2021/03/04

Friends for 300 Years: The History and Beliefs of the Society of Friends Since George Fox Started the Quaker Movement by Howard Haines Brinton | Goodreads

Friends for 300 Years: The History and Beliefs of the Society of Friends Since George Fox Started the Quaker Movement by Howard Haines Brinton | Goodreads

Friends for 300 Years: The History and Beliefs of the Society of Friends Since George Fox Started the Quaker Movement

 4.01  ·   Rating details ·  76 ratings  ·  12 reviews
  1. Introduction
  2. To Wait Upon the Lord
  3. The Light within as Experienced
  4. The Light within as Thought About
  5. The Meeting for Worship
  6. Vocal Ministry
  7. Reaching Decisions
  8. The Meeting Community
  9. The Meeting & the World
  10. The Four Periods of Quaker History
  11. Quaker Thought & the Present
Appendix: The Philadelphia Queries of 1946
Notes
Index

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Paperback225 pages
Published January 1st 1993 by Pendle Hill Publications (first published 1952)
Original Title
Friends for 350 Years: The History and Beliefs of the Society of Friends Since George Fox Started the Quaker Movement
ISBN
0875749038 (ISBN13: 9780875749037)

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 Average rating4.01  · 
 ·  76 ratings  ·  12 reviews


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Sejin,
Sejin, start your review of Friends for 300 Years: The History and Beliefs of the Society of Friends Since George Fox Started the Quaker Movement
Jonathan
Feb 29, 2008rated it really liked it

Originally entitled Friends for 300 Years, Brinton first wrote this book in 1952, but it has been revised for the 21st century. Brinton combines general historical movements of Quakerism with their beliefs and practices as an evolving Christian spiritual community/sect. Its amazing how often Quakers have been ahead of their time. Although small in membership numbers, Quakerism seems to be a model of spiritual community that will increasingly become more relevant for the seeking American soul. The following snippets are some of the most interesting parts to me:

"Mysticism exists in all religions; every great world religion has its mystical sect or groups. What the Quakers, as mystics, are to Christianity, the Zen (or Chan) sect is to Buddhism, the Yogis are to Hinduism, the Sufis to Mohammedanism, and the Taoists to the religion of China...Quakerism is peculiar in being a group mysticism, grounded in Christian concepts" pp. xix-xx.

"Quakerism represents a form of group mysticism which has persisted longer than any other instance in literate times" p. xxi.

"Friends have never required of their members assent to a religious or social creed, though not infrequently a body of Friends has issued a statement expressing their religious of social views at a particular time" p. 139.

Did you know...?

"The first protest in America against slavery was made by German Quakers in Germantown, Pennsylvania, in 1688...by 1776 there were no Quaker slaveholders..." p. 179.

"Many Friends abstained from the use of anything produced by slaves, such as sugar. They were mainly instrumental in developing 'The Free Produce Association,' a group which refused to buy products of slave labor" p. 179.

"Quaker schools were among the earliest, if not actually the first, to introduce science into the [educational] curriculum" p. 183.

"The Quaker peace principles can be best understood when viewed in a context considerably wider than the refusal to take part in war. Prison reform, renunciation of violence in the case of the mentally ill, contribution toward a democratic constitution for the United States, and the struggle for religious liberty are also evidences of the same fundamental doctrine that the best way to deal with men is 'to answer that of God' in them. Violence when applied to human beings reduces them and the user of violence to the level of the physical world where only force operates, but men who are open to the divine Light are most effectually moved by spiritual influences from within. By force men are degraded to a subhuman level; by friendship they are uplifted to the divine" p. 184.

"...[William] Penn's law to abolish imprisonment for debt was canceled at an early date. He did, however, succeed in reducing the number of crimes which could be punished by death from two hundred to two; namely, treason and murder" p. 185.

"In the eighteenth century and earlier the treatment of the insane was more inhuman than the treatment of criminals. They were imprisoned, chained, beaten, deprived of ordinary necessities of life, and made objects of ridicule by visitors who were free to torment them...The first institution expressly founded to carry out nonviolent ideas in the treatment of the insane was established by Quakers in York, England, in 1796...called The Retreat" p. 187.

"There can be no doubt that the Constitution of the United States written in Philadelphia, owed much to Penn's 'Holy Experiment'...Later the doctrines that government is based on the consent of the governed, that Church and State should be separated completely, and that the legislative and executive branches should be separate, as embodied in Penn's [Frame of Government], became the basis of Locke's political theory in the Second Treatise" p. 190.

"No pacifist claims that his method is always successful. Every method fails sometimes, including the method based on violence. If two persons or two nations resort to fighting, one is bound to lose, so the method of fighting cannot at the most be more than 50 per cent successful. The nonviolent method may, however, operate in such a way that both sides win. Together they may arrive at a decision which is better than that which either one of the parties desired in the first place" p. 193.

