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A Children's Bible: A Novel
A Children's Bible: A Novel | Lydia Millet
A brilliant, indelible novel of teenage alienation and adult complacency in a world whose climate and culture are unraveling. Pulitzer Prize finalist Lydia Millets sublime new novelher first since the National Book Awardlonglisted Sweet Lamb of Heavenfollows a group of eerily mature children on a forced vacation with their parents at a lakeside mansion. Contemptuous of their elders, who pass their days in a hedonistic stupor, the children are driven out into a chaotic landscape after a great storm descends on the summer estate. The storys narrator, Eve, devotes herself to the safety of her beloved little brother as events around them begin to mimic scenes from his cherished picture Bible. Millet, praised as unnervingly talented (San Francisco Chronicle), has produced a heartbreaking story of the legacy of climate change denial. Her parable of the coming generational divide offers a lucid vision of what awaits us on the other side of Revelation.
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Hilary427
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Pickpick

This was great! It‘s a short book and I finished it in a day. Disillusioned teens, shitty parents, climate disaster, rednecks with guns… loved it! (44)
⭐️: 4/5

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Erin.Elizabeth10
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Pickpick

This starts out with a Lord of the Flies feel, a pack of children abandoning and avoiding their incompetent parents, forming a rogue band together with rules and games. As the dystopian story continues, it felt like a retelling of the biblical story of Noah, the world being wiped out in a storm. Over time, more biblical allusions happen, adding more to the story. I felt like I was missing something, but I did enjoy the writing & it made me think.

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Bethanyroe
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Pickpick

I do not understand how Millet comes up with this stuff. This was a very different book than Dinosaurs. There was actually some better character development although it seems to be her style to keep the characters a bit at arms length. The story is BIZARRE but strangely enough, really well done. I would give a 3.5/5 but since the only option is yay, meh or nay; I give it a yay.

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rachaich
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This was actually a Litsy recommendation ages ago, then came up as suggested fiction in my course manual.

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amyrohn
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Mehso-so

This will lead to some great discussions in my book club, but the read personally felt a bit dull. This climate apocalypse book feels very mystical and surreal, and the narrative voice was distinct, but all the biblical references and countless thematic elements made this feel a bit too clever. It‘s layered in a way that made me go “oh god there‘s more?” Millet clearly has a lot of talent in her craft, it‘s just not my personal taste. 3/5⭐️

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Rachiiebookdragon
Mehso-so

A weird book 🤔

Read for reading challenges.

3.75/5

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cdreincarnate
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Mehso-so

This book is so weird and deeply disturbing. I rated it so-so because it‘s very well written, but the story is just not for me.

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SW-T
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Mehso-so

It wasn‘t bad. The teens are totally over their parents and the portrayal of the parents makes it obvious why. The end was odd…no spoilers but for all the adults to do the same thing at the end seemed weird. But the book was about the teens, so it did show them taking charge throughout the story. Dystopian, post-apocalyptic, climate change, teen driven allegory. Writing was good, but it did drag and was predictable.

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BaBaBaBillyAndTheBooks
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Mehso-so

The parents have ruined the AirBNB, and the younger generation is ashamed of the irresponsible partiers who refuse to address the mess. The outside world crumbles too. Our best chance to repair a broken place: the arrival of new life. As we grow, we bear responsibility for our home. We are more likely to put out fires when we see the innocent who truly had nothing to do with them. We are moved to act because their presence feels like a miracle.

