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December 2020 BOTM - Voting
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What a list, this was tough narrowing down my votes, but I will vote for:
1) Doors in the Walls of the World: Signs of Transcendence in the Human Story
and
2) Paradoxes of Catholicism
1) Doors in the Walls of the World: Signs of Transcendence in the Human Story
and
2) Paradoxes of Catholicism

2)Paul: A Biography, N.T. Wright




Nelson wrote: "I vote for The Marian Option and Doors in the Walls of the World. If I can say a alternate - Eifelheim sounds interesting if it’s not just dry facts."
No alternates, just two votes. :-)
No alternates, just two votes. :-)

I'll stick with my nominations, just because I feel I can only handle fiction right now.
The Mango Murders
The Light

Already read Fratelli Tutti.
Maggie wrote: "Read This House of Brede --love it love it love it and a big fan of Peter Kreeft, but voting for The Light.
Already read Fratelli Tutti."
Hi Maggie, I just want to make sure I'm counting your vote correctly. You are just voting for The Light. Is that right?
Already read Fratelli Tutti."
Hi Maggie, I just want to make sure I'm counting your vote correctly. You are just voting for The Light. Is that right?
Books mentioned in this topic
The Light: Who Do You Become When the World Falls Away? (other topics)Poor Banished Children (other topics)
Eifelheim (other topics)
Paradoxes of Catholicism (other topics)
Doors in the Walls of the World: Signs of Transcendence in the Human Story (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
N.T. Wright (other topics)Pope Francis (other topics)
Fiorella De Maria (other topics)
Robert Hugh Benson (other topics)
Joseph Pearce (other topics)
More...
Oh goodness. 6 p.m. Central Time.
It is time to vote for our December 2020 BOTM. This will be our first month voting on a BOTM under the new rules. The only impact on voting is that we have our first book from the Current Interest List on the Voting List, Fratelli tutti. Sulla fraternità e l'amicizia sociale, which has been added to the end of the Voting List. You can still vote for as many as two books from the Voting List below. A reminder, after voting, all books that get 0 or 1 vote will be removed from the Voting List; those that get 1 vote will be returned to the end of the Nominations List.
Cast your votes by replying in this thread. Happy Voting!!
Bodies and souls, by Maxence Van der Meersch, nominated by Fonch.
This dramatic novel about doctors, students, nurses and patients, has become a classic. It seems to be difficult to obtain in English (it doesn't even have a page in Goodreads), but it can easily be got in other languages (French, Spanish or Italian). This is their page in Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2...
Voting History: August 2020 - 2; September 2020 - 2; October 2020 - 3; November 2020 - 3
The Divine Milieu, by Pierre Teilhard de Chardin.
Teilhard de Chardin -- geologist, priest, and major voice in twentieth-century Christianity -- probes the ultimate meaning of all physical exploration and the fruit of his own inner life. The Divine Milieu is a spiritual treasure for every religion bookshelf.
Voting History: August 2020 - 1; September 2020 - 2; October 2020 - 3; November 2020 - 1
Doors in the Walls of the World: Signs of Transcendence in the Human Story, by Peter Kreeft, nominated by Vicky
With razor-sharp reasoning and irrepressible joy, Kreeft helps us to find the doors in the walls of the world. Drawing on history, physical science, psychology, religion, philosophy, literature, and art, he invites us to welcome what lies on the other side of these doors, and to begin living the life of Heaven in the here and now.
Voting History: August 2020 - 2; September 2020 - 3; October 2020 - 3; November 2020 - 4
Eifelheim, by Michael Flynn, nominated by Fonch
In 1349, one small town in Germany disappeared and has never been resettled. Tom, a contemporary historian, and his theoretical physicist girlfriend Sharon, become interested. Tom indeed becomes obsessed. By all logic, the town should have survived, but it didn't and that violates everything Tom knows about history. What was special about Eifelheim that it utterly disappeared more than 600 years ago?
Voting History: None
In This House of Brede, by Rumer Godden, nominated by Mariangel
This extraordinarily sensitive and insightful portrait of religious life centers on Philippa Talbot, a highly successful professional woman who leaves her life among the London elite to join a cloistered Benedictine community.
Voting History: None
Invasion '14, by Maxence Van der Meersch, nominated by John
Novel about the effects of the War on the French families behind the German lines.
Voting History: November 2020 - 2
The Light: Who Do You Become When the World Falls Away?, by Jacqueline Brown, nominated by Madeleine
A blinding flash … then darkness. Bria Ford and her three closest friends are stranded on a country highway in the middle of a November night. No phones. No car. No lights. Helpless and hundreds of miles from home, they put their lives in the hands of handsome Jonah Page and his flinty sister, East, strangers who somehow know Bria better than she knows herself. As the group bonds to adapt to a new, yet old, way of life, the secrets of Bria’s past provide them with the means to survive the extremes of Mother Nature, and the even more frightening extremes of human nature.
Voting History: August 2020 - 1; September 2020 - 2; October 2020 - 2; November 2020 - 1
The Mango Murders, by Mara Campos, nominated by Madeleine
All is not what it seems in Old San Juan, in the Pio Nono home for boys, in the life of the island's most famous artist, or in the memories of his models. Detective Sergeant Julio Ramos and gringo FBI agent Steve Halloran work in uneasy alliance to catch a serial killer with a penchant for mangoes and a need to avenge lost love and lost innocence. To come to truth, the investigators have to face their own painful issues, and even their targets must choose between light or darkness. In language, memory, race, and blood, the novel tells the story of the burden and the promise of identity.