"In defending their pacifism the Quakers have seldom given as their reason the destruction of life and property caused by war. Loss of life and property is not in itself an evil. The loss of life might lead to a happier condition hereafter, and the loss of property is sometimes an actual benefit for a person who is too closely tied to his possessions. The evil results of war--hatred, brutality, callousness to suffering and deceit--are spiritual and moral rather than material" p. 199.

"The best type of religion is one in which the mystical, the evangelical, the rational and the social are so related that each exercises a restraint on the others. Too exclusive an emphasis on mysticism results in a religion which is individualistic, subjective and vague; too dominant an evangelicalism results in a religion which is authoritarian, creedal and external; too great an emphasis on rationalism results in a cold, intellectual religion which appeals only to the few; too engrossing a devotion to the social gospel results in a religion which, in improving the outer environment, ignores defects of the inner life which cause the outer disorder" p. 245.

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Antigone
Aug 23, 2008rated it really liked it
I found this book very quotable. It was not an easy read. Your ear needs to be tuned to a very different voice. But I appreciate this book for its guidance in the typical Quaker way.... telling/informing/witnessing, not preaching. The Lord and Any Adult will tell you that preaching is the best way to breed dissent! If you are interested in Quakerism, this book is a good read. But be prepared to invest some time and thought in it. I got my copy from Pendle Hill which has a great collection of books for the Quaker and just general seeker (like me). (less)
Darcyw
Aug 13, 2008rated it liked it
It's helped me understand how different religions are all interpreting the same fundamental truths in ways their followers are comfortable discussing. And made me happy to have found such a no-frills honest way to express those feelings in myself. Kind of textbook dull at times, but also amazing how much original documentation is available. (less)
Sher
Oct 20, 2019rated it it was amazing
Shelves: religion
I read this book as part of in person book discussion group, and we discussed one chapter per month, so it took us almost a year to finish the book. Brinton provides a wonderful history of Quaker practice since the 17th C. The book ends in 1952. Key figures in Quakerism and the evolution of the faith -schisms, mysticism, evangelicalism, rationalism, and humanitarianism (Social Gospel) as it has applied to Quakers throughout the centuries is well covered.
Rhiannon Grant
One of those books in which historical figures have a curious tendency to agree with each other and the present author. I'm sure everything he reports here is true, and it certainly serves to illustrate his own religious thought, I just have doubts about whether this represents the whole truth. (less)
Mike Morrissey
Feb 28, 2019rated it really liked it
Excellent detailed writing about the history and practice of Quakers.
Kaethe Douglas
Jun 07, 2010rated it liked it
Before I gave up on the idea of religion, I considered the Quakers, who really are the embodiment of "What's the least I can believe and still be a Christian?" Of course, once you start asking that question, you might as well give the whole thing up for a lost cause.

Anyway, the Society of Friends are particularly cool for their devotion to social justice and action. As a group, they are dedicated, and have always been.

Library copy.
 (less)
Erik Graff
Jan 20, 2014rated it liked it  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: ecumenists
Recommended to Erik by: no one
Shelves: religion
I picked this book up while visiting San Francisco some years ago. Meeting some Quakers while at seminary and being impressed by them, I saw this as an opportunity to learn something more of their traditions.
As it happens, this book also presented some information about Quaker decision-making processes, a method I had previously been exposed to while working with the SPUSA. What is most memorable about this book, however, has little to do with its contents, much to do with something which happened while I was reading it.
It was a grey autumn day, but rainless, so I had gone over the hill to 'Marie's Love Garden' behind a cafe on Courtland in the city, the closest such place I knew of to where I was staying. Because of the cool weather I was alone on the back deck most of the day, but at one point an older woman sat at the table in front of me and started to read herself. This went on for a while, then something (needing a light perhaps?) came up which initiated conversation, the typical 'What are you reading?' business.
By this point I was rather tired of reading, Brinton's book hardly being a page-turner, so I welcomed conversation and followed the initial question with the 'And what do you do?'
'I make pornographic films," she said.
A pause. I am, after all, a Midwesterner and this woman reminded me of my grandmother.
'Ah, what do you do? Do you write them, film them, direct..."
'I direct them, sometimes write them.'
As it turned out she specialized in lesbian cinema, but would occasionally do a 'sexed' film for the money. She'd been doing it for years, all in the San Francisco area. She made it sound quite ordinary, like managing a theatre group or some other small business involving the coordination of various people. She made me feel quite parochial, probably thought my naivete amusing but was politely engaging until she had to go.
My memory of the rest of the Quaker book pales in comparison.
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Candy Wood
The edition I read was first published in 1952, the 300th anniversary of Quakerism, and reprinted in 1969 with some minor updating. It has been revised more extensively since. When a friend advised me to skip the last three chapters of this edition, I assumed that they focused on the 1950s and am surprised to discover some of the account of earlier history there. Brinton emphasizes experience as the basis of Quaker religion, but the book is still extremely abstract and theoretical, including many quotations from books and journals written by early and more recent Friends. He identifies Quakerism as “one of the three main forms of Christianity,” distinct from both Catholicism and Protestantism. Though he describes the conflicts that produced separate branches of Friends in America, I’m still confused about what, besides the method of meeting for worship, actually separates them. Readers looking for an introduction are not well served by this edition. (less)
Amos Smith
Sep 18, 2015rated it it was amazing
I'm not sure why there are no reviews for this book. It is extraordinary! In it Brinton writes about the three hundred year history of The Religious Society of Friends (The Quakers). And he poetically explains the thinking behind the Quaker Peace Testimony. He writes that "to be killed is a physical injury." "To kill another person is to suffer a spiritual injury." And it is better to suffer a physical injury than to suffer a spiritual one. Highly recommended!!
-Amos Smith (author of Healing The Divide: Recovering Christianity's Mystic Roots)
 (less)
Weavre
Aug 31, 2008marked it as to-read
Recommended to Weavre by: Michelle W.
Shelves: sortingquakers
The Goodreads publication info on this book is incorrect.
PYM Library: 289.69 Bri
Neither Luzerne nor Lackawanna has this.
Author: Howard Brinton
Publisher: Pendle Hill Publications (2000)
ASIN: B000L3Y09I

