Posted in Books

Great Books I’ve Read in 2024 – Part 1

https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1687382848i/176442793.jpgDo You Know Them?: Families Lost and Found After the Civil War by Shana Keller, illustrated by Laura Freeman
In this picture book set in the aftermath of the Civil War, Lettie slowly saves up pennies to place an ad in the newspaper. The ad is to ask for any information that might help reunite her and her uncle with their missing family members, who had been sold away from them long before slavery ended. On Sundays, Lettie reads the ads from others looking for family members to her church, as they all work together to share information, even if it’s bad news.
I didn’t know about this aspect of life after slavery, and this well-done picture book was an interesting way to learn about it. All the ads in the book are real ads that were placed in newspapers at the time, from the Last Seen project (www.informationwanted.org).

https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1700233840i/202331863.jpgJust Stab Me Now by Jill Bearup
I mentioned that I was looking forward to this a few months ago, and I’m happy to report that I enjoyed it. It’s the story of an author trying to write a fantasy romance book and trying to make her characters cooperate (they rarely do). There are layers of the written story, of the author’s life, of exchanges with her editor (who perhaps looks like the Hot Enemy in the story, not because she has a crush on him or anything, of course).
The story started out as a series of Youtube shorts, and it’s the author’s first book. I was prepared to enjoy it, but I was also prepared for the possibility that it would just be badly written fun feels. But I was pleasantly surprised. It’s not the best thing I’ve ever read, but it was pretty good!

https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1652700498i/60510874.jpgRestore My Soul: Reimagining Self-Care for a Sustainable Life by Janice McWilliams
This book about self-care is so practical. Janice McWilliams is a therapist, and she draws on knowledge and experience from her practice as well as Biblical principles. After introducing what good self-care is and why it’s important, she shares advice on managing your thoughts, emotions, rhythms, and living a fulfilling life. Each section includes a chapter of skills to consider and apply. The author encourages you to take your time with it and not try to do everything at once.
Restore My Soul is holistic and encouraging, and it’s an excellent, accessible resource for learning how to cope with life.

https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1500911871i/33785427.jpgThe Visual History of Type: A Visual Survey of 320 Typefaces by Paul McNeil
Last summer, I listened to The Medici by Paul Strathern, which I don’t recommend, for problematic reasons, but also because it didn’t hold my attention. The things that made me take notice the most were a few brief anecdotes on the history of certain fonts, how they were inspired by a particular person’s handwriting. After this happened two or three times, I thought, “Hmm, maybe what I actually want is a book about the history of fonts.”
This came up when I Googled that, and it isn’t what I meant. I was looking for some narrative nonfiction, and I will probably still look for that someday. After a break.
This book. I cannot convey to you the size of this book. It is enormous. I took an extra bag to work with me to carry it home after seeing it. I stopped reading it for a while because I hurt my back and it’s so heavy that it hurt to hold it. Even aside from that, it took forever to read because I couldn’t easily carry it around with me and read little bits at a time.
It’s so huge because it covers more than 550 years, and because most of each two-page spread is a large picture of an original example of the font being discussed. These are so cool to see. Also included is some technical information and a few paragraphs about the font. My one real critique is that this is presented in very small print. It might have been difficult to fit a larger size, and admittedly it’s probably time for me to get a new glasses prescription, but I found it uncomfortable, which didn’t combine well with the lack of easy ways to hold the book. But it was often such interesting information, and the writing style was professional but not textbook-dry. I got fascinating tea from the font world.
I love fonts, but in a very casual, adjacent to my graphics-making hobby way, and I have zero education on the subject, so I didn’t understand everything. But I learned things along the way, and even though this took six months to read and was exhausting, I’m glad I put in the effort. If you want an easier experience, just flipping through and looking at the pictures would still be great.

https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1684779014i/102042322.jpgInvisible Wonders: Photographs of the Hidden World by Anand Varma
Speaking of pictures, this book of photography is amazing. Anand Varma is a photographer, and this book includes some of his pictures as well as some by others. The collection focuses on ways photos can help us see the world differently, whether that’s by magnifying things too small too see, or using light in interesting ways, or capturing movement, etc. There are a few pages of text in each chapter, but most of the book is focused on the photographs. They are beautiful. I regularly found myself gasping when I turned the page. It’s a lovely book to look through.

 

For more book recommendations, click here.

Posted in Life

Music Shuffle Game 11

Answering silly questions with my music on shuffle, you know the drill. Here’s last year’s.

 

1. What is your name?
Superman (It’s Not Easy) – Five for Fighting

2. What are your hobbies?
Mars – Scott Hoying

3. How are you feeling today?
Paint Me a Birmingham – Tracy Lawrence

4. How was yesterday?
Carry On – fun.

5. What are you doing right now?
Lothlórien – The Lord of the Rings musical (Sadly, no. But, fun fact, I’M GOING TO SEE THIS MUSICAL THIS SUMMER.)

