Become a Creator today!Start creating today - Share your story with the world!
Start for free
00:00:00
00:00:01
083 | What I Read This Year image

083 | What I Read This Year

Verity by Phylicia Masonheimer
Avatar
234 Plays2 years ago

Who doesn't love a good book recommendation?? In this episode Phy shares the highlights of her book list from 2022, including theology, nonfiction and fiction reads. Theological Books If You Will Ask St. Thomas Aquinas Warefare Prayer The Lord's Work in the Lord's Way / No Little People Faith in the Wilderness Other Non-Fiction Teach from Rest The Temperament God Gave Your Kids WayMaker The Brave Learner A Needle in the Hand of God Fiction Pride and Predjudice 

Recommended
Transcript

Introduction to Verity Podcast

00:00:00
Speaker
Welcome to Verity Podcast. I'm your host, Felicia Mason-Heimer, and I am here to teach you how to know what you believe, to live it boldly, and to communicate it graciously to the world around you. I believe that women are ready to go deeper in their faith than ever before, and they don't have to go to seminary to do it. I am so glad you're here, and I hope you'll join me on this journey because every woman is a theologian.

Book Recommendations for 2022

00:00:29
Speaker
Hi friends, and welcome back to Verity Podcast. Well, it's that time again. It is time for a book recommendations episode. Last time we did children's bibles and books, and this time I'm just going to share with you the books I have been reading so far.
00:00:50
Speaker
in 2022. So I wanted to do this every quarter and I definitely failed because it's quarter three and I'm going to be giving you the highlights from the last three quarters and then hopefully I can do quarter four sometime in December
00:01:06
Speaker
and get us back on track before we get to 2023. I hope to do these once a quarter so you can hear what I've been reading and what I've been loving. But if you want to get weekly updates of what I'm reading and what I finished, how I like it, sign up for my newsletter, The Collectio, because every Tuesday that goes out and I have listed all the books that I am reading, loving, not loving, etc. and I have them linked in there. So
00:01:32
Speaker
If you want more frequent book recommendations, that is the place to get them. So I am going to be sharing with you a variety of books. These are not all heavy theology books, but I'm going to throw in some great spiritual
00:01:48
Speaker
titles as well.

