books I have to read for an upcoming law exam.
 
Friends,
Thanks so much for answering my question and giving me some ideas. Sometimes I do feel like if I am reading fiction or non-fiction (not spirtual) that I am wasting my time. But I guess that’s not the case and I shouldn’t feel guilty.
Blessings to all,
eli
 
Nostromo by Joseph Conrad
Youth by Joseph Conrad
The Things They Carried by Tim O’ Brien
 
I have just started “An Exorcist Tells His Story” by Gabriele Amorth

Kathy
An excellent book, I loved it. But if you may not want to read it alone in the dark!! Seriously!! The sequel (An Exorcist - More stories) IMHO was even better. Enjoy!!

I"ve just started on “The Inquisitor’s Guide - A Medieval Guide to Heretics” by Bernard Gui, written in around 1320, and only translated in 2006…can get it from Amazon
 
For me it is something of a matter or need. I read spiritual books or books on theology or church history when I have the time. I read fiction when I need something light that requires little thought or when I travel (I read two novels on a recent business trip)
 
I am about half way through “Grace Cafe” by Donna Marie Cooper O’Boyle
 
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