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Film in review: “Young Adult”

Mavis Gary is a pathetic character, and yet, somehow, we care about her. She’s self-centered, delusional, amoral, depressed, addictive and self-destructive, but she wants so desperately for the world to be as she wants it to be, rather than how it is, that we almost wish it with her.

Film in review: “Contraband”

We feel for Chris Farraday (Mark Wahlberg). In his younger years, he led a life of crime, but somehow he has been able to get out of “the life” and go straight, without anybody coming after him, either the law or his former cohorts. His successors in the international smuggling business have apparently felt no need to eliminate him as a potential informant.

Nature as Spiritual Practice

Nature as Spiritual Practice

by Steven Chase

Grand Rapids, Mich.: Wm. B. Eerdmanns. 286 pages

 

reviewed by SARAH SCHERSCHLIGT

 

On a morning walk, I caught sight of a bird circling over a pond. I was awestruck to witness it plummet into the pond and emerge with a catch.

Will There Be Faith? A New Vision for Educating and Growing Disciples

Will There Be Faith? A New Vision for Educating and Growing Disciples

 

by Thomas H. Groome

New York: Harper Collins. 384 pages

 

reviewed by JAMES F. CUBIE

 

Thomas Groome is a wise practical theologian who has written a superb book on how to do educational ministry that gives both a compelling, systematic vision of the theology that should support any practical effort to educate and grow disciples, and leads its reader through a series of personal and communal questions that relate directly to how a church operates day-to-day.

Kingdom Calling: Vocational Stewardship for the Common Good

Kingdom Calling: Vocational Stewardship for the Common Good

by Amy L. Sherman

InterVarsity Press Books, 272 pages

 

reviewed by JANICE HORTON

 

This book hits the spot. The “Vocational Sweet Spot” that is. Defined by Amy Sherman as “that place where our gifts and passions intersect with God’s priorities and the world’s needs,” it’s the place Christians ought to be aiming for when they consider their life’s work.

Indigenous Christianity in Madagascar

Indigenous Christianity in Madagascar

by Cynthia Holder Rich

Peter Lang Publishing, 188 pages

 

reviewed by JOELA RANAIVO

 

Cynthia Holder Rich provides a volume with a huge historical and informative value, tracing the Fifohazana, a spiritual revival movement in Madagascar, from its genesis in the late 19th century until now.

Film in review: “We Bought A Zoo”

We Bought A Zoo” will be a crowd-pleaser. It’s charming, it’s sentimental, it’s hopeful, it has plenty of star power, and it’s based on a heartwarming true story. A little unevenness can be readily excused.

Film in review: “Melancholia”

OK, it’s both weird and non-linear. To the point of impressionistic, what with its long introduction/foreshadowing with the classical music and the things falling out of the sky and freeze-frame images, collaged as if on a cinematic canvas.

Film in review: “The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo”

Yes, it’s a re-make. The original Swedish film was such a sensation that the English translation of the book caught on, then the two sequels, and now we make an English-language version of the Swedish film, still utilizing the cold remoteness of winter in Scandinavia, even occasionally showing newspaper clippings in Swedish, but everybody speaks English, whether or not with a Swedish accent.

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