Categories
Book Review Faith Life

Invisible by Ginny L. Yttrup: A Book Review

I am created in God’s image! When I hide in shame—I hide Him too. ~Ginny L. Yttrup

Can butter make you invisible?

I love butter 2

  • Ellyn, gourmet chef and butter lover, certain her dress size excludes her from love.
  • Sabina, a psychologist running from pain, convinced her past disqualifies her from joy.
  • Twila, a young woman with an old soul and a new tattoo fights the urge to make her body disappear.

Together, these three women represent the many ways we humans hide and hurt and hope. As the story unfolds, courage is found to open their hearts to God and each other. They learn to say no to the whisper, “The way God made you is not good enough.”

I just finished the book and already I miss these quirky women and their honest but gracious banter. My finger itches to text them, wondering if they would join me for coffee; if in the embrace of their friendship I could find healing too.

I care about made-up people! Novelist Ginny Yttrup has done it again.

Her award-winning books (Words, Lost and Found and now Invisible) strike a deep chord in me, touching old wounds I avoid or bluff my way through. I love Ginny’s characters and God loves me back through them.

This time it’s about body image, and where I turn when empty and hungry, instead of to God. I’m reminded of ways I isolate instead of letting others see me struggle.

Invisible is about hospitality, as Henri Nouwen defined it: The creation of a free and friendly space where we can reach out to strangers and invite them to become our friends. 

Don’t you long for that? In a world where hostility screams loudest, God has ordained healing to happen through the hospitable heart of one offered to another. Many of us find this welcoming space in the pages of a good book.

Buy Invisible:

  1. If you know someone (it may be you) who struggles with shame or body image issues, who doubts they are beloved of God. Better than a self-help book, every page sings with the implications of Imago dei–we are created in the image of God.
  2. If you are confident in your self-image but love a well-crafted story about friendship, and God’s redemptive healing, set in beautiful Mendocino. Here’s the link for Invisible to Amazon.com. and Barnes & Noble and Christianbook. com.

Henri Nouwen wrote: Just as we cannot force a plant to grow but can take away the weeds and stones which prevent its development, so we cannot force anyone to such a personal and intimate change of heart, but we can offer the space where such a change can take place.

This is exactly what Ginny’s books do.

Have you ever experienced the hospitality of a good book? 

9781433671685-325x500

 

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail
Categories
Book Review Faith Life

A Year With G.K. Chesterton by Kevin Belmonte, ed.

This world of ours has some purpose; and if there is a purpose, there is a Person. I had always felt life first as a story: and if there is a story, there is a Storyteller. ~G.K. Chesterton

A Year With G.K. Chesterton

[I love books, and so do you, so just for fun, a book review!] 

You find yourself in a cozy tavern, a warm refuge from the rain pelting the roof above. The fire is generous, the drinks are hot and the conversation merry.

But you mostly listen, enthralled by the literary giant seated before you. Armed with a satirical wit, towering intellect, deep curiosity and a grateful attentiveness to all of God’s created world, he blasts away at your shallow assumptions.

You leave the conversation nourished, challenged, overwhelmed, and not surprised C.S. Lewis regarded this man as a catalyst to his own faith journey.

So I felt after wading through the works of C.K. Chesterton.

His books aren’t easily digested–I imagine the author was accustomed to more robust readers than are found today. Fortunately, in A Year With G.K. Chesterton, Kevin Belmonte provides a way to experience Chesterton one chewable tidbit at a time.

Belmonte has compiled a wide range of materials into a 365 daily format. Each day includes a scripture verse followed by excerpts from Chesterton’s writings. Politics, literature, philosophy, theology–no topic is left unexplored by his lively mind. In addition, interesting glimpses of Chesterton life events are scattered throughout.

This is a great book to give as a stocking stuffer, or to keep on your night stand for a daily dose of his wisdom.

A couple of thoughts:

  • This is not a “daily devotional” of the 5-minute-check-in-with-God genre. Nor does it claim to be. Some days you will be inspired, others, not so much; some passages you will understand, others may puzzle you. Keep a highlighter handy–Chesterton is a very quotable writer.
  • If you are not familiar with the political, literary and philosophical climate of the early 20th century, some topics may confuse you. But that’s what Wikipedia is for! Become educated as well as encouraged (smile).

If you prefer a book of just quotations, Belmonte has also published The Quotable Chesterton: The Wit and Wisdom of G.K. Chesterton.

I’ve added it to my wish list!

Have you read G.K. Chesterton? What did you think?

 

Will write for free books! [BookSneeze provided me with a complementary copy of this book and I am not obligated to give a positive review].

Thomas Nelson product page: click here.

Amazon.com preview: click here.

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail