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416 pages, Kindle Edition
First published October 30, 2012
He who is faithful in what is least is faithful also in much. --Luke 16:10 NKJV
To love anything is to see it at once under lowering skies of danger. Loyalty implies loyalty in misfortune.
A Passage from Orthodoxy (1908): Had Christianity felt what I felt, but could not (and cannot) express -- this need for a first loyalty to things, and for a ruinous reform of things? Then I remembered that it was actually the charge against Christianity that it combined these two things which I was wildly trying to combine. Christianity was accused, at one and the same time, of being too optimistic about the universe and of being too pessimistic about the world. The coincidence made me suddenly stand still.
Certain types of books are always difficult to review: study Bibles, commentaries, and how-to books are all on that list for me. So, too, are year-long readers. Whether they be devotionals or selected excerpts from a famous author, books that require 365 days of reading are inevitably difficult to review fairly.
That introduction is my way of apologizing for giving a 3-star rating to a compelling collection of Chesterton quotes. A Year with G. K. Chesterton is one man’s attempt to present the reader with hundreds of Chesterton quotes, excerpted out of their context, and by and large, Kevin Belmonte succeeds beautifully.
I really do not see how reading GKC out of context could serve any greater purpose than to send someone on the way to the full work. He alludes to Dickens, Stevenson, and so many more writers who were classic or his contemporaries. An understanding of history (or the reader taking time to research GKC's references) is helpful.