I don't have a summer list going yet, but I do have a significant stack of books I've been claiming I'm going to read for the last two years sitting on a shelf staring me down. Maybe I'll start there. =D
I love to get lost in fiction (even when I've already read a story before), so the stack of non-fiction gets pushed to the wayside.
On that note, I've had Whose Waves These Are for two days now and I absolutely cannot put it down! I'm already halfway through it, have laughed, and cried, exclaimed out loud, and cried some more.
Life is big. And God is bigger. <3 Thank you for the recommendation.
On my list for this summer is Fatherland by Burkhard Bilger. It is his family story of his grandfather who was a part of the Nazi Party and his turning from that evil. Beyond Colorblind by Sarah Shin. She writes about race relation from a Christian point of view. I just finished a book by the former director of womenβs magazines ministry at the church where I work. It is called The Woodbine Chronicles. Her name is Suzanne Stelling. She and her husband chose to leave behind ( in her words ) the white, affluent part of town they lived in to move to the inner city so they could just love on the people in that neighborhood. Itβs a wonderful, eye opening book. And of course lots of fiction.
I don't have a summer list going yet, but I do have a significant stack of books I've been claiming I'm going to read for the last two years sitting on a shelf staring me down. Maybe I'll start there. =D
I love to get lost in fiction (even when I've already read a story before), so the stack of non-fiction gets pushed to the wayside.
On that note, I've had Whose Waves These Are for two days now and I absolutely cannot put it down! I'm already halfway through it, have laughed, and cried, exclaimed out loud, and cried some more.
Life is big. And God is bigger. <3 Thank you for the recommendation.
I raved about WWTA to someone literally yesterday - ha! Love that you're loving it. Hope you'll join the call with Amanda next month!
On my list for this summer is Fatherland by Burkhard Bilger. It is his family story of his grandfather who was a part of the Nazi Party and his turning from that evil. Beyond Colorblind by Sarah Shin. She writes about race relation from a Christian point of view. I just finished a book by the former director of womenβs magazines ministry at the church where I work. It is called The Woodbine Chronicles. Her name is Suzanne Stelling. She and her husband chose to leave behind ( in her words ) the white, affluent part of town they lived in to move to the inner city so they could just love on the people in that neighborhood. Itβs a wonderful, eye opening book. And of course lots of fiction.
I'll have to look into these!
Thank you for the mention, Kaitlyn! π«Άπ½π
It's such a good book, Tasha. <3