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Ddzmini
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Book mail from my literati 📖🤗 book club interesting synopsis 📖🤗

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Eggbeater
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Pickpick

#20in4 #Readathon 1st book complete @Andrew65

This was a dark, thought-provoking dystopian novel. The children are jaded, the adults fail to adapt, and the world is wrecked by climate change. So basically, it was pretty realistic. I won't say it was an enjoyable read, but I appreciated it for the keen insight and depressing humor.

mcctrish I read this and you are right, it is very good but it‘s not ‘enjoyable‘ and I can‘t ‘love‘ it 3y
Andrew65 Sounds intriguing. Well done. 👏👏👏 3y
45 likes2 comments
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Cinfhen
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Pickpick

This was a re-read for my IRL bookclub which meets tomorrow. I‘m looking forward to discussing this one. And a part of me wonders if this would work for #HopePunk #Booked2022 / I‘m gonna toss out the idea tomorrow 🤓

BookBabe Interesting premise, this book! 😮 3y
Cinfhen You might appreciate all the allegories @BookBabe I don‘t know the New Testament but I sure recognize all the not so subtle references to the Old Testament 😉 3y
Cinfhen It‘s super short but there‘s a lot to unpack @BookBabe 3y
Megabooks There‘s a lot to work through if you‘re familiar with the New Testament, especially the parables. It‘s one I want to reread someday! @BookBabe 3y
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Peaceful_Reader
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“Life jackets!” screeched Jen‘s mother from the lawn. She held a wine bottle by the neck, a glass in the other hand, and wore a white bikini with red polka dots. The bottom exposed her ass crack and the top was pretty funny: her nipples showed through the white of the bra cups like dark eyes.

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mcctrish
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Not complaining about about warmer than usual temperatures for Canadian Thanksgiving weekend. I‘m hosting tomorrow so enjoying the calm before the storm. This book is giving me some Leave the World Behind by Ruuman Aman vibes

ATB Nice reading location! Happy Thanksgiving. 🍁 3y
mcctrish @ATB my favourite place to read 3y
48 likes1 stack add2 comments
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quietlycuriouskate
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Pickpick

A climate crisis parable, in which the parents' generation whoop it up like the last days of the Roman Empire and abdicate all responsibility for, you know, having to find a way to actually live with it, to their precociously mature kids. Yeah, it's as subtle as a tank blasting out Wagner at max volume, and the characters are from a privileged demographic, but I enjoyed it (and had fun playing 'spot the Biblical references').

TrishB I love that description! 3y
rmaclean4 Great review! 3y
Reggie Lady in the helicopter? She was God right? I liked the kids‘ interpretation of science. 3y
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JafPete
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Pickpick

I loved this story for so many reasons!
The Lord of the Flies feeling.
The spin on the Holy Trinity.
The generational divide.
The subtle (and not so subtle) religious references and allegories.
The matter of fact climate change references and depiction.
The sibling relationship. The ending. Oh, the ending.

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MegCaldwell
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Pickpick

Holy heck. I practically read this all in one sitting. Such a fascinating look at generational difference and climate change. Highly recommend. Also loved the weirdo surrealist parts.

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LadyCait84
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Pickpick

Biblical allegory and allusions fit perfectly into this story of exodus — one brought on by nature‘s wrath and society‘s complacency in the face of our climate reality rather than by a pharaoh. Centered on a group of kids/teens who understand they‘ve inherited a time bomb in the form of a planet and must look out for themselves as disaster looms, there‘s plenty of rage and resignation, but also tiny beautiful specs of what might be called hope.

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SoManyBooksNotEnoughTime
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Pickpick

Very "Lord of the Flies"-esque but the children actually get along & it's the parents who are dimwitted. An allegory for the current state of our world, climate-wise. The older generations have screwed things up & it's too late for them to do anything to fix it. The biblical references are included in a very non-religious, liberal way. While the overall message is pretty dire, the approach is humourous due to the teen narrator's dry, witty humor.

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3DClark3
Pickpick

7.8.21 “Once we lived in a summer country.”

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HeathHof
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Starting the tagged book this afternoon. Not going to lie, the cover and word Dystopian were the only two selling points that I needed. Reading down by the water #wearingspf
#summer2021
@Lauram

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AlizaApp
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Pickpick

Loved this Lord of the Flies-esque story about a band of kids surviving on their own during the collapse of civilization. The ending was maybe a little heavy-handed for my tastes, but overall witty and thoughtful.

