Recovering the Lost Art of Reading
Mound Books
€14,95 RRP €19,95
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Description
A Christian Perspective on the Joys of Reading \n
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\nReading has become a lost art. With smartphones offering us endless information with the tap of a finger, it’s hard to view reading as anything less than a tedious and outdated endeavor. This is particularly problematic for Christians, as many find it difficult to read even the Bible consistently and attentively. Reading is in desperate need of recovery.
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\nRecovering the Lost Art of Reading addresses these issues by exploring the importance of reading in general as well as studying the Bible as literature, offering practical suggestions along the way. Leland Ryken and Glenda Faye Mathes inspire a new generation to overcome the notion that reading is a duty and instead discover it as a delight.
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About the Authors:
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\nTable of Contents
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\nIntroduction: Welcome to the Conversation
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\nPart 1: Reading Is a Lost Art
\nChapter 1: Is Reading Lost?
\nChapter 2: What Have We Lost?
\nChapter 3: Why Consider Reading an Art?
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\nPart 2: Reading Literature
\nChapter 4: What Is Literature?
\nChapter 5: Why Does Literature Matter?
\nChapter 6: What Does Literature Offer?
\nChapter 7: Reading Stories: Tell Me a Story
\nChapter 8: Reading Poems: Songs of the Soul
\nChapter 9: Reading Novels: Come Away with Me
\nChapter 10: Reading Fantasy: A Far Journey
\nChapter 11: Reading Children’s Books: Once Upon a Time
\nChapter 12: Reading Creative Nonfiction: To Tell the Truth
\nChapter 13: Reading the Bible as Literature: Words of Delight
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\nPart 3: Recovering the Art of Reading
\nChapter 14: Recovery through Discovery
\nChapter 15: Truth in Literature
\nChapter 16: The Moral Vision in Literature
\nChapter 17: Beauty in Literature
\nChapter 18: Discovering Literary Excellence
\nChapter 19: Freedom to Read
\nChapter 20: Reading Good Books
\nChapter 21: Calling and Creativity
\nChapter 22: Literature and the Spiritual Life: Over and Above
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\nEndorsements
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\n“No one more than Christians should appreciate and cultivate the reading of well-written words. Yet, with so much else vying for our attention, many today have forgotten—or perhaps never really learned—how to read with care and skill the words that have shaped human history for thousands of years. Whether you are a student, teacher, parent, or pastor, Recovering the Lost Art of Reading will instruct and delight you in God’s wonderful gift of language and literature.”
\nKaren Swallow Prior, Research Professor of English and Christianity and Culture, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary; author, On Reading Well
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\n“In this literate but accessible book, Leland Ryken and Glenda Faye Mathes first rescue true literature from the trash heap of ‘text’ to which it has been confined for the last half century and then provide their readers with tools for engaging fully with the goodness, truth, and beauty of the imaginative poetry and prose of the past and present.”
\nLouis Markos, Professor of English and Scholar in Residence, Houston Baptist University; author, From Achilles to Christ and Literature: A Student’s Guide
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\n“Both practical and inspirational, Recovering the Lost Art of Reading deserves a wide audience. May it spur us, as ‘people of the book,’ to slow down and savor the riches of literature and the great gift of literacy.”
\nJanie Cheaney, Senior Writer, WORLD magazine
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\n“Thoughtful, challenging, and even harrowing, Recovering the Lost Art of Reading persuasively exhorts us to recover the serenity, joy, and wonder of serious reading. Those who seriously engage this book will find themselves blessedly refreshed, educated, and motivated to pursue the good, the true, and the beautiful.”
\nDavid V. Urban, Professor of English, Calvin University; author, Milton and the Parables of Jesus
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