Diverse Book Genres and Personal Impact

00:01:50
Speaker
I want to share everything I've been reading because I know some of you are looking for fiction recommendations. And some of you are interested in, you know, nonfiction that isn't theological. So I'm just going to share with you the whole kit and caboodle, as my mother says, of books that I've been reading in the last couple of months. So I have a goal of reading 45 books this year.
00:02:16
Speaker
And I'm actually doing pretty well on that goal. I think I'm at 32 or 35. I count a book as read if I listen to it on audio. Audio books totally count. And also if I read two thirds of it and don't finish it, I count that as read because I got the gist of it. I also have no shame in quitting books that I don't like because who has time to waste on books we don't like?
00:02:45
Speaker
I don't. I want to read books that I do like. So I give myself permission to quit books. I also read multiple books at once. I usually am reading from five books at once and usually they're all different genres because I like to kind of pick up what I'm feeling like reading. I tend to have a short attention span. It's something that I'm always having to work on. So I like to have different types of books that I can kind of hop between to keep that interest going.
00:03:14
Speaker
So I'm going to share with you some of the books that I've read in the last nine months and some of what I loved, some of what I didn't love. And then once we get the transcript back from our transcriber of this episode, I will put all of the links to these books.
00:03:30
Speaker
on the blog. So the show notes all go to the blog as soon as we can get the transcripts back and get them up on the site. So it usually takes a little while for us to get them back. So thank you for your patience, but this will be up probably in the next 30 days. So let's start with the spiritual theological books, because I know that's what a lot of you are here for. We'll start there.
00:03:56
Speaker
Okay, number one is a vintage Oswald Chambers book on prayer that I happen to find in a stack of books I bought off of Facebook Marketplace. So I thrift a lot of commentaries and old
00:04:13
Speaker
books on the Bible. A lot of pastors sell them on Facebook Marketplace or I get them from thrift stores and I find a lot of great stuff. But this is one of my favorites. I did not know that Oswald Chambers, who wrote My Upmost for His Highest, one of my favorite devotionals, I didn't know he had a book on prayer. And it is amazing. I've told so many people about this book and it's been updated
00:04:37
Speaker
to be called if you shall ask or if you will ask. So the one the version I have is from the 1940s and it's called if ye shall ask and I think the updated version is called if you will ask by Oswald Chambers and what I love about Chambers is the way he writes is so direct and yet it's it's convicting yet it's gentle and you can tell that he is living it and
00:05:06
Speaker
I don't know what else to say about this book except that you should buy it and it will transform your prayer life and your understanding of just the Christian life in general. And one of the things in it that stood out to me the most was he says, somewhere in the middle of it, if you feel misunderstood, that makes sense. No one on earth will understand you except the God who indwells you.
00:05:33
Speaker
And I thought, oh my goodness, I've been searching for like these people to just understand what I'm going through, understand me, understand everything that I'm carrying. And this was such a conviction in my heart that no one will understand this the way God does and no one will sustain you with the way God does. So if you will ask by Oswald Chambers,
00:05:55
Speaker
The second book I read was a biography of Thomas Aquinas by G.K. Chesterton. And I will admit, I got maybe halfway through this one and had to pause, but I really enjoyed it because Thomas Aquinas was one of the greatest theologians in the history of the church. He was one of the first, not the first, but one of the most notable to combine faith and reason and to argue for Christianity
00:06:25
Speaker
with logic and history and reason and so I love that. I respect that so much and so I began reading this but I had to put it down because it was getting a little heavy for my season but I'm going to be picking it back up.
00:06:39
Speaker
The third one is Warfare Prayer, and this is by C. Peter Wagner, who is a missiologist. He studies church growth. And it's interesting to me because C. Peter Wagner does not identify as charismatic. So he's not from a Pentecostal background. He's not from a Assemblies of God church. The book is also old. It was written in the 90s.
00:07:05
Speaker
But I recognized his name, so I grabbed it when I was at a thrift store. And I found this book so challenging and so interesting because he's observing churches and their understanding of spiritual warfare as someone who considers himself evangelical. So he doesn't consider himself Pentecostal.
00:07:24
Speaker
but he's observing the church growth among Pentecostal denominations and especially in South America, church growth in South America in the 90s, and talking about the need for intercession, especially for leaders to have specific intercessors
00:07:44
Speaker
for them. So like Christian pastors and leaders and ministers and teams of ministers, missionaries, having specific intercessors for them because of the spiritual opposition that they are facing territorially. So he talks in this book about territorial spiritual warfare, which we see in the book of Daniel, it talks about the specific spirit that was over a province.
00:08:12
Speaker
