Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Books I Read in 2012, Vol. I

 

I've started out the year kind of slowly...but this exercise of recording what I've read (now in its second year) is a good motivator to keep plugging away.


THE TRUE ADVENTURES OF THE WORLD'S GREATEST STUNTMAN: My Life as Indiana Jones, James Bond, Superman and Other Movie Heroes
Vic Armstrong (with Robert Sellers)

"From performing stunts in the James Bond movie You Only Live Twice to directing action scenes for recent blockbusters The Green Hornet and Thor, the Academy Award-winning Vic Armstrong has been a legend in the movie industry for over 40 years. Along the way, he's been the stunt double for a whole host of iconic heroes, including 007, Superman, and most memorably, Indiana Jones - as Harrison Ford once joked to him, 'If you learn to talk I'm in deep trouble'."

I suppose the stereotype of a stuntman is someone who loves to drink and do dangerous things. This book did nothing to kill that stereotype. Mr. Armstrong certainly seems to have lived up to it  -  in spades. It's a fairly interesting read, with Vic taking more time with and giving more details for the really big movies he worked on, like Indiana Jones and the Bond films...which is exactly what a fan would want him to do.

56/5: I was watching that night and saw him come out in front of the curtains and give a funny smile, but it wasn't quite the smile of old.


IF YOU ASK ME (And of Course You Won't)
Betty White

"Drawing from a lifetime of lessons learned, seven-time Emmy winner Betty White's wit and wisdom take center stage as she tackles topics like friendship, romantic love, aging, television, fans, love for animals, and the brave new world of celebrity."

On the whole, the book was a pleasant read with many pleasant anecdotes about an apparently pleasant life. The chapter about when the author met Koko the sign-language-using gorilla was actually fairly amazing. It was a rough start for me, though, with the following typo-ridden foreword: "One time I remember hearing someone ask my friend George Burne [I can only assume she means George Burns], of he had read a certain book, current at the time. George said, 'I can't read a book cuz I'm writing one.' We all laughed, but he use absolutely right. Whatever else you may be involved in writing a book take precedence. By my sixth book you'd think I would know better, get once again I was thrilled when..."

And it is signed, "Betty white"

Thankfully, the proofreaders did a much better job with the rest of the book.

56/5: Portrait: We became great and dear friends.  Landscape: I've never, in all the instances I've been nominated for an award, prepared a speech.


HEAVEN
Randy Alcorn

"We all have questions about what Heaven will be like. After years of research, Dr. Randy Alcorn offers answers from the Bible."

Full disclosure...I didn't actually read the book, but a good-sized booklet-thingy that provided "a sampling of the questions and answers found in Randy Alcorn's Heaven, available now in bookstores and online." For me, it was a good way to "read the book"...kind of like watching an ESPN condensed football game, where they only show you the plays where something happened. I'm thinking I got all the answers I need (which, saying it like that...tweren't many) without all the filler.

56/5: Sin has terrible consequences, but God has provided a solution.


AS IRON SHARPENS IRON: Building Character in a Mentoring Relationship
Howard & William Hendricks

"Respected authors Howard and Bill Hendricks show that the most dramatic spiritual and personal growth often happens through the influence of a mentor. Rooted in biblical principles, this book is both a profound and practical guide to mentoring relationships for men."

It didn't hit me until I just now typed out the above back-cover blurb, but this book really is focused on MENtorship. But in all honesty, there's nothing in here that wouldn't be good for women as well. Maybe it's one of those things that women tend to be more capable of, so it's the menfolk that really need this kind of practical advice and encouragement. Howard Hendricks is great at giving real-life examples of the principles he's writing about, and that keeps this from becoming a dry, text-booky read.

56/5: Instead, we ask, "What do you think is a realistic goal?"


Friday, December 30, 2011

Books I Read in 2011, Vol. III


MY LUCKY LIFE IN AND OUT OF SHOW BUSINESS: A Memoir
Dick Van Dyke

From the publisher: "A colorful, loving, richly detailed look at the decades of a multilayered life, My Lucky Life In and Out of Show Business, will enthrall every generation of reader, from baby-boomers who recall when Rob Petrie became a household name, to all those still enchanted by Bert’s “Chim Chim Cher-ee.” This is a lively, heartwarming memoir of a performer who still thinks of himself as a “simple song-and-dance man,” but who is, in every sense of the word, a classic entertainer."