Hiking Naked: A Quaker Woman’s Search for Balance - Friends Journal

Hiking Naked: A Quaker Woman’s Search for Balance - Friends Journal



Hiking Naked: A Quaker Woman’s Search for Balance


Reviewed by Beth Taylor

November 1, 2017

By Iris Graville. Homebound Publications, 2017. 260 pages. $17.95/paperback; eBook coming December 2017.
Buy from QuakerBooks

This wonderful memoir tells the story of a Quaker woman and her family as they leave city life behind and seek a simpler life deep in the mountains east of Seattle, Wash. Burned out after years of nursing and seemingly fruitless public health interventions, Iris Graville retreats with her husband, Jerry, and their 13-year-old twin son and daughter to an isolated lake deep in the North Cascade Mountains. Her family looks for adventure. She finds solace in the lush landscape, quiet dirt roads, baking, and writing.

The “hiking naked” part of the story does not refer to the like-minded sporting groups you can find online, but to the moment a year earlier when Graville realized she needed to change her life. Hot and exhausted as she and Jerry hike high into the mountains on their yearly getaway alone together, their twins happily staying with a grandmother, Graville stops and wonders if she can walk another step. Slowly she rounds a bend and sees her husband standing there, waiting for her, naked and grinning. It is her sign, and the metaphor for her journey to come—to lighten up, count her blessings, let go of heavy baggage, and hold on to what really matters.

Stehekin—a Salish word that means “the way through”—becomes their next stop together. A tiny community of 85 residents, the village is accessible only by boat, floatplane, or hiking. The kids become the seventh-graders of the one-room schoolhouse. Jerry becomes the bus driver. Iris becomes a baker, bicycling to work in the early morning darkness on the dirt road down to the village. Hours off fill with chores—chopping wood, repairing plumbing, and cooking—punctuated by trail hikes and cross-country skiing.

Food is planned a week ahead, the handwritten list sent by ferry down the lake to the friendly grocer, who sends the boxes back in a day or two. Occasionally a black bear wanders into the backyard; winter snow piles up against the windows; a forest fire threatens to sweep down into the valley; and a spring flood strands them for three days—nature’s way of reminding them of their powerlessness. Trees fall onto power lines, leaving some evenings brightened only by candles and kerosene lamps. With no phone, no TV, no Internet, the family embraces old entertainments anew. They read books, play board games, learn to juggle, make block prints for Christmas, and write letters to friends and family.

Graville embraces this rustic life as a way to simplify—leave behind the noise of highways, crowded urban streets, and schools with hundreds of students. Most important, though, she knows she needs to let go of 20 years of anxieties about her job, in particular, her fears of inadequacy in the face of the overwhelming human needs of her patients.

A practicing Quaker, she feels at home in the deep quiet of the woods. When the summer tourists leave and the bakery closes for the winter, she uses the silent days to write in her journal, waiting for “the still, small voice” as in Quaker meeting, seeking insight into the past that had tied her in knots, and writing her way into a calling to come. As she “attends to what is important”—the tasks of family life in a small, close-knit community and her times alone—she discovers that “the smallest touch, the briefest contact, the quietest diligence can make a difference—can change the course of a river.”

In the end, through solitude amidst the pines, family support, and deep friendships old and new, she finds a spiritual footing to carry her into her next chapter. Their family will move to Lopez Island off the coast of Washington state, larger and more developed than Stehekin but offering similar kinds of quiet and leadings through natural beauty.

