C.A. Gray's Blog, page 11
December 8, 2023
The Ice Swan, J’Nell Ciesielski
This podcast comes from this blog review of The Ice Swan.
The post The Ice Swan, J’Nell Ciesielski appeared first on C.A. Gray.
December 1, 2023
The Strangest Secret, Earl Nightingale
This is short, but absolutely fantastic.
I had never heard of Earl Nightingale until I listened to Bob Proctor’s book, and he mentioned him and this title specifically numerous times. It reads like a long essay, and it is essentially “The Secret,” except from a Christian perspective, with many Bible verses quoted to back up his point. The bottom line is that your life follows your dominant, emotionalized thoughts. Your thoughts become your actions, your actions become your habits, and your habits steer the course of your life. This is easy to say in a sentence and forget, but listening to the book is like meditating on the concept until it sinks down into your subconscious mind… which is exactly what you need for the concept to do you any good.
I listened twice in a row, and I’ll likely revisit this little book many more times.
My rating: *****
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Change Your Paradigm, Change Your Life, Bob Proctor
Today’s podcast comes from this blog review of Change Your Paradigm, Change Your Life.
The post Change Your Paradigm, Change Your Life, Bob Proctor appeared first on C.A. Gray.
November 24, 2023
Christy, Books 10-12
Christy #10: Stage Fright
This one was such a gimmick. Christy has her class read Romeo and Juliet, and then Doctor MacNeill walks in as she is reciting Juliet’s lines, as it turns out that she played Juliet on stage in high school… and it also turns out that Doctor MacNeill’s aunt is the director of the Knoxville Players, who just happen to be putting on Romeo and Juliet. She comes to visit, and invites Christy to come out and be part of the show as a bit player… only of course they end up without a Juliet, forced to use Christy instead (as if she remembers all the lines from high school. I’ve had nightmares of exactly this scenario, where I find I’m playing the lead role in a show I was in in high school, and it’s opening night, but of course I don’t remember the lines.) Then for good measure, Neil goes back with them, and there’s a love triangle, and a jealous stage hand tries to sabotage Christy’s performance… it doesn’t fit the Cutter Gap story at all. It takes the same characters, but it reads like fan fiction. The extrapolation is just too far to work, for me.
My rating: **1/2
Christy #11: Goodbye Sweet Prince
Another extrapolation story from the original characters that we loved so much…
I can see why this was the second to last novella ever written, as clearly they were running out of ideas. The story revolves around Prince, the mission’s stallion. The mission is running out of funds, and has to sell Prince for the proceeds. Ruby Mae especially is highly distraught. Prince, it turns out, gets sold to an abusive man, and runs away. The kids hide him until the new owner comes looking. Then Ruby Mae challenges him to a ride, and she out-rides him, so according to the rules of the deal, they get the right to buy him back. It’s very simplistic, childlike, and happily-ever-after in an over-the-top, cheesy kind of way.
But, if you’re looking for a clean, uplifting read for an elementary or maybe a middle school student, it might work.
My rating: **
Christy #12: Brotherly Love
This is the last novella in the series, and it doesn’t wrap things up at all… I think they just stopped because there probably wasn’t enough interest. And I see why…
It wasn’t poorly written, it just introduced a brand new character, Christy’s brother George. He was mentioned in the novel in passing, I think. Here the conflict centers around at first Christy’s envy of her brother’s easy way of capturing the hearts of everyone around him, and also her suspicion that there’s something he’s not telling her when he ends up in Cutter Gap out of nowhere. Turns out he stole some money… or so she thinks… and had to flee school. Then his roommate turns up, and Christy’s frantic parents write her, and the real story comes out.
All of the stories are written simplistically enough to be easy, very quick reads.
My rating: **1/2
Language: none
Sexual content: none
Violence: none
Political content: none
The post Christy, Books 10-12 appeared first on C.A. Gray.
Christy Novellas 10-12, C. Archer
This week’s podcast review comes from this blog review of the Christy Novellas, books 10-12.
The post Christy Novellas 10-12, C. Archer appeared first on C.A. Gray.