From me: A review I read online kind of complained that Van Dyke goes into more detail about his personal life (struggles with alcoholism and divorce) than about the roles that made him famous. I can't say I disagree with that, but honestly, as I was reading this, the thought never crossed my mind. I simply enjoyed practically every page. There are lots of anecdotes and plenty of soul-baring and I was sorry to read the final page. The author quotes himself to open the book, and it's a good summary: "If I'm known for giving people decent entertainment and raising good kids, that's all right. I'll have lived a good one."

Page 56/Sentence 5: Portrait: He told me to relax, it was going to be a good meeting. Landscape: "At least she died like a man," said Thursday.

THE GOD DELUSION
Richard Dawkins

"A preeminent scientist - and the world's most prominent atheist - asserts the irrationality of belief in God and the grievous harm religion has inflicted on society, from the Crusades to 9/11."

Okay, I didn't actually read this book. I only finished the first four chapters. You can read why in a note I posted in September. Suffice it to say that I was not overwhelmed by Dawkins' flawless logic...and I was distracted by his spider-webbing from thought to thought instead of laying out a clear, linear argument for his beliefs.

56/5: What expertise can theologians bring to deep cosmological questions that scientists cannot?

FIRE AND RAIN: The Beatles, Simon & Garfunkel, James Taylor, CSNY, and the Lost Story of 1970
David Browne

"Fire and Rain tells the story of four landmark albums of 1970, the intertwining personal ties between the legendary artists who made them, and the ways in which their songs and journeys mirrored the end of one era and the start of another."

It's been who-knows-how-long since I've read a book in the same year it was published, but I was looking forward to this from the moment I read a review in Entertainment Weekly. And I was not disappointed. The author apparently had excellent access to all the players involved in the tale and has made a good case for 1970 being a pivotal year...not only in popular music with the demise of the three groups mentioned in the title, but on college campuses and political backrooms as well. I realize that makes this sound like an academic treatise, but it is anything BUT that.

56/5: Kortchmar didn't think Taylor would actually call Asher; his friend already seemed battered by his experiences in life and the music business.

THEY THOUGHT FOR THEMSELVES: Ten Amazing Jews
Sid Roth

"Author Sid Roth was instructed in a dream to find and interview people who had broken through the mold of their previous experiences to achieve their destiny. These are the people he interviewed. These are their stories and this is your time for your breakthrough."

This book had been sent "out of the blue" to my dad, and I read it during a week of vacation Back Home Again in Indiana. A few of the stories involved talk of supernatural healing and appearances of white lights that make me kind of suspicious, but hey, the people say it happened to them...who am I to call them liars? Particularly interesting were the multiple times the book documented Jewish people who held on to their religious traditions but who did not really believe in God at all...until the truth of Jesus as the promised Messiah got through to them.

56/5: My upbringing was very Orthodox.

WINNIE-THE-POOH
A. A. Milne

This space is usually a quote from the dust jacket or promotional website, but seriously, does anything need to be said here about one of England's greatest exports?

This came pre-loaded as a free gift in my iPad's iBooks app, and I couldn't have been happier. It was a real treat to read these stories again after Who Knows How Long and delight in just how positively clever Milne was. Normally, I would put a relevant quote from the book here...to prove my point...but methinks it would serve the reader better to just read this whole book for oneself.

56/5: Landscape: "I was just beginning to think," said Bear, sniffing slightly, "that Rabbit might never be able to use his front door again." Portrait: "It reminds me of something," he said, "but I can't think what."

GOD IN THE DOCK
C. S. Lewis

"Forty-eight essays and twelve letters written by Lewis between 1940 and 1963 [the year of his death]. Here the reader finds the tough-minded polemicist relishing the debate; here too the kindly teacher explaining a complex abstraction by means of clarifying analogies; here the public speaker addressing his varied audience with all the humility and grace of a man who knows how much more remains to be known."

I've liked Lewis for a long time. First, because of Narnia; then the Space Trilogy and The Screwtape Letters; but more deeply for Mere Christianity as he found ways to say exactly what I thought but didn't know how to express. He does much the same here, and I'd like to find a copy of this book to purchase, preferably an e-book I could carry with me in my iPad. Listen to just this small snippet about Jesus: "We may note in passing that He was never regarded as a mere moral teacher. He did not produce that effect on any of the people who actually met Him. He produced mainly three effects -- Hatred -- Terror -- Adoration. There was no trace of people expressing mild approval."

56/5: The man may be thinking about winning a war; he may be wanting to be a General because he honestly thinks he has a good plan and is glad of a chance to carry it out.


Thursday, December 22, 2011

Roth Family Christmas Epistle 2011

 

KELLY JO (22) – Following a cross-country trek (literally…ALL the way across the country) this summer, participating in way-cool dance events with her No. 1 Man (Dustin—The Wind), K.J. started a full-time nanny job with two families and has officially moved to Saint Paul, where she bikes more than drives, dances when she can, and still loves coffee.

CURTIS (24) –Curtis and his bride, Christine, still live in NYC, working in a couple high-end eating establishments as they audition their little hearts out. They both escaped the New York hurricane by, of all things, being in Florida…performing in a regional theatre production of A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. Curtis had the same role his daddy did when he was in a local theatre production of the show! The big C-mas gift last year for us all was flying them in for a visit in January. We had a blast.

SHONDA (28) –Air Force hubby, John, has received his orders to return to the States from Germany (where he and Shonda have been for almost 4 years) in February. Sad news this year was the passing of their German shepherd, Aby. Hopes are high that the weather will allow them a short visit in Minnesota before reporting for duty in Little Rock, Arkansas.


ANGEL (31) –is teaching first grade for the 8th year, but gave a substitute a steady gig through Spring Break starting December 4th, when Jesse Darrel Stanley made his early arrival. His due date was Dec 30, and he was only 5 lbs, 13 oz, but mommy and son are doing fine. Husband Phil already has The Knack for soothing his son, who doesn’t necessarily like having his diapers changed. Phil’s baby pictures have been consulted and it is official, Jesse looks enough like him that they better start labeling the photos.

DEBBIE – Finished the 4th and final CD in the Hope series, living letters of HOPE, and has been blessed with multiple speaking and singing engagements…to the point that it’s all paid for. Next project: getting enough funds to restock the 3rd CD, which is almost gone. (More info at http://www.restinhimministry.com) Debbie has healed well from an Achilles tendon repair this summer and is pretty excited about being a Grandma to a little guy who is only 9 miles away.

DEWEY – With the wonderfully-welcome addition of becoming a Grampa, last year’s entry could just about be repeated… still Technical Writer with Harris IT Services; Actor/Choreographer/Asst. Director with Giant Step Theatre; elder and worship leader with Valley Christian Church; blogger at almostthetruth.blogspot.com…well, one change, there’s a new and improved www.almostthetruth.com website available for perusal, but that’s about as important as the ever-decreasing number of hairs on Dewey’s head.

MAY THE HOPE OF CHRIST DWELL IN YOUR HEART IN THE COMING YEAR AND FOR ALL OF ETERNITY!


Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Books I Read in 2011, Vol. II


SMOKE AND MIRRORS: Short Fictions and Illusions
Neil Gaiman

"In this, Gaiman's first book of short stories, his imagination and supreme artistry transform a mundane world into a place of terrible wonders—a place where an old woman can purchase the Holy Grail at a thrift store, where assassins advertise their services in the Yellow Pages under 'Pest Control,' and where a frightened young boy must barter for his life with a mean-spirited troll living beneath a bridge."

While most of the stories here were dark and supernatural (The retelling of Snow White, "Snow, Glass, Apples," cast Snow White as a young vampire that sucked the life out of her father...and was excellent) there were a couple of laugh-out-loud moments...like this: "Sitting in the bus shelter in which he had unrolled his sleeping bag one night, he had begun to translate key descriptive words [in the tour book he was using]: charming he decided, meant nondescript; scenic meant ugly but with a nice view if the rain ever lets up." And now that I quote it out-of-context it doesn't seem so all-fire funny, but when I was sitting in Buffalo Wild Wings reading it, it was a gasser.

