bookpagedev

Review by

In the opening pages of Sharon Baldacci’s A Sundog Moment, Elizabeth Whittaker is diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. Suddenly her seemingly perfect life is thrown into turmoil. As she struggles with the disease, Elizabeth joins a support group and learns to find the sundog moments in life moments “filled with clarity and truth.” But the chronic pain of MS leads Elizabeth into a life-changing decision when she is arrested for trying to obtain illegal drugs. This carefully crafted first novel from Baldacci, sister of best-selling novelist David Baldacci, draws from her 21 years of living with MS. Author and editor W. Terry Whalin has always loved a good story.

In the opening pages of Sharon Baldacci's A Sundog Moment, Elizabeth Whittaker is diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. Suddenly her seemingly perfect life is thrown into turmoil. As she struggles with the disease, Elizabeth joins a support group and learns to find the sundog moments in…
Review by

Our identity if we’re not verifying it, we’re worried about someone stealing it. But what is this mysterious and elusive It ? The Identity Code: The 8 Essential Questions for Finding Your Purpose and Place in the World is a guide to discovering the core self, written by a man who’s very sure of his own identity: I am Larry Ackerman and I am driven by the need to help people to see. Ackerman, an identity management consultant, believes that identity is beautiful and it is powerful. Decipher its secret code, which is embedded in us from birth along with our biological constructs, and we will understand the why of our lives. His introductory essay debunks a currently popular identity theory: The myth of personal freedom the idea that you are at liberty to pick whatever path in life you want is the unspoken agony of the modern person. This myth, Ackerman argues, ignores an inherent order already present in life, a complex system of natural law wherein lie the seeds of identity.

Ackerman clearly presents his finely distilled Laws of Identity and their eight corresponding questions, which lead, like a well-signed path, toward self-knowledge and personal responsibility. First tackling basic queries such as, Who am I, and what makes me special? The Identity Code then turns to questions about life patterns, directions, gifts, relationships and abundance. With instructions on using an Identity Mapping Process, case studies and exercises, this commonsense workbook shines with Ackerman’s compassionate desire for each individual to discover his or her precious jewel of identity and be at peace with yourself.

Our identity if we're not verifying it, we're worried about someone stealing it. But what is this mysterious and elusive It ? The Identity Code: The 8 Essential Questions for Finding Your Purpose and Place in the World is a guide to discovering the…
Review by

National leaders occasionally decide that some of their country’s citizens must die so that the nation may live. This is true whether the citizens are soldiers sent off to war, murderers hung from the gallows or dissidents shot in the street.

In June 1989, thousands of Chinese protestors gathered in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square to demand the reform or removal of their government. Drawing their slogans from Mao and their symbols from the Statue of Liberty, they nearly succeeded. But then the People’s Liberation Army arrived, murdering hundreds or perhaps thousands in the crowd.

The most famous image of the uprising showed a man facing down a tank. Who was this man? Who were the soldiers and leaders who wanted him dead, and why? A new novel, <B>Sons of Heaven</B> by Terrence Cheng, provides some answers, if only fictional ones. It tells three stories: that of the tank-defying dissident Xiao-Di; the rebellion-quashing soldier Lu; and China’s chain-smoking leader Deng Xao Ping. Xiao-Di and Lu are brothers, and Deng was once a dissident himself. Thus Cheng debunks the simplistic, good-versus-evil treatment the event often receives.

Xiao-Di studies at Cornell University, where he is given an addictive whiff of freedom and wealth, while Lu stays behind, bound by duty and country. Xiao-Di returns to China to find fear and poverty, but also a wariness of foreign influence. Deng is sympathetic toward the students but is justly skeptical of their ability to rule. Xiao-Di’s rabble-rousing endangers his family’s life; Lu’s obedience challenges filial bonds; and Deng’s decision haunts his dreams.

Because Terrence Cheng was born in Taiwan and is a long-term resident of New York, the reaction to the novel on both sides of the Pacific will probably follow the usual doctrinaire lines. Perhaps the <I>China People’s Daily</I> will label it subversive, while <I>The New York Times</I> will label it an indictment of totalitarianism. <B>Sons of Heaven</B> is neither, and that is its virtue. It is a story of three men doing what each thinks is right in the context of their personal and world history. As Marx once said, Man makes his history, but he does not make it out of whole cloth. Man makes democracy, but he does not make it overnight. <I>Kenneth Champeon is a writer living in Thailand.</I>

National leaders occasionally decide that some of their country's citizens must die so that the nation may live. This is true whether the citizens are soldiers sent off to war, murderers hung from the gallows or dissidents shot in the street.