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cosmicgoddess
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Pickpick

Pretty good, a very unique take on storytelling. I liked the small references to Christianity. The ending was kind of confusing. Where did the parents go? I also was a little bit confused in terms of the hurricane and the apocalypse, was the apocalypse also happening or was it just an inflated view of a natural disaster from the perspective of rich youth? Well, interesting and short read none the less! ⭐⭐⭐⭐

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Lcsmcat
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Pickpick

While you‘ll get more out of this with strong biblical knowledge, it‘s not required. It‘s a quick read, with some uneven writing in places, but if you like clifi and allegory you should read this.

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Lcsmcat
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I read one chapter this morning before work. This was a gift from my (grown) daughter. I‘m starting to wonder if she had a message for me. 😂

Ruthiella Let‘s hope there‘s no ulterior motive about your parenting skills! 😂 4y
Lcsmcat @Ruthiella One has to wonder! 😂 4y
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Karmapen
Pickpick

Y‘all this one was so messed up and disturbing. I shouldn‘t have read it at night. There‘s a lot of biblical references that went over my head, but the story was dark and compelling and the ending was just WRENCHING. You think things will be ok, but…

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Addison_Reads
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Pickpick

Loved this one! Although that might be the wrong word to describe it since I pretty much hated most of the characters. 😉 I loved the mix of religion and science and the overall story was fast-paced and very thought-provoking.

I have a YA book by this author on my TBR this month that I'm excited to read now.

#BookSpinBingo @TheAromaofBooks

TheAromaofBooks Great progress!!! 4y
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rmaclean4
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Pickpick

Complelling and very readable. Loved the writing. So depressing. It paints such a bleak picture. Worth a read. I have a feeling that this book will stick with me for some time! 3.5 🌟

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EmilyM
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Pickpick

A group of children strike out on their own during a hurricane into a post apocalyptic like world after their parents remain completely clueless of the impending danger. A great story with dark undertones!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️/5

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bernadette
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Pickpick

I was unsure of this book at first due to the contempt the children have for the parents but the writing was so rich and well done. Just looking at the contradictions and tensions between the kids and nature in the first few pages was enlightening. It was an interesting journey to understand the children and and then see how the narrator begins to pity the parents. It‘s an indictment of our generation‘s complacency in the face of global disaster.

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kwmg40
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Pickpick

I enjoyed this book from the #TournamentOfBooks shortlist. The message about our complacency regarding the climate crisis is hard-hitting. Unfortunately, it lost out to Memorial in the #ToB21 as well as our own #LitsyToB21 hosted by @BarbaraBB.

Littens who are following the ToB: which of these should I read in the short time I have left? Sharks, Telephone, Shuggie or Memorial?

Ruthiella I suggest Shuggie since it won the Booker too. 4y
BarbaraBB Telephone or Memorial if you ask me! 4y
kwmg40 @Ruthiella @BarbaraBB Thanks for your suggestions! 4y
30 likes1 stack add3 comments
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Moray_Reads
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Mehso-so

There was a lot to like here. The humour, the intergenerational conflict, the imminent climate disaster. But the whole felt less than the sum of its interesting parts. In the end I was underwhelmed and a little disappointed. This was a library book choice for one of my free spaces #bookspin @TheAromaofBooks

TheAromaofBooks I've seen a lot of mixed reviews for this one. 4y
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Creadnorthey
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Pickpick

This should really be 4 and 1/2 stars. I loved the writing style and the various scenes that developed into a series of “adventures”. The 1/2 star is lost in the book‘s connection to biblical imagery only because it became tiresome at one point in reading where I felt almost compelled to make definitive sense of the books events and their biblical corollary. In the end I couldn‘t be bothered... does that make me one of the evaporating adults...

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BookishTrish
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Pickpick

Presenting... OK Boomer on Climate Change: a novel

Megabooks 😂😂😂😂😂😂 4y
Crazeedi It was called global cooling then, we were waiting for the ice age that was just around the corner 4y
Kalalalatja Perfect review! 😂😂😂 4y
veritysalter When I was at primary school in the 80s (I‘m a late Gen X), one teacher was keen to get us all recycling, using showers not baths and being conscious of CFCs - she was mocked by all the parents; her lessons have stuck with me though. 4y
58 likes1 stack add5 comments
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CortexVortex
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Mehso-so

Between “pick“ and “so-so“ for me. I read this because it's a Pulitzer finalist playing out in a climate change-related dystopia. I knew it had biblical undertones, and that's okay. The writing was generally fine too. Yet, I had a hard time connecting with the protagonist or any of the characters, to be honest.