that was providing resistance to the angels of God. And so he talks a little bit about that and how prayer plays a part in spiritual warfare. And this was just a really emboldening book for me and my prayer life. Although there was some stuff in there, I was like, I don't know if I completely agree with that or what I think about that. It was definitely thought provoking.
00:08:33
Speaker
The next book is called No Little People slash Lord's Work in the Lord's Way by Francis Schaeffer. And if you follow me on Instagram or get my newsletter, you've seen me link this book. It's really short. It's beautiful. It's just a little collection from Crossway Books.
00:08:49
Speaker
and I got it when I was at the Gospel Coalition Women's Conference this summer, and I am so glad I bought it because I have read it and reread it and reread it. I love Frances Schaeffer, but this particular book I would recommend to anyone who's in ministry, anyone who is doing ministry online in real life, because in it Schaeffer talks about how we cannot do the Lord's work in the flesh. We cannot do the Lord's work apart from the Spirit of God.
00:09:19
Speaker
And we do. We try. We try to do that. And then in No Little People, he's talking about how there are no people who are insignificant in the kingdom of God. There are no little people. There are only consecrated people. Oh, it is so good. Okay, just go buy it from Crossway. It's amazing.
00:09:38
Speaker
The next book I also got at TGC was Letters from the Chinese Church. This was compiled by Hannah Nation. This is a group of letters translated from Chinese. The letters are sermons that were preached to the Chinese church by leaders in the Chinese church.
00:09:59
Speaker
so fascinating to read their perspective as a persecuted church. So convicting. I read it very slowly. I usually read it after my Bible study each day. And I just, I've really enjoyed getting their perspective and thinking about what is it like to follow God when you have so much to lose? So letters from the Chinese church, it's actually called faith in the wilderness.
00:10:22
Speaker
Okay, so those are the spiritual books. I have more, but I'm gonna stop myself there. I want to now move to my nonfiction, non-theological books that I've been reading. The first is Teaching from Rest by Sarah McKenzie. If you're familiar with the Read Aloud Revival, this is Sarah. She wrote this book as well as the book, The Read Aloud Revival. And this book is for homeschoolers. I cannot recommend this book enough if you homeschool.
00:10:52
Speaker
or if you're thinking of homeschooling. It should be required reading for every homeschooler. It's small and thin and it is absolutely amazing.
00:11:02
Speaker
It's amazing. And any homeschooler who's read it will tell you that. Many of us reread it every year. It's phenomenal. And it is such a weight lifted off your shoulders when you look at educating your children and the responsibility that we bear in that. It's just beautiful. So, Teaching from Rest by Sarah McKenzie.
00:11:23
Speaker
The second one is the temperament God gave your kids. And I don't remember the authors of this at the moment, but they're a Catholic couple. And this book was written 10 years ago, but I have found it to be absolutely transformative in helping with my parenting and understanding also parenting with my spouse. So Josh and I, if you've listened to the marriage series, know that we are, we're very opposite.
00:11:52
Speaker
And we are opposite even in our parenting in some ways. And so we've had to communicate about that constantly. And what I loved about this book is that it actually turns to the four temperaments that were really popular like in the 90s, choleric, melancholy, sanguine, and phlegmatic.
00:12:13
Speaker
And so I wasn't super familiar with these temperaments, but I find them to be pretty straightforward. And when I read through them, I found that Josh is phlegmatic melancholic. I'm choleric. Eva is sanguine and Adeline is melancholic.
00:12:32
Speaker
And it was just hilarious because, you know, we're all different personalities. Jury's out on Ivan. I think he might be my personality. But what is so cool about this book is that it has so much respect for scripture and for God's design of our kids, but it also is talking about how you can't parent every kid the same way.
00:12:53
Speaker
because your bubbly, outgoing, distractible, sanguine child is going to need different things than your more anxious, melancholic child is. And we found that to be true even at this young age that we're parenting. And so this book was just a great reminder. And it was also great to see that she had chapters or the couple had chapters at the back that were about parenting with a spouse who has a different personality than you.
00:13:20
Speaker
So even though it's a Catholic resource and I'm not Catholic, I found that the Catholic elements were pretty minimal and it was just a generally helpful book. The temperament God gave your kids.
00:13:32
Speaker
The third book I have in this category is Waymaker by Ann Voskamp. And I am honored to know Ann in real life. And she is truly exactly who she portrays herself to be online. Who you see online is who she is, which is always reassuring with an author. And it's been five years since she has had a book come out. So Waymaker is five years in the making. And what I found in that
00:13:58
Speaker
book was just such encouragement and such beautiful writing to trust the Lord in suffering and to remember that the Lord is the one who makes the way, not us. We are not the ones who have to save ourselves. It's God who does it, who redeems, who makes the way. So if you're going through suffering or you know someone who is, or especially if someone's going through struggles in their marriage, I found this book just speaks to that in such a gentle
00:14:28
Speaker
Way, so Waymaker by Anne Voskamp.