In…

Review by

In Ted Dekker’s latest novel, Black, Thomas Hunter is running away from attackers in Denver when a bullet clips him and his world goes black. He wakes up in another world with a green forest and meets a beautiful woman, Rachelle. In this other world, Hunter learns things he could not possibly know such as the creation of the Raison virus by an evil industrialist who plans to use it to dominate world leaders. Each time Hunter sleeps, he moves between the two worlds, and becomes increasingly uncertain about which one is real. With a story reminiscent of The Matrix or The Lord of the Rings, Black will amaze readers as unexpected connections between the worlds are revealed. Expected to be a hit in both the Christian and secular markets, Black is the first part of a trilogy the next entries, Red and White, will be published later this year. Author and editor W. Terry Whalin has always loved a good story.

In Ted Dekker's latest novel, Black, Thomas Hunter is running away from attackers in Denver when a bullet clips him and his world goes black. He wakes up in another world with a green forest and meets a beautiful woman, Rachelle. In this other world,…
Review by

In 1991, John Chappelear’s life fell apart. Within days, he went from being CEO of a multimillion dollar company to financial and emotional ruin. This catastrophic fall, which he dubbed my gift of desperation, woke him mightily. Now a successful life coach, Chappelear discovered that meaning in life comes not from achievements or wealth, but from something that is slowly entwined into life through your daily experiences, personal beliefs, and the way you interact with those around you. Enter The Daily Six: Six Simple Steps to Find the Perfect Balance of Prosperity and Purpose, a commonsense bible based on short, powerful maxims. This is Chappelear’s road map to well-being, his contribution to bettering private and business lives, inspired by mentors who helped him back to wholeness. Dedicated to fostering success with significance, his six-point plan emphasizes the daily practices of willingness, contemplation, love and forgiveness, service, gratitude and action. Chappelear’s approach to change is gentle, almost humble; he uses heartening case studies of others who have met and managed change, but he uses his own life as the primary lesson. This self-proclaimed recovering big shot realizes that My life quest is no longer what can I get?’ but what can I give?’

In 1991, John Chappelear's life fell apart. Within days, he went from being CEO of a multimillion dollar company to financial and emotional ruin. This catastrophic fall, which he dubbed my gift of desperation, woke him mightily. Now a successful life coach, Chappelear discovered…
Review by

Don’t be surprised if this generation-spanning spy saga ignites widespread nostalgia for the days of the Cold War. It immerses the reader in a world of comparative political clarity, a time when clear-cut secular ideologies clashed on a grand scale. Robert Littell’s characters spend little time, though, discussing political philosophies. They know from the start which side they’re on. The Company of the title is, of course, the Central Intelligence Agency.

The story begins in 1950, just as the CIA is emerging from World War II’s Office of Strategic Services. By this time, the U.S. and Russia are already circling each other for global supremacy, their recent common cause against Germany relegated to history. Into this bubbling geopolitical stew come Jack McAuliffe and Leo Kritzky, Yale roommates recruited by the CIA to join its first generation of shadow warriors. A fellow Yalie, Russian exchange student Yevgeny Alexandrovich Tsipin, returns home for KGB training and reassignment to America as a deep undercover agent.

Joining McAuliffe and Kritzky for a series of missions that will continue until the Soviet Union crumbles is high-principled E. Winston Ebby Ebbitt II, a Columbia University law school graduate. In the years ahead, these three friends will be in the backrooms and on the frontlines at the Hungarian uprising, the Bay of Pigs invasion, various domestic upheavals and the Russian war with Afghanistan. We see them fall in love, marry and have children who eventually follow in their furtive footsteps. Unlike writers who use historical characters and events as backdrops for their fictional ones, Littell integrates them both seamlessly. The real CIA head spook, James Angleton, hovers over Liddell’s trio of fictional agents, alternately inspiring and outraging them with his mania for detail and his raging paranoia. Stung by the revelation that his mentor and good friend Kim Philby is a spy for Russia, Angleton is convinced there’s a high-level mole in the agency.

CIA directors Allen Dulles, William Colby, William Casey and others have speaking roles here, as do Presidents Kennedy, Johnson and Reagan. Glimpsed in the background are such familiars as William F. Buckley Jr., E. Howard Hunt, William Sloan Coffin and Frank Sinatra, his Rat Pack and gangster friends. Littell populates his narrative with colorful, inventive spymasters, chief among them Angleton’s Soviet counterpart, the pedophile Starik; the CIA’s hard-drinking and duplicitous Harvey The Sorcerer Torriti; and Israel’s eagle-eyed Ezra Ben Ezra, affectionately dubbed the Rabbi. Readers who lived through or who have studied the Cold War will relish Littell’s touches of verisimilitude his off-handed references to movies, comic strips, songs, personalities and books which were popular during the periods he writes about. In one scene, the Sorcerer praises Littell’s own then-current novel, The Defection of A.J. Lewinter.

