Not too early to plan summer reading

One of the authors I plan to read this summer on my sabbatical is Marilynne Robinson.  Regarding her Gilead: A Novel, John Piper posts:

“[It] continues to move me, months after I read it. I have waited to comment on it since I knew it would be around for decades (centuries?). I wanted to let it ripen in my memory.

Rev. John Ames is dying. The book is a kind of last testament he would like his young son to read when he is twenty-five, long after his father is dead. His voice is still with me.

So I went back to gather a few treasures. Gilead is not a "must read.” There are no “must reads” but the Bible. None.

So how do you choose what to read before you die and give an account to Jesus? I do it largely by what is awakened in me when I read samples. I hope these help. Some of the treasures.

He’d walk fifteen miles across open country in the dead of winter to settle a point of interpretation. We’d have to thaw him out before he could tell us what it was he had on his mind. (p. 16)

Existence seems to me now the most remarkable thing that could ever be imagined. (p. 53)

Read more of Piper’s quotes here.

3 thoughts on “Not too early to plan summer reading

  1. I heard so much hype about Gilead that I thought it would disappoint. It did not! Excellent book.

  2. I love Marilyn Robinson’s books. Also, I was encouraged by a Chuck Colson commentary to read Mary DeMuth’s novel, “Watching the Tree Limbs”. Just finished it yesterday and can’t get it out of my head. I’ve ordered her memoir, “Thin Places”, and will dive into that as soon as it arrives…don’t want to wait until summer! Other novelists I like are Charles Martin, Bret Lott, Wendell Berry…all fine Christian writers with a lot to say.

  3. Will add to my list.

    By the way, I just got/started reading Piper’s new little book called A Sweet and Bitter Providence (on the story of Ruth) and it is so good.

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