6. What song describes you?
Three Minutes More – Yellowcard

7. What is good advice?
See Jesus Stripped of Majesty – Phil Moore (That is fairly good advice. XD)

8. What were your first words?
Dancing With Our Hands Tied – Taylor Swift

9. What are you afraid of?
Fourth Dimension – Lights (So scary.)

10. What is your motto?
Jet Lag – Simple Plan, Natasha Bedingfield (I am currently not in my usual time zone.)

11. What is the story of your life?
I Lied – Sophia Fracassi (Oh, dear. XD)

12. What will the future be like?
California – Mindy Gledhill

13. What is your happiest memory?
When a Man Loves a Woman – Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist

14. What is your wedding song going to be?
Come as You Are – Nathan Pacheco

15. What do you think of every day?
Jar of Hearts – Christina Perri

16. What did you learn today?
When I Think About Angels – Jamie O’Neal

17. What is your biggest secret?
A Song About Nothing – Malinda

18. How do people see you?
Come, Share the Lord – Hallal Music

19. What will your dying words be?
Woman – Mumford & Sons

20. What song will they play at your funeral?
Heart Attack – Kurt Hugo Schneider (Wow. XD)

Posted in Life

Eclipse Day

I live in the path of totality for the solar eclipse that happened yesterday. I also live in northeast Ohio, in one of the places with the most cloud cover in this area of the country.

When I headed to work yesterday morning, clouds covered the whole sky. But they cleared up (probably in answer to prayer), and it turned into an absolutely beautiful day. I kept thinking about this paragraph from The Fellowship of the Ring:

No description available.

It ended up so sunny that I’m slightly sunburned from spending part of the day at the library’s table at the eclipse party in the park behind our building. And when the full eclipse happened, while there we no patrons in the library, those of us not working at the table got to go outside and watch it.

I didn’t take pictures myself, and I don’t have anything particularly profound to say about the total eclipse. It was incredible, and I almost cried, and I’m so thankful I got to experience it. Pictures and descriptions truly are not the same, and many people have done a better job trying than I could.

But something else I found myself thankful for is that my coworkers are a fun group of people who I genuinely enjoyed getting to experience it with. We had a weird day of strange schedules and answering umpteen questions about whether we had eclipse glasses and watching something we might never see again, certainly not here. And it was chill and pleasant, smoothing even the annoying parts into a fun and memorable day.

That hasn’t always been the case here, and sometimes it still takes me by surprise. I’m very grateful for a place to work where I enjoy being around my coworkers.

Posted in Christianity, Thoughts

Eternity in the Human Heart

Back in January, I drove up to Cleveland for a day to visit the Mummies of the World exhibit. I’d been excited about it for months and got a ticket for Christmas. I love this sort of thing. I wandered slowly through and read all the signs.

I saw naturally preserved mummies from 17th century Germany, wearing knitted stockings, with stitches that are exactly like knitted stockings today.

Shrunken heads that are unbelievably small.

Ancient Egyptian mummies, and a recreation that was done in the 90s with a body that had been donated to science.

Mummies from South America, tightly wrapped in braided grass, braiding just like I do on my hair.

Bodies preserved for students studying anatomy in the 1800s.

It was so cool, and I would have happily looked at three times as many mummies.

When I finished, I had some time to kill before getting dinner, and I found I was within walking distance of the Cleveland Library, so I headed over, planning to write or read for a while. Once there, I remembered that they currently have a display a friend and I had been wanting to see (we haven’t been there together yet, but we’re planning to go later this week, which made me think about it again). The display is a room full of dried flowers, and I’d seen beautiful pictures of it, but they did not do it justice.

Thousands of flowers are threaded onto strings that hang from wooden beams. They are colorful in a muted way, and somehow appear sturdy and intact, yet like the wrong breath could make them fall to dust. They sway with the shifting air as admirerers walk the open paths through and around them. The sign at the door asks you not to touch, quite reasonably, but the delicate beauty makes it difficult to refrain. And no picture could ever convey the wonderful scent as you walk in.

I didn’t write or read. I sat and looked. And I pondered the experience of going from an exhibit of preserved dead human bodies to one of preserved dead flowers.

Both are fascinating and beautiful, in their own ways, but not quite right, not quite like they were in life. And one thing that makes them fascinating is that they are unusual; this isn’t what normally happens when something dies. Death brings decay.

I think humans have an inherent sense that death is wrong, that life ends, but that isn’t the way it should be. In general, we fight so hard to prevent it, and even, in some cases, to preserve what’s left afterwards, whether of a person or a flower.

And we’re right: life ending is not the way it should be. Death is an enemy, and it’s the last one God will destroy. Isn’t it intriguing to see how people of all times and cultures have had a sense of this, however faint?

He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the human heart; yet no one can fathom what God has done from beginning to end. – Ecclesiastes 3:11