Thursday 1 January 2015

Books of 2014, Part 2: Non-fiction

You know, I was a bit worried about what would happen to my reading habits once I finished school. For years, a lot of what I read was school-related. I figured, without the required reading, I'd sink into fiction and never read anything deep again. So far that hasn't been a problem! Here are my favourites from last year:

1. Jerry Bridges: Growing Your Faith. So far I like everything Jerry Bridges has written. I've already started another one (we're doing it for my ladies' group).

2. Steve Corbett and Brian Fikkert: When Helping Hurts. This was a school requirement but I'd recommend it to anyone interested in missions, helping the poor, etc. It gave me some good perspective on how to help and how not to help (and balanced out the "go and do stuff now or you're a bad Christian" attitude of some books).

3. Greg Harris: The Cup and the Glory. Dr. Harris was my professor for Worship and Wisdom (my favourite class). He writes well, pulls things from the Bible together well, and keeps his readers thinking.

4. Moreau, Carwin, and McGee: Introducing World Missions. This was another school book, and very interesting. The authors traced world missions from the Old Testament to the modern times. They looked at the good and the bad. It's also set up to work for a classroom or Bible study type situation.

5. Tara Kelen Barthel and Judy Dabler: Peace Making Women. This one I read for the women's discipleship class at the church. The authors give principles for being a peace maker in different situations, showing the most likely problems that we may face and how to deal with them biblically.

6. Kevin DeYoung: Crazy Busy and The Hole in Our Holiness. Both of these are short books, but still deep. I like that the author doesn't try to heap condemnation on people; rather, he gives both practical and biblical advice on overcoming in both books (and he points out that we aren't called to do everything).

7. John Piper: The Swans are Not Silent series: The Roots of Endurance, The Legacy of Sovereign Joy, and The Hidden Smile of God. These are biographies of famous Christian men. Each book looks at three men, their struggles, their joys, and their legacies. I started them because one had William Wilberforce, and he's one of my heroes.

8. Sharon James: My Heart in His Hands. This is a biography of Ann Judson, and it makes use of her journals and letters. Ann Judson and her husband were among the first American missionaries and the first missionaries to Burma.

9. William Varner: Jacob's Dozen. This is a short book that looks Jacob's final blessing to his sons and how that blessing has been realized through the rest of the Bible.

10. Carl Honore: In Praise of Slowness. I like the idea of slowing down. The idea, as I understand it, is not that everything must be done slowly, but that everything should be done at its own pace, and that faster is not always better.

11. Malcolm Gladwell: David and Goliath. I stumbled upon Malcolm Gladwell's writings several years ago and have enjoyed everything I have read of his. This one looks at why the little guy can (and often does) win, and the advantages of things that look like disadvantages.

12. Richard Feynman: Perfectly Reasonable Deviations and "Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman". Richard Feynman was a Noble-winning physicist. Neither of these books has anything to do with physics (or I wouldn't understand them). The first one is a compilation of letters he wrote over his lifetime. The second (which was actually a re-read; it's how I was first introduced to Feynman some 15 or so years ago) is autobiographical, and relates various of the more interesting (and/or odd) incidents from his life.

Those are the best of my non-fiction reading this year. There were others, of course, but these 16 were the most interesting and/or enjoyable. Between the fiction list and this one, you have about half of what I read last year.

No comments: