Have you heard? The Reading Crisis is over.
The National Endowment for the Arts released new survey findings this year indicating that literature is no longer in danger of extinction brought on by competition from other media, contrary to earlier NEA reports. The so-called Reading Crisis, while it lasted, was only one of several death-of-reading controversies to grace editorial pages this decade. Cooler-headed researchers have insisted all along that the debate was overblown, but that doesnât make for good headlines.
Confused and curious, I decided to examine reading habits for myselfâspecifically, best-seller lists from the past 100 years. If fiction was in trouble, I wanted to know.
Written fiction has a unique truth-telling power. Unlike other forms of storytelling, it investigates both our total depravityâour capacity to deceive ourselvesâand languageâs role in that deception.
I didnât find much evidence of apocalyptic change over the past century, but I did notice, in the past 15 years, two subtler trends: the rise of the info-novel and the memoir.
Bad best-sellers have always shoved characters around in service of a sexy story. Info-novelsâThe Da Vinci Code, Sophieâs World, and, yes, Left Behindâgo further, subordinating both characters and story to a series of bulleted talking points.
Memoirs, meanwhileâthough theyâre often as contrived as any novel, or even outright fabricationsâhave gotten so popular that a few editors have resorted to re-labeling novels as memoirs.
These developments are no âreading crisisââletâs leave melodrama to the NEA. But theyâre troubling nonetheless. Do richly imagined novels not seem âseriousâ enough, so that we have to lard them with factoids or pretend they really happened?
During the same 15 years weâve repeatedly found ourselves at the mercy of institutions possessing, at best, a memoiristâs commitment to truth. Whether it was a U.S. administration that (as one Bush official told journalist Ron Suskind) governed by the relativist maxim âWe are the Empire, and we create reality when we act,â or that infinitely expanding credit bubble on which so many nations gambled and lostâor even the Reading Crisis itselfâweâre as self-deluding as ever.
We need literature to remind us of that fact.
reviewed by Ron VandenBurg
In this film based on a true story, African-born Scotsman Angus Buchan resettles his family on a South African farm after escaping political unrest in Zambia. Angusâs life changes when he comes to Christ. He begins sharing his faith with local Zulu workers and white farmers, and in conditions of drought and doubt he plants potatoes. Though his familyâs faith is challenged repeatedly, this film reveals people of faith seeking Godâs direction and Godâs provision for their needs. (Sony)
by Peter Rollins
reviewed by Bryan Berghoef
This unique collection of parables, stories, and tales will challenge your understanding of faith, discipleship, and what it means to be the church. Rollins retells familiar parables or biblical stories; he also spins contemporary tales that embody an uncompromising critique of typical religion. Written by a fiery Irish philosopher/theologian, this collection is guaranteed to provoke you, unsettle you, and call you into a deeper understanding of what true faith is. (Paraclete Press)
by Andrew Clements
reviewed by Sonya VanderVeen Feddema
To boost her chances of passing the sixth grade, an Illinois girl named Abby takes on an extra-credit project by becoming a pen pal with an Afghani boy. Abby and Saheedâs exchange of letters stirs up opposition in both their communities, but it builds a bridge between them in their disparate worlds. Abby voices what each comes to realize: âPeople are simple, but the stuff going on around them can get complicated. And even dangerous.â Ages 9-12. (Atheneum)
by Thomas Cahill
reviewed by Sonya VanderVeen Feddema
In his indictment of the death penalty, Cahill relates how Dominique Green, an African American man charged with murder, âwas convicted and executed by a system that has no regard for fairness and no regard for human life.â Learning from other death-row prisoners that âcoming here is not the end of their lives but merely a second chance,â Green used his second chance to better the lives of his fellow prisoners, to fight for justice, and to pursue the abolition of the death penalty. (Nan A. Talese)
Age of Persuasion
reviewed by Ron DeBoer
Terry OâReilly, a former advertising executive and now examiner of trends in advertising and the media, hosts the CBC radio program Age of Persuasion. Some of the topics in OâReillyâs half-hour podcasts include âSelling War,â a look at the history of persuading young men to join the army and the new challenges of recruitment; âNasty Is the New Nice,â an exploration of the new, meaner tone of the latest advertising trend; and âSelling God,â an examination of the delicate, always-controversial relationship between faith and advertising. All-new episodes start Jan. 4, 2010. (ageofpersuasion.wordpress.com)
reviewed by Otto Selles
The North American food industry produces a remarkable amount of food at a very low cost. But if we knew how this food is produced, would we want to eat it? After watching this riveting documentary by Robert Kenner, you will think twice about what you put in your grocery cart. Discussions with farmers, businesspeople, and activists, including the likes of Eric Schlosser (Fast Food Nation), trace the high price that workers, consumers, animals, and the environment pay for our cheap food. Recommended for adult church group discussions. (Magnolia)
The Lowdown
Last-Minute Gift Ideas
A Year of Yancey: Drawn from his many writings, is a book of daily readings by Philip Yancey. (Zondervan)
Tough Choices: Would your older children prefer and the Half-Blood Prince (Warner) or (20th Century Fox)? Both are out on DVD.
Mission-Minded: is a collection of the journals and letters of Tena Huizinga, a missionary nurse in Nigeria. (Eerdmans)
Casting Call: Casting Crowns is back with more worshipful rock on their new CD . (Reunion)
About the Author
Phil Christman teaches English at the University of Michigan and attends St. Clare's Episcopal Church in Ann Arbor, Mich.