Verity Conference Announcement and Themes

00:14:32
Speaker
after a three year hiatus, Verity Conference is back and it's coming to Petoskey, Michigan, November 4th and 5th. I am so thrilled to bring back Verity Conference after our short break of a few years for COVID. And this time we are much bigger with two amazing speakers joining me to talk about apologetics and evangelism. How do we share our faith effectively in today's culture
00:15:00
Speaker
in a way that is both gracious and truthful. You'll hear from me, Jeremy Jenkins of All Things All People, and Priscellis Dominguez, who is going to share with us how to love other people while also speaking the truth. Jeremy specializes in world religions and cults, and he will be talking about evangelism in that context. I am so excited for this event. I hope you can join us. You can grab the remaining early bird tickets on my website, feliciamasonheimer.com, if you click the conference tab.
00:15:30
Speaker
Okay, now we're gonna move to the fiction that I read this year. And I'm not going through all of the fiction because there's actually quite a lot. I listen on audio to a lot of books. And as I go through these, I just want to remind you that
00:15:47
Speaker
Fiction to me is a tough topic. If you've listened to my episodes on sexual sin, you know that I had a history with erotic fiction. I was addicted to erotic fiction from high school into my early 20s. It was basically it's pornography in written form. And so I'm very sensitive to sexual content in fiction books and almost all books have it now.
00:16:12
Speaker
even young adult fiction has it, although it's less explicit in young adult fiction. So I'm very sensitive to that. And I try to be careful what I'm reading because of it. And in some books, there will be language and I will overlook language depending on the book. So if there's excessive language, I won't listen to it. But if it's not super excessive, I will discern through it.
00:16:41
Speaker
You need to follow your convictions on that matter. And if it is okay for you, not okay for you, I'm able to discern through it without saying the language that I'm listening to. But if that's a temptation for you, it may not be good to listen to some of those things. Same thing with sexual content. You may not be as sensitive as I am, but are you able to skip over it or is it going to be a trap for you? I talk more about that in the Redeeming Love episode as well.
00:17:06
Speaker
So here's some of what I read for fiction. First, Pride and Prejudice. I read this as a kid. I loved it.

