The thirteenth book I read in 2018 was Dandelion Fire, the second book in N. D. Wilson's 100 Cupboards trilogy. The story picks up pretty much where 100 Cupboards left off, with Henry and his family dealing with the aftermath of the events of that book as well as Henry's parents' reappearance and the threat of their imminent arrival to take their son back to the sterile life he knew in Boston.
Before he is taken away, Henry is determined to do more exploring in the cupboards, a clandestine plan that is derailed by (literally) a bolt from the blue. Henry's electric experience attracts the unwelcome attention of a wizard named Darius obsessed with the secrets of Endor. When Henry escapes his clutches, Darius travels through the cupboards himself, scooping up Henry's aunt, uncle and cousins, his friend Zeke, an unfortunate police officer named Ken Simmons, and the entire Willis farmhouse and sending the whole lot of them on a desperate journey between worlds to reunite the family and save the multiverse from the life-drinking evil of Nimiane.
The childish selfishness of Henry and his cousin Henrietta in the early chapters of this books is grating, though, in the characters' defense, they aren't as aware as is the reader of the dangerous stakes of the game they're playing. The backstory of the Willis family's history with the cupboards is fleshed out more satisfactorily in this volume than in the first installment, where I found the supposed connections between the worlds sketchy. Ken Simmons is a welcome and worthy addition to the cast of characters, as is Caleb, an ally discovered on the other side of one of the cupboards, and the entire race of Faeren, both villains and heroes. Raise a gambler for Tate.
Monday, April 23, 2018
Sunday, April 15, 2018
Book review: The Story of Reality by Gregory Koukl
The ninth book I read in 2018 was The Story of Reality: How the World Began, How It Ends, and Everything Important that Happens in Between by Gregory Koukl. Koukl is an apologist, and this is a worldview book, and a good one.
Worldview asks the question 'why': why is everything the way it is? Koukl answers the question from the Christian perspective in five words: God, man, Jesus, cross, and redemption. He is fair, in my opinion, in evaluating other worldviews, which he clusters into Mind-ism and Matter-ism, and rejects them on the basis that they fail adequately to respond to the problem of evil.
This is an evangelistic book which, at its culmination, delivers a clear call to decision. It is well-written and theologically rigorous and represents a good starting point for those who question whether Christianity, or theism in general, is intellectually defensible.
Worldview asks the question 'why': why is everything the way it is? Koukl answers the question from the Christian perspective in five words: God, man, Jesus, cross, and redemption. He is fair, in my opinion, in evaluating other worldviews, which he clusters into Mind-ism and Matter-ism, and rejects them on the basis that they fail adequately to respond to the problem of evil.
This is an evangelistic book which, at its culmination, delivers a clear call to decision. It is well-written and theologically rigorous and represents a good starting point for those who question whether Christianity, or theism in general, is intellectually defensible.
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