3 of the 5.4 Books I Read in February 2024

February was another interesting reading month for me, even though I did not read as many books as in January. Here’s my take on three of the 5.4 books I read last month.


Fortune Favors the Dead, by Stephen Spotswood

Fortune Favors the Dead, by Stephen Spotswood

I was not familiar with Stephen Spotswood’s writing until I read about Fortune Favors the Dead in an e-newsletter from Main Street Books in Davidson, North Carolina. This is the first book in a four-book mystery series and was recommended by the bookstore’s staff.

The novel is written in first-person in the voice of Willowjean “Will” Parker, a teen with several years of experience working for a circus. In her employment with the circus, Will has learned many skills (such as knife-throwing) and life lessons. Through those experiences she comes to be employed as an assistant for private investigator Lillian Pentecost in New York.

Ms. Pentecost is a well-respected investigator. She and Will get involved in investigating the Collins family of Collins Steel. As one expects in a mystery, there are many secrets and a couple of murders. A clairvoyant is involved, as well as a college professor.

The story held my interest throughout. It is written with humor and suspense, and it will keep you guessing.


The Kingdom, The Power, and The Glory: American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism, by Tim Alberta

The Kingdom, The Power, and The Glory, by Tim Alberta

Where do I begin?

This book tries to get to the heart of a question I have wondered about and to which I have been unable to find a satisfying answer: How did so many evangelical Christians in the United States get so far removed from the teachings of Jesus Christ?

I really want to know. I want to understand what happened and why.

Written by the son of an Evangelical Presbyterian pastor, Tim Alberta set out to discern the answer. For starters, I find “Evangelical Presbyterian” to be a bit of an oxymoron. Presbyterians by nature are not what I would call evangelical. I’m a member of a church affiliated with the Presbyterian Church USA, which is a much more liberal denomination than the Evangelical Presbyterian church.

This book is fascinating. The author’s theory is that for many evangelicals in the United States, America is their kingdom. They see the United States as a nation set apart and uniquely blessed by God. But this love of country has transitioned into nationalism bordering on idolatry. He documents case after case where worship services look and sound more like political rallies than places where “love your neighbor” is proclaimed.

The book looks at famous televangelists as well as not-so-famous preachers and congregations that are focused on winning at all costs and praising their political darlings instead of God. They have somehow forgotten that the kingdom that Jesus Christ promised was not the kingdom of the United States.

The author was hit in the gut by the extremism and hatred in the fractured right-wing of the conservative evangelicals when he attended his father’s funeral. His father had been pastor of the church where the funeral was held. When speaking to the author as he stood in the receiving line, a number of church members took that opportunity to verbally attack him for the stand he had taken in favor of leaving politics out of American Christianity and unflattering revelations he had made in his earlier book about a twice impeached, 91 times indicted US president.

More people than Mr. Alberta could count spoke to him that day not to offer condolences but to attack him. It was on that day that Mr. Alberta saw the true colors of these people, many of whom he had known all his life. He set out that day to try to determine how and when the conservative right-wing segment of American Christianity went so horribly off the rails and lost sight of the teachings of Jesus Christ.

The people this book is about are the people who claim to be Christians (and in their hearts they believe they are Christians), but they have lost sight of people who are not exactly like them. They have confused their worldview with Christianity. They have lost sight of love your neighbor as you love yourself. They not only don’t want to welcome the stranger or the foreigner, they hate them and wish them harm. They have gotten so obsessed with arming themselves to the teeth that they have lost sight of the Prince of Peace.

The most frightening part of all is that they have proclaimed a foul-mouthed, hate-spewing former US president as their savior. He has tricked them into thinking he is one of them.

If you wonder what has happened to many American evangelical Christians, I think you will find this book to be thought provoking.


Ninety-Day Wonder: How the Navy Would Have Been Better Off Without Me, by Stephen Davenport

Ninety-Day Wonder: How The Navy Would Have Been Better Off Without Me, by Stephen Davenport

I learned of this book from Liz Gauffreau’s January 24, 2024 blog post: https://lizgauffreau.com/2024/01/24/bookreview-ninety/. Mr. Davenport’s book is a memoir of his years in the U.S. Navy in the early 1950s. It is a humorous telling of the way he more or less bumbled his way through the service. He tells of bungled practice runs of amphibious landings off Morehead City, North Carolina and how he was often put into situations where he did not know what he was doing.

Mr. Davenport entered Reserve Officer Candidate School in 1951 but, when he was thrown into various situations where he was the ranking officer, he often learned the hard way that the enlisted sailors until his command were more familiar with the tasks at hand than he was. Hence, the graduates of the Reserve Officer Candidate School were called “Ninety-Day Wonders,” and perhaps are to this day.

Liz Gauffreau gives a more detailed overview of the book than I have here. She is more adept at writing book reviews. I highly recommend that you check out her blog, or poetry, and her other writing.


Until my next blog post

I hope you have at least one good book to read. Support your local public library and your local independent bookstore!

Please visit my website, https://www.janetmorrisonbooks.com and subscribe to my e-newsletter. If you were a subscriber as of last Thursday, you received my March newsletter on Friday. Among other things, I wrote about and shared photos from my recent hike on the Hector Henry Greenway on the Carolina Thread Trail and its connection to my articles in Harrisburg, Did You Know? Cabarrus History, Book 2 about the bridges over Rocky River in Cabarrus County in the 1870s. You never know what you’re going to miss if you aren’t receiving my newsletters!

Remember the people of Ukraine and the innocent people suffering in Gaza.

Janet

11 thoughts on “3 of the 5.4 Books I Read in February 2024

  1. It was good to see your review of Ninety-Day Wonder, Janet! I have been asking myself this very question for quite some time now: “How did so many evangelical Christians in the United States get so far removed from the teachings of Jesus Christ?” Your discussion of The Kingdom, The Power, and The Glory reminded me a sermon my dad once preached, which asserted that self-proclaimed Christians who behave in this fashion have not in fact genuinely accepted Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior. I’m not going to read the book because it would be too upsetting.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Well Janet that’s quite an impressive amount of books and they all seem to be quite interesting indeed. Wishing you continued success with your book/s and projects. I will not be directly active for about two weeks as I will be working on something offline and mostly out of the studio/office, but I’ll look in every day (mostly). Take good care and all the best…

    Liked by 2 people

  3. I was delighted the other day to see Sally Cronin highlight your blog post! Sally’s amazing! Yes, The Kingdom, The Power, and The Glory was a difficult read. My blood pressure probably rose with each chapter. Somedays I just couldn’t deal with it at all. I think your father was correct. I keep praying that Trump will accept Jesus Christ as his Lord and Savior. That’s our country’s only hope, as long as he maintains his following. To follow that book by reading The Women, by Kristin Hannah (didn’t finish it until March, so it’s not on February’s list of 5.4 books read) was almost too much. Two hard books to close and put out of my mind.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. In light of the Super Tuesday results this week, I wish I could just go live in a cave. I’m not sure I have the energy to face the next eight months of lies and mud slinging.

    Liked by 1 person

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