I’m taking a bit of a different tack today, and looking at my nightstand. I have a pile of books either waiting to be read or in some stage of reading -- some for work, some for articles I’m working on for The High Calling and TweetSpeak Poetry, some for research for my own literary endeavors, and even a few for pleasure.
Can Poetry Matter? by Dana Gioia. And a collection of his poems entitled Pity the Beautiful.
What Poetry Brings to Business by Clare Morgan.
Can Poetry Save the Earth? A Field Guide to Nature Poems By John Felstiner.
Descent: Poems by Kathryn Stripling Byer.
The Wishing Tomb: Poems by Amanda Auchter.
Every Good Endeavor: Connecting Your Work to God’s Work by Timothy Keller.
Foundation: The History of England by Peter Ackroyd.
Crown, Orb & Sceptre: The True Stories of English Coronations by David Hilliam.
The King’s Speech: How One Man Saved the British Monarchy, by Mark Logue and Peter Conradi.
Through the Eye of the Needle: Wealth, the Fall of Rome, and the Making of Christianity in the West 350-550 AD, by Peter Brown.
The Deeper Journey by Robert Mulholland.
APE: Author, Publisher, Entrepreneur, by Guy Kawasaki and Shawn Welch.
Booked: Literature in the Soul of Me, by Karen Swallow Prior.
The Crystal Scepter by C.S. Lakin.
Maybe these aren’t on my nightstand. Maybe they are my nightstand.
3 comments:
I wish my stack was that nice and neat. Thanks for the encouragement. A Light Shining is on the way to my doorstep!
Some real heft here.
Will be interested to know what you think of 'The Wishing Tomb', which you know I reviewed.
Gioia's 'Pity the Beautiful' is a lovely collection.
Glynn, balance a coffee cup on top of it all and yes, you have a nightstand.
I'm looking forward to the 'Booked' discussion on the High Calling. I am thoroughly enjoying it--Karen has some deep thoughts on many different subjects.
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