And Graville will continue to write. Her essay “Seeking Clearness with Work Transitions” was published in the February 2015 issue of Friends Journal. She has also published the award-winning Hands at Work: Portraits and Profiles of People Who Work with Their Hands; and Bounty: Lopez Island Farmers, Food, and Community. Now, she publishes Shark Reef literary magazine. This eloquent memoir shows the move to Stehekin was indeed her “way through” to her new calling as a writer.


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Hiking Naked: A Quaker Woman's Search for Balance
by Iris Graville (Goodreads Author)
 4.15  ·   Rating details ·  144 ratings  ·  49 reviews
Knocked off her feet after twenty years in public health nursing, Iris Graville quit her job and convinced her husband and their thirteen-year-old twin son and daughter to move to Stehekin, a remote mountain village in Washington State’s North Cascades. They sought adventure; she yearned for the quiet and respite of this community of eighty-five residents accessible only by boat, float plane, or hiking. Hiking Naked chronicles Graville’s journey through questions about work and calling as well as how she coped with ordering groceries by mail, black bears outside her kitchen window, a forest fire that threatened the valley, and a flood that left her and her family stranded for three days. (less)
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Paperback, 260 pages
Published September 12th 2017 by Homebound Publications
ISBN1938846842 (ISBN13: 9781938846847)
Edition LanguageEnglish
URLhttp://homeboundpublications.com/hiking-naked-by-iris-graville/
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 Average rating4.15  ·  Rating details ·  144 ratings  ·  49 reviews

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Gretchen Wing
Oct 12, 2017Gretchen Wing rated it it was amazing
If you are making or contemplating a major life transition, you will love this book. If you are yearning for more spiritual depth in your life, you will love this book. If you love the mountains and the feeling of being transported to the banks of a clear, rushing creek simply by turning pages, you will love this book. If you love finding your own family conflicts, joys, heartbreak, and sweet daily celebrations reflected in someone else's experience, you will love this book. Get the picture? Iris writes with unpretentious skill, making the ordinary extraordinary. (less)
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Brynnen Ford
Jul 16, 2018Brynnen Ford rated it it was amazing
Loved the stories, the insight, and just the writing was a joy to experience. It was fun to listen for Quaker themes, but it really was a universal story of a woman's search for work-life-spirit-balance and exploring ideas of calling and meaningful work.

Thank you for the opportunity! I hightly recommend it to all readers who enjoy memoir-type stories. (less)
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Yi_Shun
Oct 15, 2017Yi_Shun rated it it was amazing
Deepy satisfying, on a storytelling level and a spiritual level. Yes, even for those of us who don’t read “spiritual” books. This is the story of one family’s transition from city to rural life to their own brand of equilibrium. It’s worth every page.
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Julene
Oct 23, 2020Julene rated it really liked it
Shelves: memoir
This was a good memoir to read during covid time. I found it in a Free Book Library and the title drew me to take a look. Iris Graville, a white woman and a Quaker, in her 40s asks questions about her work, life, and purpose. She is in a stable, secure attached, relationship with two children who are twins. She has a good job in Bellingham, Wa, working in Public Health, but she's burnt out and questioning her path. I related to her questioning immediately.

Her family has started the tradition of ...more
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Leigh Anne
Apr 06, 2018Leigh Anne rated it liked it
Burn out, or fade away?

Iris Graville was completely done with being a nurse. Although it had been her dream to help improve public health, she just couldn't anymore with the long hours, endless policy debates, and difficult patients (people are not always at their kindest when they are sick, and nurses bear the brunt of it). She needed a break from her life and some time to think through her next move, hopefully with some guidance from the still small voice inside her (as Quakers do). With her family's blessing and help, they decided to spend a year in a remote village in northern Washington State, only accessible by ferry, and with a grand total of 85 residents. Will stepping out of the rat race bring clarity? Or will it just make the Graville's slightly less stressed rats?

Anybody who's ever had a customer service job wlil relate to the burnout aspects, though you could make the argument that being able to up and change directions like this is a pretty privileged thing to do. Luckily Iris is aware of this, and remarks on it often. Life in the village is both beautiful and rough, as flooding, forest fires, and LOTS OF SNOW are concerns. The book's greatest strengths are its descriptions of nature, and how complicated a "simple" life can really be, with all the adjustments you have to make.

Still, it's beautiful, even if it's tough, and even if the soul-searching starts to get a bit wearying (it didn't for me, but I could see it happening), it's a good read for folks who like "people vs nature" and "what the hell should I do with my life?" as themes. Recommended for medium to large libraries, esp. in the Pacific Northwest. (less)
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Lin
Oct 19, 2017Lin rated it really liked it
Looking for a book to peacefully settle into? Iris Graville's Hiking Naked: A Quaker Woman's Search for Balance, then, is your perfect companion.