Voting History: August 2020 - 3; September 2020 - 2; October 2020 - 2; November 2020 - 2
The Marian Option: God’s Solution to a Civilization in Crisis, by Carrie Gress PhD, nominated by Marlicia
As the world descends into chaos, Christians are thinking deeply about how to stem the tide. Many options and suggestions have been presented to deal with Christian persecution and cultural decadence, but none can hold a candle to The Marian Option.
Dr. Carrie Gress provides a thoroughly researched bird’s eye view of the significant cultural and military events mediated through Mary on behalf of her spiritual children. From miraculous victories to the soaring heights of culture, you have never seen Mary like this before. Until now, books on the Virgin Mary have generally focused upon one apparition or various theological elements of this mysterious woman. But the scope of The Marian Option is far greater. Drawing from a vast array of dogmas, Vatican approved apparitions, and writings of the saints, Dr. Gress has pulled together the remarkable story of Mary’s overwhelming influence and intercession.
Voting History: August 2020 - 1; September 2020 - 3; October 2020 - 2; November 2020 - 2
Paradoxes of Catholicism, by Robert Hugh Benson, nominated by Sergio
A collection of essays relating to his conversion to Catholicism.
Voting History: November 2020 - 1
Paul: A Biography, N.T. Wright, nominated by Jill
In this definitive biography, renowned Bible scholar, Anglican bishop, and bestselling author N. T. Wright offers a radical look at the apostle Paul, illuminating the humanity and remarkable achievements of this intellectual who invented Christian theology—transforming a faith and changing the world.
Voting History: August 2020 - 3; September 2020 - 5; October 2020 - 3; November 2020 - 1
Poor Banished Children, by Fiorella De Maria, nominated by Fonch
An explosion is heard off the coast of sixteenth-century England, and a woman washes up on the shore. She is barely alive and does not speak English, but she asks for a priest... in Latin. She has a confession to make and a story to tell, but who is she and where has she come from? Cast out of her superstitious, Maltese family, Warda turns to begging and stealing until she is fostered by an understanding Catholic priest who teaches her the art of healing. Her willful nature and hard-earned independence make her unfit for marriage, and so the good priest sends Warda to serve an anchorite, in the hope that his protege will discern a religious vocation.
Voting History: August 2020 - 1; September 2020 - 5; October 2020 - 3; November 2020 - 2
Race with the Devil by Joseph Pearce proposed by Fonch.
Joseph Pearce is foremost Catholic biographer of our time, but it wasn't always so. Imagine discovering God for the first time in the confines of a jail cell. Imagine spending the first half your life amidst the seedy underground of the white supremacy movement before becoming one of the foremost Religious scholars in the world. Imagine being converted by the writings of Chesterton, and years later writing a biography on him. Joseph Pearce doesn't have to imagine it - he lived it.
"In Race With the Devil: My Journey from Racial Hatred to Rational Love" take a journey through the peaks and valleys of one of the most fascinating conversion stories of our time, written first-hand by Pearce himself.
Voting History: October 2020 - 4; November 2020 - 4
The Secrets of Successful Financial Planning: Inside Tips from an Expert, by Dan Gallagher
There are six interrelated segments to a complete financial plan: Cash & Budget Planning, Insurance & Risk Management, Tax Management, Retirement Planning, Investment Planning, and Estate Planning. What aspects of the financial plan require sophisticated planning by a professional, and what can savvy, well-educated consumers handle themselves? The Secrets of Successful Financial Planning empowers readers to take charge of their financial present and future, regardless of where they are financially, by presenting technical jargon in a way that's easy to understand.
Voting History: August 2020 - 2; September 2020 - 2; October 2020 - 2; November 2020 - 2
A World Such as Heaven Intended, by Amanda Lauer, nominated by Dan.
The Civil War tore the United States apart and many friendships and families as well. In "A World Such as Heaven Intended," Amara McKirnan and Nathan Simmons share a devotion to their Catholic faith but their loyalties lie on opposite sides of the conflict. Dedicated to the Confederate cause, Amara offers to help out at her uncle’s makeshift hospital in Atlanta. Fate brought Nathan to their doorstep and into Amara’s life. Little does Amara know that the wounded soldier she cares for harbors a secret that will not only jeopardize his life but hers as well. Follow Amara and Nathan’s story from the heart of war-torn Atlanta to the Northern Georgia battlefields to the plains of East Texas as their lives become intertwined in a way that shatters the separate worlds they once knew.
Voting History: September 2020 - 0; October 2020 - 1; November 2020 - 0
And, our first Current Interest Book:
Fratelli tutti. Sulla fraternità e l'amicizia sociale, by Pope Francis, nominated by Jill
Pope Francis’s third Encyclical Letter. Pope Francis, inspired by St. Francis of Assisi, invites every Christian to be a Good Samaritan, to embrace and care for others with a humble and open heart. Pope Francis challenges us to rise above the isolation and discouragement that is so prevalent in our world today and to set our sights on Christ's call to love one another deeply and sacrificially.
No one is disposable, Pope Francis reminds us, and every person is endowed with dignity as a daughter or and son of God. This truth allows us to acknowledge, appreciate, and love each person. It also allows us to meet people in their place of suffering‚ whether it be the physical suffering of hunger or exploitation, or the unseen suffering of loneliness.
Voting History: None