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LaraReads
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“What people wanted to be, but never could, traveled along beside them. Company.”

Finished this #bookspin book tonight, and I need some time to process. It was an enjoyable, though tough to stomach, climate change-esque novel. It was also a scathing review of the generations that have come before the narrator. Of which, I think I‘m a part of? I don‘t know. It‘s gonna take some time to wade through my thoughts. But I didn‘t hate it!

TheAromaofBooks I've seen mixed reviews, so I'm glad you at least found this one thought-provoking!! 4y
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BkClubCare
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This author intrigues me. How do I describe it? Like, I have a feeling that she is amusing herself as she writes; she is having fun. Something suggests she would be a sarcastic wit at parties and at work, she would tolerate boring business meetings with a sly sardonic smile on her face. #ToB #ToB21 #WiaN #DogsofLitsy #EstherFest #EstherAssisting

Ruthiella I just finished it. It made me go “huh”? 4y
BkClubCare @Ruthiella - I agree with you. First half? Let‘s go! Second half? What just happened? 4y
26 likes2 stack adds2 comments
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Johanna414
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Bailedbailed

After a couple weeks of trying to like this one, I just don't feel compelled to pick it up... moving on to something more enjoyable! This is my February #bookspin title. @TheAromaofBooks

TheAromaofBooks How random, you're the second person to tag me with this as your #BookSpin pick! The other person didn't like it that well either. 😬 4y
Johanna414 @TheAromaofBooks I was pretty disappointed! 4y
37 likes2 comments
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Kalalalatja
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Mehso-so

I had a feeling this wouldn‘t be my kind of book, and while I didn‘t hate it, I left feeling meh about it. The first half was stronger than the latter, imo, and the end especially was too heavy handed with the religious clues, it got unnecessarily violent, and those kids and parents were all annoying.

#ToB21

Cinfhen Yeah; lousy bunch of adults 😖 4y
STORYBOOK-CAFE I DID actually hate it. The whole thing is just nonsense to me. 4y
Erinreadsthebooks Yes!!!!! 4y
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Moray_Reads Ah, shame. This sounded good! 4y
TorieStorieS I totally agree! I wanted it to stay more along the lines of the beginning!!! 4y
Kalalalatja I completely forgot, this is my #doublespin @TheAromaofBooks 😅 #bookspin 4y
TheAromaofBooks Great progress!! 4y
BarbaraBB Oh no. No I‘m almost sure I‘ll be disappointed too. I have the same feeling on forehand. 4y
64 likes8 comments
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alexnyeguy
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Pickpick

Molecules never die, I thought. Hadn‘t they told us that in chemistry? Hadn‘t they said a molecule of Julius Caesar‘s dying breath was, statistically speaking, in every breath we took? Same with Lincoln. Or our grandparents. Molecules exchanging & mingling, on and on. Particles that had once been others and now moved through us. “Evie!” said Jack. “Look! I found a sand dollar!” That was the sad thing about my molecules: they wouldn‘t remember him.

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perfectlywinged
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A super quick post apocalyptic read that perfectly balances reality and allegory.

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Drjro27
Pickpick

A fast-paced read with likeable characters and deeper meaning.