Finding only stress and unanswered questions after 20 years in nursing, she convinces her husband and 13-year old twins to make a bold move -- to literally move the family from Bellingham to the remote community of Stehekin at the far northwest end of Lake Chelan where there are 85 year-round residents. The village is accessible only by a ferry, float plane, or a long hike.

What follows is a peacefully unfolding journey of discovery. She questions whether she has "stayed in nursing because it serves my own need to feel valued rather than out of compassion for those I care for?" Couple that with new-found solitude and unforeseen realities such as a forest fire that threatens the entire village, ordering groceries by U.S. Mail to be delivered a few days later by boat, and a snowfall that is measured in feet.

Described as a blend of Cheryl Strayed’s Wild and Henry David Thoreau’s Walden, Graville’s memoir chronicles her spiritual search for meaningful work as she lands a job at the local bakery, gently urging dough into delicious treats for villagers and tourists. She pursues a life-long interest in writing and finds time to just "be."

Her book should come with its own quilt to wrap up in while reading. Oh, wait...it is its own quilt, comforting and comfortable. (less)
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Jan Crossen
Sep 17, 2017Jan Crossen rated it it was amazing
Author, Iris Graville, bares her soul in this memoir. Iris was a successful wife and mother of twins, juggling a hectic career in public health, when she hit a major life roadblock. Her passion for nursing, the career she had worked so hard to perfect, had fizzled. Iris suffered from a nearly terminal case of professional ‘burn out.” Searching for answers and spiritual guidance as to her life’s purpose, she and her family moved to an extremely remote community. The family members agreed to experience the peace and solitude of a simple, less encumbered life for two years. Iris and her family grow and evolve as they overcome challenges with grit and determination. Iris is a talented and beautiful writer. She is a master of descriptions and has perfected the art of word selection. She uses humor, honesty and wit to share her journey of discovery in this inspirational story. I celebrated her victories and shared her tears of loss. Iris has found her calling, and thrives in her chosen vocation, community, and spiritual path. I highly recommend this book!

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Pat
Sep 16, 2019Pat rated it it was amazing
I actually picked up two books about Quakerism, this one and another by Phillip Gulley the author of the Harmony series. He is a Quaker minister so I figured he knows what he is talking about. But this book was the first one I was going to skim thru before I sat down to read. Just skimming made me stop and start reading instantly. I was sucked into the story and loved every moment of it.

Iris is having doubts about the direction her life is taking. Her husband is super understanding and even her kids get onboard when they decide to pack up their lives and move to a very remote area in Washington. What was suppose to be a one year experience turns into a two year life change. Everyone gets so much out of their time there so I think it was life changing for the entire family.

I just loved this book. I have recommended it to a couple friends already and really hope they give it a chance. (less)
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Heidi Barr
Aug 13, 2017Heidi Barr rated it it was amazing
I loved this book. Reading about the author's time living in a remote village made me reflect on my own choices, reminded me that community is essential for a full life, and reassured me that even though the human experience is peppered with loss, pain, and uncertainty, when it is grounded in nature and steeped in faith, any storm can be weathered. Taking stock of one’s life choices while raising a family can leave one feeling bare to the bone, and Iris tells her story with grace, humor, and humility. Highly recommended. (less)
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Barb
Sep 27, 2018Barb rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
A story by a Quaker about getting away from our “typical” US life of consumerism and living closer to nature and in community? Yes please. Iris did a terrific job describing her life in this removed community, how it affected her family, and ultimately how it really didn’t make her discernment that much easier or clearer. Enjoyed this very much.
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Sarah Ewald
Jul 11, 2018Sarah Ewald rated it really liked it
I was a bit taken aback by the title. In fact, someone saw it on my coffee table, and laughed. This is memoir by Iris Graville, who, like many, had become fed up with her job as a public health administrator. She started out as a nurse, which she loved, and over the years graduated into administration. Not always what it seems, she wanted something different. She quit her job and convinced her husband, Jerry, and 13 year old twins, to move to Stehekin, a remote mountain village in Washington state in the Northern Cascade Mountains. Seeking adventure and solitude, they researched their move and landed in a community of 85 residents, and a completely new reality, where they thrived. Kids took classes in a one-room school, Jerry drove transportation for a summer adventure resort and did odd jobs, and Iris took a job at the local bakery. Telephoning someone meant going into town to use the community phone by the dock; groceries came by boat (after having been 'mail-ordered'); forest fires were a reality, and floods could leave you stranded. Despite that, there were hikes to peaks and views seen by few, adventures of white water rafting, and moments of solitude in a cathedral of trees. Sounds like heaven to me.
I tried to figure out the title, and I came up with the vulnerabilities you experience when all conveniences are stripped away, and you become one with your small community. (less)
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Jennifer
Aug 30, 2018Jennifer rated it really liked it
Shelves: bookgroup
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here. I was not sure what to expect from this book - I give it a high rating because a lot of what the author was going through sounded like me - I quit my job 3 yrs ago to try to figure out what to do...now I find myself still doing a little bit of it on the side. I, too, wanted less of a rat race of 'career advancement' - but I did not go quite so extreme as move nearly off the grid!

