Author: Kimberly

One Year Reading Challenge 2015

One Year Reading Challenge 2015

If you’re like me, you have started off this year full of great ideas of how you’re going to increase or improve your reading selections this year. A high school friend of mine who loves to read as much as I do asked if I wanted to do the One Year Reading Challenge with her this year.

I plan to post about my progress each week, so I think this reading challenge will help me to round out the blog with a wider variety of books reviewed.

Posted January 2, 2015 by Kimberly in Book Reviews, Reading / 0 Comments
Guest Review: The Atheist’s Fatal Flaw by Norman Geisler and Daniel McCoy

Guest Review: The Atheist’s Fatal Flaw by Norman Geisler and Daniel McCoy

As a Christian who attended a secular school, The University of Kansas, I wish I had read this book sooner. Nothing I encountered on campus was sufficient to undermine my faith, but I often didn’t know how to answer the accusations atheists threw out, as if they were reading from a predetermined list. I never thought about how to dismantle an atheist’s position. That’s where Norman Geisler and Daniel McCoy’s book, The Atheist Fatal Flaw, could have changed my experience.

Posted December 9, 2014 by Kimberly in Non-Fiction, Reading, True Tuesday / 0 Comments
Guest Review: The Pastor’s Kid by Barnabas Piper

Guest Review: The Pastor’s Kid by Barnabas Piper

In the introduction to his book, The Pastor’s Kid, Barnabas Piper writes two things that capture The Pastor’s Kid. First Piper describes the three objectives of his book: Give voice to PKs and their challenges, speak to pastors about how they can help their kids, and write to the church about how to “ease the burden of the pastor and his family” (p. 17).

Posted December 2, 2014 by Kimberly in Non-Fiction, Reading, True Tuesday / 0 Comments
Book Review: Act of War by Brad Thor

Book Review: Act of War by Brad Thor

One of the things that I find so thrilling about Thor’s novels is that the scenarios he describes and technology used by his characters often show up in the real news over the next 12-18 months. So you know he’s done his research thoroughly and crafted a story that, while it is fiction, feels completely real when you are reading it. And that adds an unbelievable edge to the reading experience.