One Book Meme -- BK
Earlier, Layman did his own One-Book Meme, and I thought I would add mine (just 'cause I wanted to).
1. One book that changed your life:
1. One book that changed your life:
God in the Dock, by C.S. Lewis2. One book that you’ve read more than once:
Reasonable Faith , by William Lane Craig3. One book you’d want on a desert island:
Forty Wooden Boats: A Third Catalog of Building Plans, by Editors of Woodenboat Magazine4. One book that made you laugh:
A Prayer for Owen Meany, by John Irving5. One book that made you cry:
Onions, Onions, Onions: Delicious Recipes for the World's Favorite Secret Ingredient by Linda and Fred Griffith6. One book that you wish had been written:
How to Effectively Communicate the Gospels to Thinking Skeptics, by anyone7. One book that you wish had never been written:
Holy Blood, Holy Grail by what's-his-name8. One book you’re currently reading:
A Treasury of English Ghost Stories, by Michael Cox and R.A. Gilbert9. One book you’ve been meaning to read:
The Jesus Dynasty, by James Tabor (but it's so hard to actually start reading what I know I'm going to hate)10. One book you wish you had written:
God in the Dock, by C.S. Lewis
Comments
Though one ghost story in the fiction collection by Ambrose Bierce had the same basic approach as The Sixth Sense. Wonder if Shyamalan had ever read it.
WF, Yeah, its kinda' interesting that I should go for ghost stories, but I really enjoy them. I don't like gruesome stories (I don't even bother with most horror movies since they are more slash and attack than suspense), but I love the real creepy ones where weird things happen.
I should write about ghosts because I'm pretty confident that people are experiencing real things when they tell some of the ghost stories (especially since we had a ghost in my house when I was a lad), but I don't think they are what most people think they are.
I'm curious why.
If I was asked which one of the questions could I have answered, "The Bible," I would have listed 1-5, and 8.
But I thought that might get boring and defeat the purpose of the task. In any event, I did list Acts as one book that I've read more than once, because I've read the thing so many times.
Sadly, I think I would have to put the NATURAL Error Messages Handbook as the book I have read the most.
And you could put Wright's "The Resurrection of the Son of God" as a book you have been meaning to read, given how much you've already written about it.
t