Also makes me wonder if I would have been a good Quaker. Meeting to sit in silence for an hour sounds better than many of the sermons I've heard in my lifetime. And sounds a lot like meditation. Plus, their activism has historically been amazing -several suffrage and abolitionist leaders were Quakers, for example.

Since the book was written (or at least published) 20+ years after they embarked on adventure - it was interesting to see how she returned a bit - was still doing some health consulting, they moved to Lopez (and remain there), her husband did return to his teaching career, too. I wonder if their experience would be the same (how has the town of Stehekin changed?) with the internet, wi-fi, cell phones, etc. (less)
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Heather Durham
Apr 30, 2019Heather Durham rated it it was amazing
Shelves: nonfiction, personal-essay-and-memoir
Iris Graville recently wrote an article for Brevity’s Nonfiction Blog on Writing the Quotidian, on the beauty and resonance to be found in everyday life. And that’s exactly what she explores in Hiking Naked, it’s just that her stories of work, family, friendship, interpersonal challenges, life and death just happen to take place in a remote village only accessible by boat, trail, or seaplane, where the everyday also might include bears in the yard, days without power, a flood that leaves you stranded, and literal and figurative nudity. In this beautiful memoir, Graville takes us with her as she experiences real life in the wilderness beyond the romantic honeymoon period in paradise. With a balance of levity and depth, contemplation and questioning, Hiking Naked may inspire you to reexamine your own choices, and to ponder the difference between seeking and escape.
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Claire
Jan 05, 2018Claire rated it it was amazing
Author Iris Graville's love for her family, her community, and the North Cascades wilderness shines through every page of this thoughtful memoir. In making the choice to be unplugged in the wilderness in the modern age, the Graville family discovers more joy, and more hardship, than they bargained for. Through fire and flood, deep snow and "roof-alanches," Graville and her husband and two children face it all with admirable openness and strength. In the practice of her Quaker faith, Graville allows the spirit lead her where it may, through ups and downs and logistics galore, in the end discovering a physical sense of place, and a creative, spiritual interior life as well. A unique, insightful journey. (less)
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Gloria
Jan 23, 2018Gloria rated it liked it
Shelves: for-the-spirit
Decent recounting of one woman's experience in stepping away from a frenetic lifestyle and living alternatively in a remote region of Washington state. Graville tells of her stressful nursing career as well as some family stressors. She is very open about financial concerns, family opinions, spiritual considerations, and just the cultural change of living in a seriously different environment.

This is not gripping in any way, but rather meanders through her thought process and the practical steps the family took to make this change. She seems like any middle-class mother and professional woman who recognizes being overwhelmed and is thinking out of the box to remedy the situation. (less)
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Hiking Naked: A Quaker Woman's Search for Balance Paperback – Illustrated, 19 September 2017
by Iris Graville  (Author)
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Product details
Publisher : Homebound Publications; Illustrated edition (19 September 2017)
Language : English
Paperback : 262 pages
ISBN-10 : 1938846842
ISBN-13 : 978-1938846847
Dimensions : 13.97 x 2.03 x 21.59 cm
Customer Reviews: 4.4 out of 5 stars    13 ratings
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"Hiking Naked shows us the possibilities that appear if we take the risk." -- Margery Post Abbott, author of To Be Broken and Tender



"This memoir of 'seeking, not escaping' speaks to the hearts of those longing to be free from modern constraints--work, money, ambition, stress of all sorts--to find their bliss, wherever it might be. For Graville, in 1993, that means listening to the urgings of her heart and leaving her job as a public health nurse in Bellingham, WA, and moving her family to Stehekin, a remote village near North Cascades National Park. What resonates throughout is her deep connection to Quakerism; here a gentle, quiet spirituality that encourages places and periods of silence rather than imposing rigid external demands. As her husband and children agree to this experiment, over the two years, all come in their own way to say, 'I thought I knew about powerlessness, ' only to find that the rigors of living life simply require letting go of much more than they ever could have imagined. Graville concludes that 'Far from feeling deprived, we found over and over again the riches of attending to what's truly important.' VERDICT: Reading this expressive and beautifully written memoir is to experience one's own quest toward self-discovery." -- Library Journal, *Starred Review!

About the Author
Iris Graville is the author of Hands at Work: Portraits and Profiles of People Who Work with Their Hands, recipient of numerous accolades including a Nautilus Gold Book Award, and BOUNTY: Lopez Island Farmers, Food, and Community. She also serves as publisher of SHARK REEF Literary Magazine. Iris lives and writes on Lopez Island, Washington.


