Birmingham Community Book Club

Submitted by Joe on March 3, 2005 - 2:46pm.

It's been suggested that we might initiate something like a book club in the Birmingham Community.

Suggestions for books so far:

[list]
[*][b]Miroslav Volf, [i]'Exclusion and Embrace: Theological Exploration of Identity, Otherness and Reconciliation'[/i][/b] - buy it at Amazon.co.uk
Life at the end of the twentieth century presents us with a disturbing reality. Otherness, the simple fact of being different in some way, has come to be defined as in and of itself evil. Miroslav Volf contends that if the healing word of the gospel is to be heard today, Christian theology must find ways of speaking that address the hatred of the other. Reaching back to the New Testament metaphor of salvation as reconciliation, Volf proposes the idea of embrace as a theological response to the problem of exclusion. Increasingly we see that exclusion has become the primary sin, skewing our perceptions of reality and causing us to react out of fear and anger to all those who are not within our (ever-narrowing) circle. In light of this, Christians must learn that salvation comes, not only as we are reconciled to God, and not only as we 'learn to live with one another', but as we take the dangerous and costly step of opening ourselves to the other, of enfolding him or her in the same embrace with which we have been enfolded by God.
[i](from the publisher)[/i]

[*][b]Hans Boersma, [i]'Violence, Hospitality, and the Cross: Reappropriating the Atonement Tradition'[/i][/b] - buy it at [url=http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0801027209/qid=1109859236/sr=1-3/ref=sr_1_0_3/202-2578220-3174259]Amazon.co.uk[/url]
The Cross is central to any understanding of Christian theology. But what is the primary significance of the cross: God’s victory over death and hell? The moral example of a righteous sufferer? God’s Son taking the punishment for the world’s sin? Or is it possible that in our postmodern setting these traditional views of the atonement are irrelevant and outmoded? In this important study, Hans Boersma proposes an understanding of the atonement that is sensitive to both the Christian tradition and postmodern critiques of that tradition.

Throughout his work, Boersma takes seriously the critics of traditional atonement theology. He also acknowledges a certain paradoxical tension between violence and hospitality that will remain a mystery. Nevertheless, he offers a substantial response in the form of an alternative account of violence that also reenvisions the atonement as divine hospitality.
[i](from the jacket)[/i]
[/list]

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by Tim Evans
March 3, 2005 - 6:03pm

Both sound excellent to me. I have read the first although will need to read it again. I guess with the second is whether people want to explore the atonement some more - I know Joe is really interested in that subject. I guess time for people to read the book and how easy each of them are to read might shape the decision. I also wonder in the future about not just looking at Christian or theological books so that peace Church is about the whole of us and the whole of our lives not just the spiritual or the theological? Who would be up for it - would we invite others who may not be in the Sunday or Table Talk 'club'? Perhaps Thursdays could move between alternative worship/spirituality stuff, films and books? Not been to a Thursday yet so not sure who comes and what they are wanting to get out of that time.

Tim

by Joe
March 3, 2005 - 8:54pm

Yeah totally agree with you on the breadth side of things, Tim. I had purposely put a 'Fiction' section into the 'Reading' forum, 'cause I love reading novels, especially contemporary fiction. If anyone's really like to have space for other genres, comment away!

On that front, can I suggest a couple of novels I'd love to read in our burgeoning book club?

  • 2 by [b]Chuck Palahniuk[/b], author of Fight Club, that was turned into that rather famous film...
    • [b]Invisible Monsters[/b]
      She's a fashion model who has everything: a boyfriend, a career, a loyal best friend. But when a sudden freeway "accident" leaves her disfigured and incapable of speech, she goes from being the beautiful center of attention to being an invisible monster, so hideous that no one will acknowledge she exists. Enter Brandy Alexander, Queen Supreme, one operation away from becoming a real woman, who will teach her that reinventing yourself means erasing your past and making up something better. And that salvation hides in the last places you'll ever want to look.. "In this hilarious and daringly unpredictable novel the narrator must exact revenge upon Evie, her best friend and fellow model; kidnap Manus, her two-timing ex-boyfriend; and hit the road with Brandy in search of a brand-new past, present, and future. Changing names and stories in every city, they catapult toward a final confrontation with a rifle-toting Evie - by which time we will have learned that loving and being loved are not mutually exclusive, and that nothing, on the surface, is ever quite what it seems.
      [i](From the publisher)[/i]

    • [b]Lullaby[/b]
      Carl Streator is a solitary widower and fortyish newspaper reporter who is assigned to do a series of articles on Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. In the course of this investigation, he discovers an ominous thread: the presence on the scenes of these deaths of the anthology Poems and Rhymes Around the World, opened to the page where there appears an African chant or "culling song." This song turns out to be lethal when spoken or even thought in anyone's direction - and once it lodges in Streator's brain, he finds himself becoming an involuntary serial killer. So he teams up with a real estate broker, one Helen Hoover Boyle, who specializes in selling haunted (or "distressed") houses (wonderfully high turnover), and who lost a child to the culling song years before. Together they set out on a cross-country odyssey. Their goal is to remove all copies of the book from libraries, lest this deadly verbal virus spread and wipe out human life. Accompanying them on their road trip are Helen's assistant, Mona Sabbat, an exquisitely earnest Wiccan, and her sardonic ecoterrorist boyfriend, Oyster, who is running a scam involving fake liability claims and business blackmail. Welcome to the new nuclear family.
      [i](From the publisher)[/i]
  • And one by [b]Douglas Coupland[/b], author of Microserfs, Generation X and Girlfriend in a Coma
    • [b]All Families are Psychotic[/b]
      It is the year 2001 and the Drummond family, reunited for the first time in years, has gathered near Cape Canaveral to watch the launch into space of their beloved daughter and sister, Sarah. Against the Technicolor unreality of Florida's finest tourist attractions, the Drummonds and their intimates manage to stumble into every illicit activity under the tropical sun - kidnapping, blackmail, gunplay, and black market negotiations, to name a few. They can't seem to avoid disaster at every turn, but what could deteriorate into talk-show cacophony in the hands of a different writer becomes the stuff of a modern epic with Coupland. For all their madness, the only real sin binding the Drummonds together is their fallibility. Even as the Drummonds' lives spin out of control, Coupland reminds us of their humanity at every turn, hammering out a hilarious masterpiece with the keen eye of a cultural critic and the heart and soul of a gifted storyteller. As he circles back and fills us in on the Drummonds' various pasts, he tells not only the characters' stories but also the story of our times - thalidomide, AIDS, born-again Christianity, drugs, divorce, the Internet - all bound together with the familiar glue of family love and madness.
      [i](From the publisher)[/i]

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