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PNWBookseller85
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Haven‘t posted in a long time, but I wanted to post my top ten books that I read that were published in 2020. #topten

BarbaraBB I loved your number 2 and have your numbers 1 and 3 on my tbr! 4y
PNWBookseller85 @BarbaraBB yay! They‘re worth the read! I read a LOT of thrillers this year because I couldn‘t handle much more than that. I feel like venturing back into more literary material is a good sign for my mental health. 4y
BarbaraBB Are you into The Tournament of Books? The shortlist this year contains your top 3 so the other shortlisted books might be just what you‘re looking for 😀 4y
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PNWBookseller85 @BarbaraBB I‘m not familiar with it! Is it a Litsy thing? 4y
BarbaraBB No, I‘ll tag you in a post with a link in it! 4y
Suet624 Fresh Water was sooooo good. I‘m with you on hidden valley and children‘s Bible. Great reads this past year. 4y
55 likes7 comments
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Bookboss
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Pickpick

This was my last ebook of 2020. I wasn‘t sure I wanted to read a novel about teenagers surviving an apocalypse, but after reading so many glowing reviews I decided to give it a try. I enjoyed the first half of the book much more than I had expected. Once the children started on their journey to supposed safety, the story started to lose its way. I was interested in the biblical allusions, but the characters were not fully developed.

juliegumdrop I absolutely loved this book. The parents were such trash! 😂 4y
Bookboss The parents were horrible! 4y
47 likes2 comments
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Vali-Khali
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Pickpick

I bought this because of its cover.

Now, 4 months after reading, I still can‘t get it out of my head and that‘s not because of the beautiful artwork.

Whats resonated with me is the authors concept of God as nature, Jesus as science and the Holy Ghost as art.

Originally gave this 4/5 but bumping it to 5 for how well the author wormed into my head and sparked new avenues of thought. What more could one possibly want from an author than that?

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Megabooks
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Pickpick

I think there are a lot of things one can take away from this #audiobook, especially if they are familiar with the Bible. In a unique way, this novel definitely hits the high notes of many biblical stories, and one can definitely argue there is a strong undercurrent of environmental stewardship issues.

But what struck me most was the author‘s assertion that God is nature, Jesus is science, and the HG is art, and that makes a lot of sense to me!⬇️

Megabooks As a “wavering Christian” (not totally in or out), I‘m definitely going to have to think about this book. It‘s not my favorite of the #tob field, but it‘s an interesting book. 4y
Cinfhen I agree, this book stays with you and says a lot in very few pages. I read this right after reading Transcendent Kingdom and I thought I noted some similarities between religion & nature. Great review 💜 4y
Megabooks @Cinfhen Thanks friend! ❤️ I can see how it would be interesting reading those two books back-to-back, although I liked Transcendent better, probably because it mirrored my own struggles more closely. 4y
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Cinfhen Definitely Transcendent was the better book but there were enough parallels that made both books more interesting. 4y
Megabooks @Cinfhen Truth. 👍🏻👍🏻 4y
LauraBeth Between your and @vivastory ‘s review of this book, I‘m now very curious to read it! 4y
Megabooks @LauraBeth it is a really interesting book. And Scott‘s review was fantastic. I already owned the audiobook, but he definitely lit a fire to finish it. 4y
BarbaraBB Interesting! My biblical knowledge is little so I am curious to see what I‘ll get out the book! 4y
Tanisha_A @BarbaraBB Same! I am still very curious to read it 4y
vivastory Great review, Meg! And I agree, Millet's assertion about God is nature, Jesus is science & HG is art really struck me as remarkable. (edited) 4y
Megabooks @BarbaraBB @Tanisha_A I still think you will both get something out of it, especially the environmental stewardship part. That you just have to believe in Jesus (science) to get. 😉😉 4y
Megabooks @vivastory thanks, Scott! I‘m really enjoying reading this year‘s tob field. It‘s an interesting bunch! 4y
Reggie Totally agreed with that interpretation of the Bible code. Great review! 4y
Megabooks @Reggie sorry I missed this! Thank you. 😊 This is one I‘m still thinking about. 4y
Reggie No worries. 😊there was a lot to think about in here. Happy New Year! 4y
Megabooks @Reggie happy new year to you! 🎉🥂 4y
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rsteve388
Pickpick

Great story, the Audiobook was delightful and well done. Interesting idea about what climate change will do to society and how some.will.rise to meet the challenge and others will despair.

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