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   Book Info

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Imagination and Spirit: A Contemporary Quaker Reader  
Author: J. Brent Bill (Editor)
ISBN: 0944350615
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


From Publishers Weekly
It's high time the traditional Publishers of Truth as Quakers originally called themselves published something for today's general readers outside the Quaker fold. Bill's anthology picks up where the Quaker Reader (edited by novelist Jessamyn West) left, focusing on writings from the latter half of the 20th century. The prose mix is lively: nonfiction devotional slices from modern mystic Thomas Kelly are served up along with such fiction as an excerpt from the murder mystery Quaker Testimony by Irene Allen, pen name for geologist Elsa Kirsten Peters. Such dizzying range makes the point that contemporary Quakers liberal, pastoral, evangelical can be mildly or wildly different despite common core beliefs in peace, simplicity, truth telling and ongoing divine revelation. At the same time it offers excerpts from such better known Quaker believers as James Michener and Richard Foster, the anthology introduces such unsung writers as children's book specialist Elfrida Vipont Foulds, one of a notably large cadre of women who have always been empowered in Quaker tradition to speak or write. Anthologies are necessarily arbitrary, acknowledges editor Bill, an Earlham College writing program graduate who provides helpful biographical introductions. Still, the influential writer-educator Parker Palmer should have been included. However, this collection is a welcome reminder that the small Society of Friends, as Quakers are also known, continues to offer creative and relevant witness to the truth as found within and practiced in community. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Booklist
The influence of the Religious Society of Friends, better known as the Quakers, has far exceeded its perennially small membership, especially in terms of the written word. For instance, the journals of George Fox and William Penn are classics of devotional literature. As the subtitle indicates, Imagination & Spirit is not meant to be comprehensive. Editor Bill has chosen modern writings first published by mainstream, not religious specialty, publishers or that have proven popular in the general marketplace. Many may be surprised to learn that some very popular authors were Quakers, including Jessamyn West, whose story "Music on the Muscatatuck" comes from her classic The Friendly Persuasion (1945), and James A. Michener, represented by an excerpt from the novel Chesapeake (1978). Nonfiction comes from such earlier twentieth-century inspirational stars as D. Elton Trueblood and Thomas R. Kelley and contemporaries such as David Yount, Richard J. Foster, Scott Russell Sanders, and Philip Gulley, author of the best-selling Harmony books. A sampling that graciously introduces Quaker faith to Friends and non-Friends alike. June Sawyers
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


Book Description
From essays about the Quaker Christian experience and the "mystery at the core of all being" to a murder mystery by Irene Allen, this collection presents some of the best of contemporary Quaker nonfiction and fiction writing, with a brief biography of each author. Among these popular 20th- and 21st-century writers are names familiar to readers of mainstream Christianity, including Thomas Kelly, Jessamyn West, James Michener, Daisy Newman, Jan de Hartog, and Scott Russell Sanders. These adept essays and works of fiction reflect the true scope of spiritual experience, offering essays and fiction that range from tender, thought-provoking, and challenging to humorous, dramatic, and mysterious.


About the Author
J. Brent Bill is the associate director of the Indianapolis Center for Congregations. He is the assistant book review editor for Friends Journal and director of the Ministry of Writing Annual Colloquium at Earlham School of Religion. He lives in Plainfield, Indiana.




Imagination and Spirit: A Contemporary Quaker Reader

FROM THE PUBLISHER

From essays about the Quaker Christian experience and the "mystery at the core of all being" to a murder mystery by Irene Allen, this collection presents some of the best of contemporary Quaker nonfiction and fiction writing, with a brief biography of each author. Among these popular 20th- and 21st-century writers are names familiar to readers of mainstream Christianity, including Thomas Kelly, Jessamyn West, James Michener, Daisy Newman, Jan de Hartog, and Scott Russell Sanders. These adept essays and works of fiction reflect the true scope of spiritual experience, offering essays and fiction that range from ter, thought-provoking, and challenging to humorous, dramatic, and mysterious.

Author Biography: J. Brent Bill is the associate director of the Indianapolis Center for Congregations. He is the assistant book review editor for Fris Journal and director of the Ministry of Writing Annual Colloquium at Earlham School of Religion. He lives in Plainfield, Indiana.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

It's high time the traditional Publishers of Truth as Quakers originally called themselves published something for today's general readers outside the Quaker fold. Bill's anthology picks up where the Quaker Reader (edited by novelist Jessamyn West) left, focusing on writings from the latter half of the 20th century. The prose mix is lively: nonfiction devotional slices from modern mystic Thomas Kelly are served up along with such fiction as an excerpt from the murder mystery Quaker Testimony by Irene Allen, pen name for geologist Elsa Kirsten Peters. Such dizzying range makes the point that contemporary Quakers liberal, pastoral, evangelical can be mildly or wildly different despite common core beliefs in peace, simplicity, truth telling and ongoing divine revelation. At the same time it offers excerpts from such better known Quaker believers as James Michener and Richard Foster, the anthology introduces such unsung writers as children's book specialist Elfrida Vipont Foulds, one of a notably large cadre of women who have always been empowered in Quaker tradition to speak or write. Anthologies are necessarily arbitrary, acknowledges editor Bill, an Earlham College writing program graduate who provides helpful biographical introductions. Still, the influential writer-educator Parker Palmer should have been included. However, this collection is a welcome reminder that the small Society of Friends, as Quakers are also known, continues to offer creative and relevant witness to the truth as found within and practiced in community. (Apr.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

The associate director of the Indianapolis Center for Congregations and director of Earlham's annual writing colloquium, Brill offers an interesting smorgasbord of modern Quaker writings that includes as much fiction as nonfiction. Selections come from James Michener, Jessamyn West, Jan de Hartog, and Elizabeth Gray Vining. Each selection is furnished with biographical and critical introductions. Standouts include the piece by Thomas R. Kelly and a murder mystery excerpt by Irene Allen. For most collections. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

     



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