56/5: I had never seen the Devil before, and, although I had written about him in the past, if pressed would have confessed that I had no belief in him, other than as an imaginary figure, tragic and Miltonian.


WHAT'S SO GREAT ABOUT CHRISTIANITY
Dinesh D'Souza

"Best selling author Dinesh D'Souza (What's So Great About America) looks at Christianity with a questioning eye, but treats atheists with equal skepticism. The result is a book that will challenge the assumptions of both believers and doubters and affirm that there really is, indeed, something great about Christianity."

I generally like the field of apologetics (look it up), but usually am slightly disappointed by books written by preachers. Well, Dinesh is not a preacher, and this book was not a disappointment. He responds to the relatively recent deluge of atheist tomes with deep, thoughtful, logical reasoning. He may or may not "convert" anyone, but he at least makes the case that a person doesn't have to check their brain at the door to embrace Christ. If I had more than two thumbs, they would all be WAY up for this book.

56/5: I also want to focus on the Christian exaltation of the low man, the common man, and the underdog.


THERE AND BACK AGAIN: An Actor's Tale
Sean Astin with Joe Layden

"...not only an extremely personal and immensely readable behind-the-scenes look at what it was like to be involved in one of the biggest movie franchises of all time [Lord of the Rings], it's also the true story of an underdog who succeeds in making his dream a reality."

If you've read Volume I of this look at the books I read in 2011, you should already realize that I'm rather partial to biographies and memoirs of actors and entertainers. I like the insight on how it all happens, and this book is overflowing with the reality of the whole process: auditioning, working with an agent (or two or three), keeping one's ego in check, etc. I will give Mr. Astin kudos for not white-washing himself...he certainly comes across as a self-centered, egotistic, whiner. At least he ADMITS to it all and says he doesn't LIKE that about himself.

56/5: During preproduction, I was waiting and trying to help work through the necessary bureaucracy in the eager hope that the army would agree to be involved in the making of the picture.


THIS TIME TOGETHER: Laughter and Reflection
Carol Burnett

"What follows are some...stories that I've shared over the years in response to various questions. Some have to do with our gang on the variety show, embarrassing moments, famous people, not-so-famous people, family, and so on."

Show biz memories from a highly-respected and mostly-hilarious woman...very easy read with some real laughs, but also some insight into Ms. Burnett's upbringing, personality, and sensibilities. Great story about getting into a high-class ice cream shop in NYC by pretending to have a wooden leg.

56/5: This being my first eBook library loan, page 56/ Sentence 5 is flexible. If I'm reading on my iPad in portrait orientation, it would be, "I'm sorry, I didn't know," but if I turn the tablet sideways and read it landscape, it's "All of a sudden I was famous: the flavor of the month."


WASHINGTON: A Life
Ron Chernow

"In a book that pays meticulous attention to the decisions made by Washington during wartime, with a step-by-step march through the eight years of Revolutionary War battles, Mr. Chernow arrives at a carefully considered assessment of his subject’s capabilities. He sees the successes and failures of Washington’s military decisions. But he places much higher value on the great man’s political instincts and shows how they rarely failed him. And he argues that Washington’s ability to hold his soldiers together and set a proud, stoical example mattered more than any individual battle could."

I figured I needed to expand my horizons beyond short stories and celebrity memoirs, and this was available from the library as an ebook, so I gave it a shot...and I'm glad I did. Yes, it's history, and I can't really say it reads like a novel, but Chernow's style is straightforward and easy to follow. I learned a lot I didn't know, not only about Washington but about life in these here parts way back in the 18th century.

56/5: Portrait: Even amid the trip's escapist pleasures, George had a conspicuous habit of improving himself, turning everything into an educational opportunity.
Landscape: Even when he toured the thirteen states as first president, he methodically recorded the topographical features of places, as if he remained a working surveyor.


