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A Life in Books

Last year about this time of year, several bloggers I know were busily listing the books that had defined their life's journey. I couldn't resist, so I made my own list. Looking back at it a year later, I'm not sure which ones I'd change, although I can think of others that have influenced me, too.

The challenge is to make a list of ten books that have "shaped or defined you," "a list that reveals something about you." Or as SFP asks, "Can you timeline your life with books?"

1. The Severed Wasp by Madeleine L'Engle. Why did this book impress me so much when I first read it several years ago? It's about real people attempting to live authentic lives in New York City. It's about community and how that community is formed. I'm very interested in how families interact, how intentional communities are formed and sustained, especially artistic communities and Christian communities. I think there's something more there, too, but I can't put my finger on it.

2. A Severe Mercy by Sheldon Van Auken. Van Auken tells the story of how he re-lived his life with his wife, Davey, after her death, by listening to the music they listened to together and re-reading the books they read together. It may sound maudlin, but it's not. He also comes to terms with his loss and with the flaws in their relationship and with priorities, how marriage partners who find their ultimate security in Christ and His love can grow closer to each other. But those who hold onto each other jealously and possesively lose the thing they most want to preserve. I think I'm married the way I'm married, very happily I must say, partly because of this book.

3. Cry, the Beloved Country by Alan Paton. C.S. Lewis talks about "joy" as an elusive longing for Something that is just out of reach. Tragedy is also an elusive feeling that depends on just the right combination of circumstances. Paton's book about South Africa under the apartheid system and about the power of forgiveness to redeem, sometimes, is truly tragic. I also think this is what life is like: essentially hopeful, but tragic in the short run. Sometimes the Good is too little , too late.

4. Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis. Life-changing. Lewis puts into words what I believe and why I believe. Definitely part of my mind's landscape along with the Narnia books, The Screwtape Letters, The Great Divorce, and Till We Have Faces.

5. My first homeschooling book was John Holt's Teach Your Own. This was before I had any children. Even though I use workbooks and curricula with my children, the unschooling, easygoing, let them teach themselves, philosophy is a part of my homeschool, too. I do want them to learn to learn and to enjoy learning, to be self-educators. I'm also drawn again to the sense of community that is present in Holt's books.

6. The book that most shaped my life as a young Christian teenager was The Edge of Adventure by Keith Miller and Bruce Larson. I haven't re-read this book in a long while, and I suspect it's full of what I would now consider psycho-babble. But at the time the emphasis, again (note the recurring theme), on Christian community and basic Christian disciplines was exactly what I needed to hear. A lot of my ideas about prayer and discerning God's will and following Christ in obedience came from this book.

7. All the Way Home by Mary Pride. I know that Mary Pride is a lightning rod for criticism and controversy, but her ideas about home and family being a center for economic, spiritual, and social influence were and are liberating for me.

8. The Hobbit by JRR Tolkien. Either I'm focused on the ideal of community tonight or else the theme of my whole adult life is community and how families come together to form real communities. I've wanted to live in Hobbiton, in a nice little hobbit-hole, ever since I first read Tolkien in the late 1960's.

9. No Graven Image by Elizabeth Elliot. A young missionary finds that God is trustworthy, but not necessarily fathomable. I find the same to be true in my Christian life. This novel and the book of Job are my mainstays in the time of suffering and difficulty.

10. Cheaper by the Dozen by Ernestine and Frank Gilbreth. Was it from this book or somewhere else that I got the idea that it could be fun to have a lot of children and to teach them things in my own home? I think some of the nonfiction I listed above (and life) fleshed out the details, but Cheaper by the Dozen planted the seed of an idea long before I even realized the idea was there.

The Mental Multivitamin list that inspired this one.

Hard task. I didn't even begin to list my childhood influences--the picture books that formed my imagination and the chapter books that made me think and made me grow. I'll save all that for another post, but the ten books above have definitely shaped and do continue to define who I am. What books made you who you are or confirmed your direction in life and work?

Comments

Interesting choices, Sherry...there are several on that list that I need to add to my need/want-to-read list!

I've been intrigued by "A Severe Mercy" since it figured into something that happened in my extended family several years ago that actually became the subject of national news.

A relative of my husband's eloped with his girlfriend and vanished for a few months, causing understandable consternation and even grief among their close relatives. They resurfaced a few months later, were forgiven all around, and have gone on to become a wonderful couple.

However, at one point during the ordeal, that book was mentioned as one they had read and admired ardently, and it was even hinted that the book was influential in their decision to run away.

Anyway, I've always wanted to read it, for that and other reasons...

Posted by: Cindy Swanson at October 17, 2006 9:40 AM

Sherry, I'd guess that every literate person can "chronicle" their development to some extent via a book list. I'd like to spend more time on this but briefly, some books that have greatly influenced me:

1) Severe Mercy. Can't say enough about what this book did for me.

2) Thomas Merton Selected Poems.

3) Alice in Wonderland. Scared the h*ll out of me.

4) Here I Stand, bio of Martin Luther

5) Shadowlands, a novel by Peter Straub. Helped me understand the spiritual realm, believe it or not

6) Peyton Place. Talk about a loss of innocence.

There are many more, of course, including various C. S. Lewis.

Funny what you said about childhood influences -- I can still remember how hugely impressionable I was to illustrations. They haunted, even possessed, my imagination and I pondered them at length. Now of course I can recognize convention and style, but not then! I still remember the pictures in The Crows of Pearblossom and Journey Cake Ho! and they were read to me as a young child!

Also, it's funny about Mary Pride. I read parts of The Way Home, and, while empathizing with many things, found her..."militancy" rather off-putting! She took some things to extremes. But she definitely started a movement toward "choosing home," which is a good thing.

Posted by: Bonnie at October 18, 2006 10:10 PM

P. S. How could I forget Lord of the Flies?

Posted by: Bonnie at October 18, 2006 10:11 PM
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