Certain references, though, reveal either the author’s carelessness or else his taunting of readers to be attentive to the kind of minute details by which spies live or die. For example, he has President Kennedy recommending Catch-22 several months before it was reviewed in The New York Times. He has a character in February 1951, listening to the song Kisses Sweeter Than Wine, which he identifies as then being number three on the American top ten. Not likely, since the song didn’t even enter the Billboard charts until August 1951, and then rose only to the number 19 spot. His characters use such words and phrases as security blanket, maven and liaising, not, perhaps, before they actually entered the language, but certainly well before they became conversationally commonplace.

In the book’s final chapter, set in 1995, Littell makes it plain that even though the Cold War is over, the great game [of spying] goes on. He describes a man, code-named Ramon, waiting in his car in a Washington, D.C., suburb to pick up $50,000 for American secrets he has stolen for the Russians. That man was real FBI agent Robert Hanssen and it would be five more years before he was caught. Edward Morris reviews from Nashville.

Don't be surprised if this generation-spanning spy saga ignites widespread nostalgia for the days of the Cold War. It immerses the reader in a world of comparative political clarity, a time when clear-cut secular ideologies clashed on a grand scale. Robert Littell's characters spend little…
Review by

With a four million print run, the 12th installment of Tim LaHaye and Jerry Jenkins’ Left Behind series, Glorious Appearing: The End of Days is the biggest event in Christian publishing this year. At the end of Book 11, two central characters in the series, writer Cameron “Buck” Williams and former 747 pilot Rayford Steele, were each in dire straits. Williams was last seen defending the Old City Wall in Jerusalem and Steele was on assignment at Petra. Glorious Appearing moves quickly to the return of Jesus Christ and the long-awaited confrontation between the evil Nicolae Jetty Carpathia and the Christians. Author and editor W. Terry Whalin has always loved a good story.

With a four million print run, the 12th installment of Tim LaHaye and Jerry Jenkins' Left Behind series, Glorious Appearing: The End of Days is the biggest event in Christian publishing this year. At the end of Book 11, two central characters in the series,…
Review by

If you seem to be losing your keys with unsettling regularity, Mind Power might be the book for you. Gary Null, who wrote the bestseller Power Aging, is urging Baby Boomers to take control of their mental acuity by understanding and taking better care of their brains. Null encourages regular exercise, spiritual health through meditation and regular social contact and a nutritional plan packed with complex carbohydrates, soy products and organic produce. Null also examines the symptoms of several specific brain conditions, from depression to mental fatigue to Alzheimer’s Disease, and shows how they can be combated. He includes a chapter of Mind Power Meals, or as he calls them, recipes for the mind.

If you seem to be losing your keys with unsettling regularity, Mind Power might be the book for you. Gary Null, who wrote the bestseller Power Aging, is urging Baby Boomers to take control of their mental acuity by understanding and taking better care of…
Review by

When her lovely oldest daughter drops out of college to beg on a Toronto street corner wearing a sign that reads GOODNESS, Reta Winters’ life loses all happiness. What had been meaningful before now exists under a cloud. Why had 19-year-old Norah done this awful thing? Happiness is the lucky pane of glass you carry in your head . . . once it’s smashed you have to move into a different sort of life, Reta confides to the reader.

She and her doctor husband Tom, their other two girls and Tom’s mother Lois are forever marked by the family tragedy. The question of Norah haunts their lives as it haunts the novel, until the final chapters suggest an answer (as they so often do in Shields’ books, like The Stone Diaries, a 1995 Pulitzer Prize winner, and Larry’s Party).

Reta begins her narrative in the summer of 2000. She is almost 44, an author of light fiction as well as the translator of a prominent French feminist. What makes Unless fun despite its dark shadow is Reta’s honest voice, alive to the new possibility of disaster. She gamely works on a sequel to her jolly Elinor Lipman-like novel, My Thyme Is Up, and pretends a normal life. I dust and polish this house of mine so that I’ll be able to seal it from damage, she says. Meanwhile, Norah sits on the street corner in the Canadian winter. Reta channels anger into unmailed letters to male scholars who would relegate women to second-class status. The male establishment might be to blame for Norah’s passive withdrawal from life. Otherwise, Reta must blame herself.