LOVE WINS: A Book About Heaven, Hell, and the Fate of Every Person Who Ever Lived
Rob Bell

"What if the story of heaven and hell we have been taught is not, in fact, what the Bible teaches? What if what Jesus meant by heaven, hell, and salvation are very different from how we have come to understand them? Author, pastor, and innovative teacher Rob Bell presents a deeply biblical vision for rediscovering a richer,  grander, truer and more spiritually satisfying way of understanding...."

I came to this book with plenty of baggage and preconceptions. It has gotten more than its fair share of press, both positive and negative, because it really does present a different understanding ("truer"? hmmm...) of some fundamental faith tenets. More than once, I had to stop reading and ask God to help me lay aside my prejudices and bent toward argument so I could really digest what the author was trying to say. It's just that he said it all in such a sly, slick, vacuum-seller kind of way, I always felt like I was having something pulled on me. And there were far too many instances of Bell saying, basically, "This is what the Bible says, but THIS is how we should understand it" for me to be comfortable. And his redefining of heaven and hell gives me the creeps. (After telling a story about seeing young children in Rwanda who had arms or legs removed by machete, he says, "Do I believe in a literal hell? Of course. Those aren't metaphorical missing arms and legs." Well, I'm sorry, but "hell" does not equal "bad things happening in our time/space continuum".)

56/5: Prior to that, then, after death we are without a body.


Friday, December 26, 2008

I'm Now on Amazon!

 

The Book Cover: Ta-Daaa!



As I was writing our family Christmas letter (finally!) I had to do some quick fact-checking about my book, Almost the Truth About Youth Ministry: Salesmen, Secretaries, and Smart Alecksand found out that it is now available for purchase at amazon.com.

This is not earth-shattering news, of course, but it was kind of a thrill for me. Makes the book feel just that much more official, you know? And people are more likely to be hanging out around amazon.com than lulu.com (even though I get a bigger share of the $$$ when it's purchased directly from lulu).

If there's a youth minister in your life that you haven't given a copy of this to, what better way to celebrate the New Year?

Later...


Friday, December 24, 1999

Roth Family Christmas Epistle 1999

 


KELLY is a ten-year-old 5th grader who began piano lessons and playing flute in band this year. She now has braces and is looking forward to finally having enough room for all her beautiful teeth.

CURTIS is in 7th grade and looking forward to turning 13 in January 2000. He has put the 21st Century Kids performance troupe aside in favor of involvement in church, school, and community theater. He was in the local children's theater's productions of Jack & the Beanstalk and Charlie & the Chocolate Factory AND had a feature role in our church's fall dinner theater.

SHONDA is now 16 and a Junior. Mommy & Daddy need to get more motivated to help her practice driving so she can drive herself to FCA and madrigal rehearsals and youth group. Some ideas about what-about-after-high-school are beginning to float around.

ANGEL, our 19-year-old college sophomore, has recently gone through some "okay, now what am I really doing here?" kind of wrestling. She's planning on a month in an inner-city Chicago elementary school in January, and will probably spend a semester next year at Cincinnati Bible College. [Editor's note from 2021: That Cincinnati semester never happened.]

DEBBIE is celebrating being cancer-free, one year after her double mastectomy. She had a follow-up/clean-up surgery in June (Happy 20th Anniversary!) and really is doing great. She spent 2 1/2 weeks in Austria in late June/early July housekeeping for the church leader training center there.

Having been out of the full-time ministry for a year, DEWEY has been bitten by the acting bug again. He had a paying gig at the Dakota County fair for 13 performances of a Chautauqua (look it up), and just finished playing a guy at the ages of 19, 29, 42, and 68 in our church's dinner theater...followed by a stint as Grandpa Joe in the same Charlie & the Chocolate Factory that Curtis was in.

*  *  *  *  *  *  *

The months zoom by, the children grow up, and out lives are lived. We've grown to appreciate the little pockets of extra time with the family that Dewey's 3rd shift schedule affords, but still are open to whatever door God opens next. If there's anything that Christmas can teach us, it's that God's blessings can show up anywhere, anytime.

MERRY CHRISTMAS!


