So....What Are You Reading? (Volume II)

Discussion in 'Books' started by Footix, May 27, 2004.

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  1. nicodemus

    nicodemus Member+

    Sep 3, 2001
    Cidade Mágica
    Club:
    PAOK Saloniki
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    I have Waiting, but haven't read it yet. I have read his In the Pond though and found it enjoyable. It's impressive he's received so many accolades for writing in his second language (he taught himself English, but did study in later in academic setting.) He's a professor at Emory in Atlanta. Also, Ha Jin is a pen name (can't remember his real name.)
     
  2. nicodemus

    nicodemus Member+

    Sep 3, 2001
    Cidade Mágica
    Club:
    PAOK Saloniki
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    I read the first 50 pages last night and it is really good (don't judge this book by the cheesy cover.)

    [​IMG]

    here's the review from amazon.com:


    The spiritual traditions of the Eastern Orthodox Church are all but unknown to most Christians in the West, who often think of Christianity as split into two camps: Bible-based Protestantism and sacramental Catholicism. Yet in The Mountain of Silence, sociologist Kyriacos Markides suggests that Orthodox spirituality offers rich resources for Western Christians to integrate the head and the heart, and to regain a more expansive view of Christian life. The book combines elements of memoir, travelogue, and history in a single story. Markides journeys to a cluster of monasteries on Mount Athos, an isolated peninsula in northern Greece and one of the holiest sites in the Orthodox tradition. He also visits the troubled island of Cyprus, largely occupied by Turkey since 1974, and makes the acquaintance of a monk named Father Maximos, who has established churches, convents, and monasteries. Markides, a native Cypriot, tells the tale of this journey in a tone that's loose and light, with many excursions on Church history and Greek and Turkish politics. But despite the easygoing tone, the importance of this book is potentially immense. The Mountain of Silence introduces a world that is entirely new to many Western readers, and unveils a Christian tradition that reveres the mystical approach to God as much as the rational, a tradition that Markides says "may have the potential to inject Christianity with the new vitality that it so desperately needs."
     
  3. Footix

    Footix Member

    Dec 11, 1998
    Left Of The Dial
    Thread closed because it was just too full of good stuff.

    New thread (Volume III) is here.
     

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