This is a collection of eight short volumes by E.M. (Edward McKendree) Bounds. He is less known than many Christian authors. He wrote other books, but he always loved prayer, and one gets the feeling that his books on prayer were his favourites. Bounds was a Methodist Episcopal South pastor and writer in the 19th and early 20th centuries. The denomination was also known as the Southern Methodist Church, and it is now defunct; through various mergers, it survives today as the United Methodist Church. His daily practice was to spend several hours in morning prayer. His devotion to the practice shines through in his collected works on the subject.
This book is well-made. I read the hardcover version, which I really like because hardbacks are sturdier, last longer than paperbacks, and I also like to open books and lay them on a table so I can take notes and/or do research without having to open and close the text repeatedly, and hardcover books are conducive to this. The cover art is an attractive retro piece I assume was on an individual book.
The books included in the collection:
Power Through Prayer
Prayer and Praying Men
Purpose in Prayer
The Essentials of Prayer
The Necessity of Prayer
The Possibilities of Prayer
The Reality of Prayer
The Weapon of Prayer
Chapters are short, so the reader may want to approach the book as a devotional, reading one or two chapters per day. For some reason, Bounds sometimes chose to have consecutive chapters with the second a continuation of the subject and title of the first—perhaps they were originally serial for journal publication as the author was the editor of two denominational journals over the course of his career. In this collection, this seems unnecessary as they could have been readily combined. In such a long work on prayer, there is some repetition. This would not be as noticeable in the individual volumes, but it stands out in the collection, with all the material together. Bounds seems to be Dispensational in his theology and practical in his approach. Overall, the volume is not heavily scholarly. There are some (generally partial) in-text references to authors and other books, but there are no footnotes or indices, so this is not the greatest book for those doing research except for those satisfied with biblical citations. Bounds’ goal was praxis, and I posit that the lack of references would have been less of an issue in the individual books as he wrote them. The author’s style is approachable, and he writes directly to the reader, often in the first person plural. This results in the book seeming to be conversational. This is an antiquated stylistic, though some authors use this approach today.
I recommend this book to anyone wanting to learn more about the subject of prayer and the application of the same. The text could also be used selectively, with the reader engaging only with those portions related to a topic of interest . I am a completionist at heart, and I have a hard time reading only a segment of a book aside from books designed for this purpose such as encyclopedia, so I read the book cover to cover. It was not a waste of time as I took it slowly, reading two or three chapters at a time to keep the material fresh and distinct. Overall, I would rank the book 3.5 stars, but, since Goodreads only allows full star rankings, I bumped it up to 4.