About this title: Mackenzie Allen Phillips's youngest daughter, Missy, has been abducted during a family vacation, and evidence that she may have been brutally murdered is found in an abandoned shack deep in the Oregon wilderness. Four years later, in this midst of his great sadness, Mack receives a suspicious note, apparently from God, inviting him back to that ...
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Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Windblown Media
Date Published: 2008-12-04
ISBN-13:9781935170006ISBN:1935170007
Description: Good. This is hardcover bookclub edition. Good clean condition. All pages are clean. Cover/book edges have some wear. Your satisfaction is guaranteed! read more
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Grand Central Pub
Date Published: 2008
ISBN-13:9781935170006ISBN:1935170007
Description: New. Mackenzie Allen Phillips's youngest daughter, Missy, has been abducted during a family vacation, and evidence that she may have been brutally murdered is found in an abandoned shack deep in the Oregon wilderness. Four years later, in this midst of hi... read more
Binding: Softcover
Publisher: Windblown Media
Date Published: 2008-12-04
ISBN-13:9781935170006ISBN:1935170007
Description: NEW. Softcover. From an inventory that is 100% brand-new, 100% direct from the publishers' distribution channel. We carry NO pre-owned, NO remaindered. We pack in CARDBOARD to ensure the pristine quality is maintained. (Bubble-wrap alone is NOT sufficient to protect from USPS equipment. ) Guaranteed brand-NEW, protected with CARDBOARD, your satisfaction is guaranteed. BKLUVID: 9781935170006. read more
"7/30 don't even go there. I have to read this because I made a promise. silly me. 7/31 - God, I am glad that's over. So, I thought long and hard about giving this book 2 stars. I really did. Here's why:
1. author states heaven is NOT gold/pearl streets. (yay!) 2. author states forgiveness is good for you. not forgiving will destroy you. (agreed) 3. "Jesus" states he's not big on religion, or politics or economics. Calls them a "man- created trinity of terrors that ravage the earth..." WORD.
Why I took that 2 star rating and dropped it to one:
1. God appears in the book as a big black woman named Papa. She says sho' nuff and serves greens. (no, I'm NOT kidding!) 2. Jesus appears as an unattractive Jew with, get this: a big nose. 3. Holy spirit - little Asian woman. 4. Mack's dad is Irish American and guess what? He's a drunk! 5. Judge lady - Hispanic! (Hell, why not go all Sesame Street and make sure we have someone in a wheelchair and HIV positive people represented!?!?! Ah, sneak those guys in on the next edition.) 6. Not a thing in here was comforting. Not a one."
"This book was recommended to me by a book group I attended to speak about my book A Demon Awaits. I had not read this book prior to writing mine, but I was very surprised to find that the premise of our books (a man struggling to heal his relationship with God) was identical. Before I continue I'd like to share a bit of my bias because one's perspective will vastly affect the enjoyment of this book. I'm staunchly conservative, religiously, politically and economically. I'm also a writer and I choose NEVER to review a book that I don't find to be very strong. Someone with a more liberal viewpoint will appreciate this book even more than I did.
This book reaches out to a generation of people losing touch with God and encourages them to reach for him. While churches are rocked by scandal and divided over the issue of homosexuality and its place in God's eyes, church attendance diminishes. This book takes the subject of our relationship with God and urges us to mend our relationship with him. I cannot imagine a more important subject for a book and I applaud the author for writing a book that has reached so many. Not only is this book popular, but it puts the conversation with God center stage and this conversation carries the majority of the book. (Young chooses not to address the issue of homosexuality and the church.)
I would strongly recommend this book to anyone.
There is a tremendous amount of the author's philosophy delivered in this book that I will react to through the remainder of this review.
Characterization of God Young creates a character who is angry at God over the death of his daughter. In the end the character takes a difficult journey toward reconciliation. The subject matter will touch millions of people. Young's characterization of God was a surprising choice. When I wrote A Demon Awaits, I thought a long time about how God should be portrayed in fiction and I struggled with a way to make him appear in a way that not only moved the story, but was also reverent. We both used some of the same devices to bring God to the page, but our focus was vastly different. Young's characterization offended me as irreverent and disrespectful at times. I felt uncomfortable in the early part of the book and this connected me with Mack who was feeling much the same.
The Church Young assaults the church as something created by man that God has no interest in. I found this highly irresponsible. I agree that the earthly church is created by and run by man and as such is fallible. Still, my experience with church leaders has been one of utter joy, learning and spiritual growth. To suggest that these fine people could be replaced by blindly reaching out to God without a guide of any sort sounded illogical to me. Young also suggest that we should disregard the Ten Commandments as an unattainable ideal. The Ten Commandments played a more guiding role in my book.
Tragedy and Healing Much of the book focuses on the tragedy Mack struggles with in his life. This element of the story was superbly done and I know that this element of the book has touched people who have lost loved ones and especially some who are terminally ill. The power of this story will bring peace into many lives because this topic is tackled head-on by a believable character. The author discusses our independence and God's willingness to intercede in our lives to a great extent. This facet of the story will be a great healer to many and is one of the strongest reasons to recommend this book.
Crime & Responsibility Young skirts the issue of crime and criminals somewhat. God says that he loves his children all equally no matter what they have done and this is shown in a very strong scene in the text. This one scene was probably the best of the entire work. Counter to this, or maybe because of the focus, Young suggests that responsibility is a man-made construction that has no use in God's eyes. The idea that we could all live together in peace and harmony sounds lovely, but ignores the fact that we live in a world with lots of "broken" souls. The Puritans were clear about responsibility and made sure that able-bodied people worked or starved. We have strayed very far from the principle of responsibility and I thought it was highly irresponsible of the author to suggest that we don't need to act responsibly. I personally think that if people strived and were honest about what they were capable of and what they could contribute to our society, then we could take much better care of those who are not able to work to support themselves.
There is much I disagree with in his approach, but I commend the author on a book that is both popular and important."
"I did NOT like this book. I kept hearing how good it was and got it from the library with no idea what it was about. The idea of a guy who loses faith in god because his child is abducted and then gets invited back to "the shack" where his daughter was found...this time to spend a weekend with god...is not my idea of appealing literature."
"Pure Dribble. This book read like a Betty Crocker recipe gone bad: take one all-American Jesus lovin'/fearing family, add one unexplainable tragedy, mix with equal parts anger , guilt and sadness , bake for three weeks and get a bitter man who has turned his back on God. Alias, no need to give up, because God writes our hero a personalized note, and tells him to meet him in "the shack" (the place of his daughter's murder), funny thing is, god is a black woman cooking pancakes in the kitchen who says "you can me god, Yahweh or just plain ol' Jessie, I answer to all three". Yes, I said pancakes....I could go on, but it's just too easy. The lesson of power of forgiveness was demonstrated well, but no better than the Hallmark card I bought my boss when I spilled a whole bottle of red wine on his new suit....."
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