Thursday, December 31, 1998

The Year That Was: 1998 with the Roth Clan

 

For those of you who don't already know, you're about to find out that 1998 was Quite The Year for us...


JANUARY  -  Curtis turns 11; Angel plays Baruka in the high school production of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory; Having sold the old building, Valley Christian Church begins worshiping in an elementary school while waiting for the new building to be completed.

FEBRUARY  -  Shonda turns 15; Kelly turns 9; Dewey & Debbie attend Couples' Retreat; upon arrival, they get a phone call telling them of Dewey's mom's heart attack (She's doing fine, PTL); Debbie's dad's cancer advances, & she spends what is to be her last week with him in Wyoming.

MARCH  -  Angel is a Kit-Kat girl in Cabaret, Dewey enjoys a retreat with "A Few Good Men," his support group of peers (some of whom used to be his students).

APRIL  -  Shonda & Angel rock the house at a state solo/ensemble contest; Dewey, Debbie, & Angel spend Spring Break playing with orphaned/abandoned children at Casa De Ninos, San Luis Potosi, Mexico.

MAY  -  Angel attends and sings at her Senior Prom; With the VCC leadership wanting a more-administration-less-hands-on style of youth ministry, Dewey is given the choice of going to another church and starting over (again) or staying at VCC as a volunteer youth coach/D-Group leader and transitioning into another career. He chooses to avoid moving his family and, after 14 years in paid youth ministry, starts looking for transferable skills that he can "sell" in the mainstream marketplace; An hour after deciding to go see her dad again, Debbie gets a call saying that he has passed away.

JUNE  -  Angel graduates from high school, 13th in a class of 600; Kelly sings, with Angel's accompaniment, in her school's talent show; Curtis performs in his school's talent show, too; Dewey's last official act as VCC's youth minister is leading the youth group's trip to Christ In Youth's Indiana Conference.

JULY  -  Family attends the wedding of Dewey's niece in Indiana as part of vacation; Curtis thrives at church camp.

AUGUST   -  Dewey turns 41; Kelly goes to church camp for the 1st time; Debbie and the kids go to Wyoming for Debbie's niece's wedding and to spread her father's ashes.

SEPTEMBER  -  Kelly begins 4th grade; Curtis, 6th; Shonda, 10th; Angel starts her freshman year at St. Olaf College, Northfield, MN, just 25 minutes away; Debbie turns 40; Angel turns 18; Curtis auditions and gets accepted into a recording project for a group called "21st Century Kids;" Dewey begins work as a proofreader of financial documents at Merrill Corporation, St. Paul, 3rd shift, and also puts in 2-3 hours a day at a friend's insurance office.

OCTOBER  -  VCC moves into the new church building; Curtis records background vocals and a few solo lines for "21st Century Kids;" Dewey earns some extra $ by scaring people at the Minnesota Zoo's haunted house; Debbie gets a call saying they want to take a second mammogram to get a better look.

NOVEMBER  -  Way cool Rich Mullins memorial concert by the Ragamuffins at VCC; Debbie's 2nd mammogram leads to a biopsy which leads to a diagnosis of ductal carcinoma, a quite-curable form of breast cancer.

DECEMBER  -  Kelly sings in her 1st concerts with "Heartbeat Chorus" at the YMCA and a local mall; Curtis learning dancing as he prepares for stage performances of "21st Century Kids;" Shonda does her own dancing and singing in her high school's musical revue, "On Stage;" Angel sings in one of the choirs for St. Olaf's Christmas Choir/Orchestra Festival; Debbie has a double mastectomy and is given every hope that no further cancer treatment is needed...just more healing from the surgery.

*  *  *  *  *  *  *

And so, we keep doing what we've always done, hanging on to the Lion's mane and wondering where this part of the Ride will take us. Dewey keeps looking for more satisfying work (especially something that takes place, say, during the DAYtime), Debbie is praying for the pain to go away, and the kids keep growing. God is in control, but He's pretty consistent in NOT letting us know too far in advance what His plans are.

"To live will be a great adventure." (Peter Pan, in Hook)


The First Post

  I woke up with the idea for this new blog as a way to take the place of what I used to post in a Facebook "Note". FB doesn't...

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