Christmas was wonderful. For the first time in several Christmas seasons, we were able to gather together the whole clan for at least a few days. We enjoyed being together and doing some of our traditional things, and some new ones. But the most important thing....we were together. Is this what Heaven will be like?
Fiction Switch
I just finished two books, both of which I highly recommend. The first - a nice, short book by Ray Bradbury entitled Fahrenheit 451. You may be familiar with it through the movie (1966) of the same name. I enjoyed both the movie and the book. It has inspired me to switch over to fiction for a time, for a change of pace. As a great lover of books and libraries, the book resonated with me (the frequency of the book matched some inner-miniarms frequency). The author's point in
writing the book is open to various interpretations.....to illustrate
the evil of the suppression of opposing views through censorship, for
example. Bradbury himself has stated that the novel is not about
censorship, but "a
story about how television destroys interest in reading literature".
Interestingly enough, the wife of the main character in the book is
constantly found with some type of music player in her ear, oblivious to
what is going on around her....isolated from the reality of her
existence. Ipods and cell phones anyone? This book was first published
in 1953! The second - the Memoirs of U.S. Grant, a much more
daunting read. Did I like the book? My thoughts are in line with this
quote from Random House regarding the book: "Among
the autobiographies of great military figures, Ulysses S. Grant's is
certainly one of the finest, and it is arguably the most notable
literary achievement of any American president: a lucid, compelling, and
brutally honest chronicle of triumph and failure. From his frontier
boyhood, to his heroics in battle, to the grinding poverty from which
the Civil War ironically "rescued" him, these memoirs are a mesmerizing,
deeply moving account of a brilliant man, told with great courage as he
reflects on the fortunes that shaped his life and his character.
Written under excruciating circumstances (as Grant was dying of throat
cancer), encouraged and edited from its very inception by Mark Twain, it
is a triumph of the art of autobiography." For anyone with an interest in the Civil War, this is a must read.
The Applets
Football Overdose
In early December, one of our local teams, including a boy in our Church congregation, played for the State Championship in their division. Jon, Will, and I headed down to the Tacoma Dome for a day of football and had a great time. All of the divisions in the State have their championship games in the Dome over a two-day period. Maybe we will turn it into an annual trek. To make it even better, they won with a great comeback in a very exciting game. Go Bulldogs!
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