November 17, 2023
Change Your Paradigm, Change Your Life
I’m on my second listen of this book. It’s terrific.
There’s no super new concepts for me in this book. I’ve read a lot of self-help books and have studied scripture from a charismatic perspective for a good decade now, but this really brought it all together. It’s recorded in a question-and-answer format of interviews with Bob Proctor. He covers a LOT of scripture, which I love, and which helps to counterbalance references to The Secret and what otherwise might be a lot of New Age sounding ideas about the power of words, vibrations, etc. But if you can strip away some of the phrases that might have become associated with a particular set of ideas, there’s gold here.
The concept boils down to the importance of repetition, of meditation, and on engaging your imagination until it sparks hope. Hope becomes faith, and all things are possible for those who believe. These are principles that God baked into the universe, and they are impartial; anyone, regardless of their religious persuasion, can tap into them and make them work. The key is, getting to the point where the image or idea or belief you want makes it from your conscious mind down into your subconscious mind. The only way to do that is through repetition. It’s like brainwashing, only in this case you’re brainwashing yourself, intentionally, and for a positive purpose.
My rating: *****
Language: none
Sexual content: none
Violence: none
Political content: none
The post Change Your Paradigm, Change Your Life appeared first on C.A. Gray.
Christy, Catherine Marshall
This week’s podcast review comes from this blog review of Christy.
The post Christy, Catherine Marshall appeared first on C.A. Gray.
November 10, 2023
The Ultimate Guide to Methylene Blue, Mark Sloan
Today’s podcast review comes from this blog review of The Ultimate Guide to Methylene Blue.
The post The Ultimate Guide to Methylene Blue, Mark Sloan appeared first on C.A. Gray.
November 6, 2023
The Abolition of Man and The Great Divorce
I’d really give Abolition of Man four stars, and The Great Divorce five, so I’ll go with 4.5 for the combo.
A speaker at a gala we went to recently mentioned The Abolition of Man, and I realized I’d never read it. It’s very short, but rather like a very scholarly expansion on an idea that I believe Lewis put forth in “Mere Christianity” about why there must be such a thing as a moral code and an absolute reality outside of our own beliefs and perceptions. But it wasn’t just about this… I had a hard time following the point he was trying to make in a number of places, probably because he was arguing against something that was I guess very common in his day and age and he assumed it would be familiar to his readers. Best I could follow, the argument was that people kept trying to make everything in life a means to an end rather than ever an end in itself, and if they go on that way forever, they will end up conquering humanity itself–but in the act of doing so, they will have rendered themselves obsolete. Or something. I couldn’t quite see how this could be managed in anything like concrete terms though.
The Great Divorce was far more entertaining, told as a fantasy. The main character fell asleep and went on a trip first to hell, and then on a field trip to heaven. This I listened to because at Sunday school last week, our teacher showed us a video on the five historical views on hell, and I realized based on this book that CS Lewis takes the metaphorical view of hell, with a little bit of purgatory thrown in (though not really the classical conception of it.) I knew that one of Lewis’s heroes of the faith was George MacDonald, who appears as a character in this story too, and it’s mentioned that he takes another of the views of hell: that of universalism (didn’t know anybody truly held that position.)
I disagree with all of these positions, but it wasn’t really the point of the story, as Lewis made it very clear that he’s by no means arguing what heaven and hell are or are not – it’s entirely a work of his imagination. What I found so fascinating about the story was both the psychological perspective on what it means to be in a unique hell of one’s own making, and also the contrast of the super-reality of heaven to the mere wisp and vapor of hell. This was very similar to the way he depicted heaven in “The Last Battle” in the Chronicles of Narnia as well.
My (combined) rating: ****1/2
Language: none
Sexual content: none
Violence: none
Political content: none
The post The Abolition of Man and The Great Divorce appeared first on C.A. Gray.
November 3, 2023
Christy Novellas, books 7-9
This week’s podcast review comes from this blog review of the Christy novellas, books 7-9
The post Christy Novellas, books 7-9 appeared first on C.A. Gray.