Reflections on Classic and Modern Literature

00:17:13
Speaker
I love the movies. It was a reread for me and I was so surprised actually how easy it is to read. It's just so well written and so such a classic. I enjoyed it so much. It made me cry.
00:17:25
Speaker
Oh, I was like, I just, I needed to go back and read this. This is so good. Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen. Another book I went back in time to read was the very first Nancy Drew Mystery, The Secret of the Old Clock. I needed something light and easy to read, something fun. And so I had gotten a set of five vintage Nancy Drews at a library sale. I was so happy I snagged them. Still regretting I didn't grab the whole set. There were five more and I didn't want to pay for them.
00:17:55
Speaker
Should have done it anyway. Learned my lesson. Secret of the old clock. Ugh, the vintage Nancy Drews. They're just so good. And I'm talking 1960s or earlier. The 1970s forward, they master the storylines. No good. 1950s, 60s, and earlier Nancy Drews. That's where it's at.
00:18:16
Speaker
Okay, the next one I read was The Firekeeper's Daughter. So this book has been on a ton of lists for like great novel, you should read it. It's a young adult novel. It's about a Native American girl who lives in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan. So I was really interested in this because Sault Ste. Marie is only like two hours from me. And I don't get a lot of novels based in Michigan. So I thought it'd be cool to read and the cover was really gorgeous. So I was like,
00:18:44
Speaker
I have to read it. I did not love this book. I think the way the narrative was written, and I'm not sure this is the case, but I think the way the narrative is written maybe was supposed to be more in line with oral tradition in Native American culture. So if that was the case, I would understand.
00:19:06
Speaker
because I own the First Nations New Testament translation, and I love that. And it's written in that kind of oral tradition. But in a novel, it was kind of hard to follow and it was kind of choppy. And it was really long. It took a long time for the story to build. And I don't know, it was just not some it wasn't as enjoyable of a novel as everyone made it out to be.
00:19:34
Speaker
Also, I would say the trigger warning for drug content because it's about basically a drug cartel in Sault Ste. Marie. And some of the stuff that happened was kind of improbable. And that's a little something that bugs me in stories when like 18-year-olds are super emotionally aware when they wouldn't be because they're 18. I don't know. It's just stuff like that that's kind of irks me as a writer. But I would give it like a 5 out of 10. But the cover is beautiful.
00:20:03
Speaker
Okay, the next series that I read was Louise Penny's Inspector Gamache series. So I am saying a series because I think I've listened to eight of these this year. I love these because it's set in Quebec, which is a little bit, maybe a little south of our latitude. So it's very similar country to where I live in Northern Michigan. And it's in Canada. We're basically in Canada. We're literally two hours
00:20:31
Speaker
from the northern Ontario border. So I love reading things that are kind of set in my area. They also speak French throughout the novels a little bit and Adeline's learning French and I'm learning it with her. So that's kind of fun. And it's very descriptive. I also love that they're mysteries, they're murder mysteries, but they're not gory or spooky. They're just kind of tame in that way.
00:20:58
Speaker
There may be some themes that you don't enjoy. You can look up the synopsis of the different books. I think there are now 18 books in the series and I have greatly enjoyed them. But again, be discerning as to what's okay for you. So far there hasn't been any sexual content and that's just a relief for me because I'm always having to just be aware of that.
00:21:21
Speaker
The next book I read was The Old Fashioned Girl by Louisa May Alcott. So Louisa May Alcott wrote Little Women, which I love and the whole series. I've read the whole series. And so I thought, you know, I own The Old Fashioned Girl, but I haven't read it. So I'll read it.
00:21:36
Speaker
This was another slow one, really slow build to about halfway through, but I kept reading because I love her writing and it was definitely worth it in the end. It was a sweet ending. It was a slow paced novel, but it is really great if you like classic books, if you've read Little Women and you want to read another one of Alcott's books.
00:21:58
Speaker
Okay, the next two are by Kristin Hannah. So I took The Great Alone, which is about Alaska, on our camping trip in the summer and I read it in two days. So this was not an audiobook. This was a regular book and I read it in two days and I think it's like 300 pages. It was definitely fast paced. I didn't know what was going to happen.
00:22:20
Speaker
There was, I think, a little sexual content that I skipped over. And I'll tell you this, you will be completely sucked in. However, I found this book very unbelievable because it was as if every traumatic thing that could happen to one person happened to the protagonist in this book. Literally every terrible thing.
00:22:44
Speaker
could happen. So, I find that again bothersome. I'm like, give me some realistic drama, but let's not, you know, have two compound fractures in one book. That's just too many compound fractures for anybody at any time, but especially in one book. So, The Great Alone definitely was interested in it, definitely finished it, didn't find it believable. Could be traumatic if you're sensitive because it's just a lot.
00:23:14
Speaker
of stuff going on and an abusive domestic abuse theme. So be careful about that. The second Kristin Hannah book I read was The Four Winds. And this one was a lot slower than The Great Alone. I listened to this one on audio. It's about the Dust Bowl. This one did have some sexual content that I skipped.
00:23:36
Speaker
multiple times. So in the beginning and then towards the very, very end, there's some sexual content. It's also pretty dramatic. Lots of bad stuff happens, but it's the Dust Bowl. Bad stuff was happening. It made me very intrigued by the Dust Bowl. It made me look up stuff historically like what was happening. The one thing about the Four Winds, I really was interested in it, definitely finished it.
00:24:01
Speaker
But the one thing I did not enjoy about this book was that it put it put communists in a really good light. And I found that very also bothersome, but that seems like an understatement. It seemed just an odd theme to put in this
00:24:20
Speaker
book because they were communists who were trying to, socialist communists trying to get funding for the refugees who were going to California from Texas during the Dust Bowl. And obviously these refugees needed support, but they specifically used the word communist over and over and over again. And I don't know if that's just because it was what they were calling people at the time, but it portrayed
00:24:45
Speaker
communist in such a good light that I just thought if someone doesn't have the historical awareness that I have, it could very much change their perspective on a very problematic movement. So that was one thing that I found a little concerning. And I'm not making a political statement here. This is objective historical fact, communism resulted.
00:25:13
Speaker
in the death and murder of many many many people. So you can google that if you want to know more about that.
00:25:19
Speaker
All right, so Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe, we read this aloud to the girls this year, and I'm not listing everything we've read aloud to the girls. I will maybe do a separate podcast episode of all the read-alouds we've done with the kids, because that's a really long list, but we did listen on audio to the Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe, and the girls really enjoyed this. They would color and listen to it, and Eva called it the story about the girl in the dresser.
00:25:48
Speaker
which really is kind of what it is. So we really enjoyed this and we talked a lot about what magic is and how it's portrayed in this book and what it means and what magic is in fiction versus in real life, kind of as I talked about on the Halloween episode.
00:26:03
Speaker
Okay, last two books. I realized I stuck these in the wrong place. They should have been up in the nonfiction section. The Brave Learner. I read this this year and I keep going back and rereading it. I would say teaching from rest and The Brave Learner go hand in hand. I've never read a book that had more good ideas for bringing learning into your home and making it fun. You do not have to be a homeschooler to love this book.
00:26:27
Speaker
The Brave Learner. It is fantastic and I almost felt overwhelmed with how good it was. I just love it. So Julie Bogart is the author of this one and she also wrote the book Raising Critical Thinkers. Another great one if you want to check that out.
00:26:42
Speaker
And the last book I want to mention today is the one I'm reading right now. It is called A Needle in the Hand of God, and it is about the making of the Bayou tapestry. So this is an embroidery that portrays the Battle of Hastings when William the Conqueror defeated King Harold.
00:27:03
Speaker
So I was actually looking up books on the Norman Conquest for my girls and I found this book at the library. I got it and I was like, ooh, yes, this looks interesting. History, I love history, especially medieval history. So I was so excited about this. But then when I got it home, I realized that the first
00:27:22
Speaker
like two chapters is about what happened at the Battle of Hastings and then the entire rest of the book is about Hitler trying to take the tapestry and use it to like authenticate his German race. And as much as that sounds interesting, it was not as interesting to me as the Battle of Hastings. So I'm a little, I feel a little bit like I got a bait and switch with this book that they're like, hey, this is about the medieval period, but wait, no, it's actually about World War II.
00:27:51
Speaker
That bothers me a little bit, but I am still reading it. So the jury is out on that one Okay, you guys this was a lot of books a lot of information all over the map with the recommendations I hope that this was fun for you a little bit of a break from the normal Theological fair, but we'll be back next week with another theological episode and I hope that one of these books will make it onto your shelf and
00:28:19
Speaker
Thank you so much for listening to this week's episode of Verity Podcast. If you enjoyed this episode, would you take the time to leave us a review? It helps so many other women around the world find out about Verity and about every woman a theologian as a ministry and a shop. We appreciate you and I hope you'll be back next week as we continue to go deeper into God's word and the heart of Jesus Christ.