Shields, married for decades and mother of five children, captures perfectly the texture of family life, with its candid exchanges. She also excels at skewering the publishing world, creating a keen portrait of the incompetent young editor who replaces her kindly one.

Arranged into chapters named after little chips of grammar such as Nevertheless, Unless, Thus, or Not Yet, the novel underlines the unanticipated occurrences that figure so largely in our lives. Reta notes that Unless is used by writers who want to prise open the everyday world and show another plane. Shields herself is such a writer. Anne Morris is an Austin writer.

When her lovely oldest daughter drops out of college to beg on a Toronto street corner wearing a sign that reads GOODNESS, Reta Winters' life loses all happiness. What had been meaningful before now exists under a cloud. Why had 19-year-old Norah done this awful…
Review by

Dr. Tim Kimmel contends that too much of today’s Christian parenting is based upon fear and, as a result, many parents build walls of holy checklists around their children to keep them safe. What God really wants, he insists in Grace-Based Parenting, is for parents to base their parenting on God’s grace instead. With an easy-to-read style and lots of explanations, examples and encouragement, Kimmel gives parents the tools to build or rebuild a home that reflects the security (love), significance (purpose) and strength (hope) that God gives each of His children. Mike Parker is a writer in Smyrna, Tennessee.

Dr. Tim Kimmel contends that too much of today's Christian parenting is based upon fear and, as a result, many parents build walls of holy checklists around their children to keep them safe. What God really wants, he insists in Grace-Based Parenting, is for parents…
Review by

While staying physically fit is important, so too is preserving mental fitness. Two new books explore ways to keep your mind as healthy as your body. In Brainfit: 10 Minutes a Day for a Sharper Mind and Memory, Corinne L. Gediman prescribes daily mental exercises designed to slow age-related mental decline. Good brain exercises challenge the brain to think in new ways and may also include a component of physical exercise and social interaction. The majority of Brainfit is dedicated to dozens of fun, easy memory exercises. For example, to remember all the items on a shopping list, visualize each item, then pair it with the next item on your list. If you need to pick up sand and candles at the hardware store, Gediman advises visualizing a sandcastle at dusk with candles glowing in the windows. Follow her program, and you will soon be bowing to the goddess of memory, Mnemosyne (try remembering that name).

While staying physically fit is important, so too is preserving mental fitness. Two new books explore ways to keep your mind as healthy as your body. In Brainfit: 10 Minutes a Day for a Sharper Mind and Memory, Corinne L. Gediman prescribes daily mental exercises…
Review by

Apart from Christ, the Apostle Paul is perhaps the most dominant figure in the New Testament. With meticulous attention to detail, Robin Griffith-Jones has produced a scholarly work on his eventful life that reads like a summer beach novel. Entertaining and enlightening, The Gospel According to Paul sheds important light on the man and his times. At first a fiercely determined adversary of the fledgling faith, after his dramatic conversion experience on the Damascus road, Paul became Christianity’s most outspoken advocate. Yet while he preached of love and responsibility and founded churches throughout the Roman empire, he found himself reviled. He begged for unity while dismissing a close friend and follower, John Mark. The fascinating paradoxes of this remarkable leader are brought to life in this exploration of the early days of the Christian church.

Apart from Christ, the Apostle Paul is perhaps the most dominant figure in the New Testament. With meticulous attention to detail, Robin Griffith-Jones has produced a scholarly work on his eventful life that reads like a summer beach novel. Entertaining and enlightening, The Gospel…
Review by

Please note that the subtitle of I’m Too Young to Be Seventy is And Other Delusions. Yes, Judith Viorst is well aware that she’s a septuagenarian, and in her hilarious and poignant new collection she has written a stellar set of poems to . . . celebrate? Commiserate? Whatever her motivation, Viorst’s verses are whip-smart and will ring true to anyone entering this decade of their lives. (A noted children’s book author whose latest volume for kids is reviewed elsewhere in this issue, Viorst also wrote collections to acknowledge her 40s, 50s and 60s.) In one of the funniest pieces, Viorst firmly insists that her middle-aged children still need her advice even though it’s now about periodontal disease and tax-free bonds. In one of the sweetest, she writes, Still married after all these years? / No mystery. / We are each other’s habit, / and each other’s history. Readers don’t need to be anywhere near 70 to appreciate such sentiments.

Please note that the subtitle of I'm Too Young to Be Seventy is And Other Delusions. Yes, Judith Viorst is well aware that she's a septuagenarian, and in her hilarious and poignant new collection she has written a stellar set of poems to .…

Sign Up

Stay on top of new releases: Sign up for our newsletter to receive reading recommendations in your favorite genres.

Trending Features