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Lynda Bennion
3.0 out of 5 stars Not what I expected.
Reviewed in Canada on 5 December 2020
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I was less than intrigued with this story. The book seemed to be based more on the author's trials and tribulations of her career choices more than the 'magic' of living a different life style in the boonies. I wanted to be charmed and enthralled with more grit about living 'off grid' per se.
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Freeman
4.0 out of 5 stars Clean mountain air and a calm Quaker mind.
Reviewed in the United States on 1 November 2017
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This thoughtful quiet book is filled with the scent of pine trees, ceanothus and baking bread, the sparkle of sunlight on blue mountain water, the busy hum of squabbling teenagers, the bustle of family and visitors coming and going, the taste of homemade pizza and the comfort of a steaming cup of mint tea. Above all it is a book about the sustaining comfort and richness of a happy and loving marriage, and how deep love and compassion can allow a couple to support each other as they change and grow as individuals. I enjoyed reading about places I’ve also been and lived, about Quakers, and about a family negotiating changes in their lives with skill, grace and good humor.
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Elaine
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautifully Written and Inspiring
Reviewed in the United States on 16 October 2017
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Disconnect the wifi router, put your cell phone on “do not disturb” and read Iris Graville’s memoir “Hiking Naked”. This is the story of one woman listening to the still small voice within and following her leading to leave a successful career and spend 2 years with her family in an isolated mountain town in Washington State. One satellite phone connects the entire Stehekin village to the outside world. Yet, there is a warm and lively community of hearty artists, talented bakers, resourceful nature lovers and even a “one room” school house in this “frozen in time” (forgive the pun) setting. Hiking Naked reads like sitting down with a good friend in front of a warm fire and finally hearing all the details of a heart felt adventure: including the inner deep struggle for meaning and purpose as well as the outer beauty and sheer magnificence and inspiration of the natural world. Iris Graville writes beautifully about both.
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KBSeely
5.0 out of 5 stars A Journey Worth Sharing
Reviewed in the United States on 21 December 2017
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I loved this book! If you’ve ever fantasized about stepping out of a life you’ve outgrown and trying a new one, Graville’s story about the leap she and her family took moving to a small isolated community in the North Cascades will transport you there. What a pleasure to spend time with them as they adapt to the simple pleasures – and new challenges – of living in tiny Stehekin, WA. Graville’s clear prose and thoughtful voice hooked me from page one; reading her book is like sitting down with a wise friend.
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Aliopa
5.0 out of 5 stars Inspiring and beautifully written
Reviewed in the United States on 30 August 2018
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I loved this book! Iris writes beautifully about leaving a fast-paced and stressful life in te city and moving to a remote village among the nature. She shares the practical aspects of the experience but also her inner 'work' to achieve a more balanced life. This book is definitely inspiring for anyone who is dissatisfied with modern life and wishes to live a slower and more meaningful life.
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Amazon.com: God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything (Audible Audio Edition): Christopher Hitchens, Christopher Hitchens, Hachette Audio: Books

Amazon.com: God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything (Audible Audio Edition): Christopher Hitchens, Christopher Hitchens, Hachette Audio: Books



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God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything Audible Audiobook – Unabridged
Christopher Hitchens (Author, Narrator), Hachette Audio (Publisher)
4.6 out of 5 stars 4,824 ratings
Editors' pickBest Nonfiction

In the tradition of Bertrand Russell's Why I Am Not a Christian and Sam Harris' recent best-seller, The End of Faith, Christopher Hitchens makes the ultimate case against religion. With a close and erudite reading of the major religious texts, he documents the ways in which religion is a man-made wish, a cause of dangerous sexual repression, and a distortion of our origins in the cosmos. With eloquent clarity, Hitchens frames the argument for a more secular life based on science and reason, in which hell is replaced by the Hubble Telescope's view of the universe, and Moses and the burning bush give way to the beauty of the double helix.



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Kevin Dekker

1.0 out of 5 stars Bigotry never dies, it just changes sidesReviewed in the United States on November 9, 2018
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In “God is not Great” Christopher Hitchens undertook an unrelenting attack on religion. From the opening page he showed his approach with the example of the otherwise apparently admirable Christian lady Mrs Jean Watts, who played a pleasant part in Hitchens childhood until she over-stepped the mark and suggested that God made vegetation green so it would be easier on the human eye.

What is remarkable about this example is that it tells us more about Hitchens than Watts. She is abusively labelled an “old trout” out of nowhere, simply because of one relatively innocuous statement probably made quite lightly, yet treated as if it was a full papal edict and myopically scrutinized minutely.

Suddenly all the admirable qualities of this lady are forgotten and she is defined purely on one comment that is interpreted by Hitchens as he wishes in order to justify his categorization of her. This sets the pattern for the rest of the book, with the notable exception that while Jean Watts at least gets an initial word or two in her favour, that veneer of balance and fairness is dropped and seldom if ever resurfaces in the entire book.

