While visiting the city of Jos last week, we stopped at several bookshops. While many of them were not well stocked, one of them was a decent bookstore. I picked up a few hermeneuticis textbooks. Let the reader understand, by Dan McCartney and Charles Clayton. Understanding and Applying the Scriptures, by Danny McCain and Craig Keener. Listening to the Text: Oral Patternings in Paul's Letters, by John D. Harvey. I also picked up a book I've seen around that looks interesting, A Call to Spiritual Reformation: Priorities from Paul and his Prayers, by D.A. Carson
August 2, 2006
July 25, 2006
Nigeria in July
TBC computer lab
Books 7-25-06
Finished up the list of previous books, and have been working on reading Dr. Faustus by Christopher Marlowe. It is an interesting read with lots of archaic language. I find it interesting that the people that would attended these plays when they were written would understand the numerous latin quotes, etc. But I imagine it was more commonplace then than now.
Also reading King Arthur and his Knights by Howard Pyle.
July 13, 2006
Reading 7-14-6
I've started Another Vonnegut book, Jailbird, which has many illusions to Watergate, which wasthe subject of another book Irecently read.
And also been reading the The Complete Short Stories of Flannery O'Conner.
July 4, 2006
Books 7-5-6
Finished reading The Octopus by Frank Norris. A good book with decent flow and good subject matter. Definately a nice distraction from the warm atmosphere here.
I've also read The Prince by Machiavelli. Definately full of political theories, basically built upon the precept of the end justifies the means, and the superiority of the state and its leader over citizen. Much political theory has been built upon the foundation of the thoughts and insights of Machiavelli. How deception is ok, when it serves the purposes on the greater good.
And I've also read Born Again by Charles Colson. The autobiography of the 'Hatchet man' of the Nixon whitehouse, and his trials and travails during the watergate scandal. How Colson expereinced first hand the fallout of Machiavellian politics, and that the selfisness of man , and the supposed glory of the state was in fact not to the service of the populace, but treading the rights of those it was created to protect. What a difference in perspective in two books, between The Prince, and Born Again.