I
received two books and a bunch of Barnes and Noble gift cards as retirement
presents, and I have to say the cards have now been put to good use. As in, I
used them all. Here’s what I will be reading this summer.
Young
Eliot: From St. Louis to the Wasteland by Robert Crawford. A biography
of T.S. Eliot, it includes numerous quotations from his poetry.
Coming
Out Christian in the Roman World: How the Followers of Jesus Made a Place in
Caesar’s Empire by Douglas Boin. Boin is a professor at St. Louis University and an expert on
the religious history of the Roman Empire.
The
Fellowship: The Literary Lives of the Inklings by Philip
Zaleski and Carol Zaleski. A literary biography of J.R.R. Tolkien, C.S. Lewis,
Owen Barfield, and Charles Williams.
Plainsong and Our
Souls at Night by Kent Haruf, the writer’s first and last novels. My online
friend John Blase highly recommends him.
The
House of Silk
by Anthony Horowitz. A Sherlock Holmes novel by the author of Moriarity.
Our
Only World: Ten Essays by Wendell Berry. Speeches and essays by one of our
finest living American writers.
The
Dead Lands
by Benjamin Percy. A dystopian future with a Lewis and Clark expedition.
Stephen King raves about it.
The
Bridge
by Hart Crane. Published in 1930, critics considered it a (failed) attempt at
the great American poem.
Paris,
Rue des Martyrs
by Adria Cimono. A novel about a street that was close by our hotel when we
visited Paris some years back.
Crow
Hollow
by Michael Wallace. A novel of suspense set in Puritan America (1676, to be
precise).
Merlin’s
Nightmare
by Robert Treskillard. It’s volume three of a trilogy but a standalone novel as
well. I’ve almost finished reading it.
And this doesn't even cover all the collections you read for TSP!
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