What I’ve been reading in 2014…
- Christianity, Art and Transformation: Theological Aesthetics in the Struggle for Justice – John W. de Gruchy
- Pastrix – Nadia Bolz-Weber
- Christianity After Religion – Diana Butler Bass
- Ethnic Groups & Boundaries – Fredrik Barth
- The Freedom of a Christian – Martin Luther
- Shaping a Global Theological Mind – Darren C Marks (ed)
- The Mission of God’s People – Christopher J.H. Wright
- The Bible Unearthed – Israel Finklestein
- A Brief Introduction to the New Testament – Bart Ehrman
- Paris – Edward Rutherfurd
- New York – Edward Rutherfurd
- The Orenda – Joseph Boyden
- Maus I – Art Spiegelman
- Purple Hibiscus – Chimamanda Ngizi Acichie
- The Cure for Death by Lightning – Gail Anderson-Dorgatz
- A Tale for the Time Being – Ruth Ozeki
- Every Day is for the Thief – Teju Cole
- Maus II – Art Spiegelman
- An Uncommon Education – Elizabeth Percer
- The Bean Trees – Barbara Kingsolver
- I Never Promised You a Rose Garden – Joanne Greenberg
- The Glass Palace – Amitav Ghosh
- Pigs in Heaven – Barbara Kingsolver
- The Luminaries – Eleanor Catton
- The Inconvenient Indian – Thomas King
- Ghana Must Go – Taiye Selasi
- Perfect – Rachel Joyce
- Family Life – Akhil Sharma
- Powers and Submissions – Sarah Coakley
- In Praise of Mixed Religion – William Harrison
- Saints of the Shadow Bible – Ian Rankin
- The Four Pages of the Sermon – Paul Scott Wilson
- Creating Sanctuary – Sandra L. Bloom
- An Interpretation of Religion – John Hick
- The Preaching Life – Barbara Brown Taylor
- Religion and Public Life in the Pacific Northwest: The None Zone – Patricia O’Connell Killen & Mark Silk (eds.)
- The Meaning and End of Religion – Wilfred Cantwell Smith
- All My Puny Sorrows – Miriam Toews
- The Long Way Home – Louise Penny
- The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe – CS Lewis
- Life After God – Douglas Coupland
- Footnotes in Gaze – Joe Sacco
- A Sudden Light – Garth Stein
- Ru – Kim Thuy
- Come Back – Rudy Wiebe
- Days of Destruction, Days of Revolt – Chris Hedged and Joe Sacco
- Prince Caspian – CS Lewis