His predictable treatment of the “blood and gore soaked” bible is another example of this biased approach. Regardless of what you think of the bible, there is a huge amount of good in it, including the call to forgive your enemies, love your neighbour, judge not others but look to your own faults first, all things are lawful, and hardships in life should be viewed as an opportunity for growth and learning. It takes a special kind of blinkered approach to see nothing but the bad stuff, but that’s an approach Hitchens had perfected.

Hitchens seemed to be a man possessed with a need to create an enemy (in this case all religious people), label them as the source of all evil, and then cite selective cases in isolation while ignoring any evidence that contradicted the picture he wished to paint. ("Religion poisons EVERYTHING")

Words like negative, sarcastic, self-righteous, deliberately dishonest, asinine, and bigoted spring to mind to describe his approach. He is like a school yard bully viciously inciting a mob to surround a child with a religious background and accuse them of everything from rape, slavery, sexual repression, misogyny, human sacrifice, and of course genocide. Hitchens himself says that if he was accused of such things, even if he knew he wasn’t guilty of them, he would be tempted to commit suicide, yet his entire approach encouraged people to apply such prejudiced accusations to others equally as innocent, which is appallingly hypocritical.

The problem for Hitchens was of course that no church and virtually no religious person in any democratic Western county today fitted his picture, so he constantly dredged up ancient history and times when religion and government were one in order to justify his lurid fantasies.

While he claims religion appeals to the darkest and most primal side of humanity, he himself wrote like a tribal elder telling scary stories around a camp fire to wide eyed children of religious monsters waiting in the darkness to consume them. None of his caricatures fit the many religious people I’ve met, indeed Hitchens himself lets the cat out of the bag by admitting that he has religious friends who he wishes would “just leave me alone”.

If "religion poisons everything" as he claims continuously, then why have religious friends at all? Is it because they were in reality decent people who didn’t fit the picture he tried to paint? And if he wished they would leave him alone, why didn’t he just tell them? Was he suffering the cognitive dissonance of realizing they made it difficult for him to maintain his hateful public image in the reality of his private life?

I welcome specific criticism of religion where it is targeted at the people and organizations responsible. I reject the approach of generalized stereotypes, prejudice and bigotry against any group of people including the religious. This book is little more than a modern atheist version of “Mein Kampf” that encourages people to stop treating other human beings as they find them, and instead to relate to them according to a label, in this case “religious”.

You’d think in this day and age we’d have gotten past this kind of propaganda, but sadly it appears bigotry never dies, it just changes sides. Hitchens was certainly a great writer, and if you’re not careful you’ll fall under the spell he weaves. But ask yourself these questions; are his statements backed up by any metrics at all (rather than isolated examples) that support his generalized conclusions? And do the religious people you know act in accordance with the caricatures Hitchens paints?

I’m not questioning that there is some truth in much of what Hitchens wrote. What I am questioning is that it automatically applies to the majority of religious people today, and that it’s ever right to apply generalized stereotypes universally, the very definition of prejudice.

I also wonder whether in being so abrasive, sarcastic and abusive Hitchens projected an attitude that produced a negative reaction towards him from religious people that confirmed in his own mind the truth of his assertions. As a wise man once said; what you reap you will also sow.

Hitchens seemed to match the worst in religion; judgment of others, self-righteousness, and a blinkered narrow approach, while failing to match the best of religion; empathy, compassion, understanding, forgiveness. It’s a shame that an otherwise intelligent man should leave as one of his main legacies a book containing so much gratuitously hateful and childish sarcasm against his fellow human beings. We can only hope it’s not an approach widely adopted by fair minded people on both sides of the philosophical divide, however human nature being what it is, don't hold your breath.

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dsmith

4.0 out of 5 stars Certainly reinforces my observations throughout my 80 years that religion does poison everything.Reviewed in the United States on July 31, 2017
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This book provides excellent insight into the fallacies upon which religions, primarily those monotheistic Abrahamic ones although others are covered as well. I knocked off a star, not for the content and quality of logical reasoning, but for the convoluted writing style that frequently caused me to have to read a complex paragraph to correctly parse the intent.

The primary gist of the book is that people are indoctrinated from birth into belief systems before they are capable of reasoning for themselves and taught that they must be faithful to whatever the belief system is and reject anything seen or heard that contradicts their belief (or dogma) - to do otherwise is to admit that their belief is wrong and or unfounded.

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Ronnie Tyler

5.0 out of 5 stars Gos isn't dead, he never existed.Reviewed in the United States on July 23, 2018
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A concise argument from a wonderful writer. imo religion is the most horrific idea ever foisted upon humanity - a real and dangerous horror show. Nothing really new in this book, nothing that hasn’t been discussed before, but the presentation and arguments are well worth a read. All good.

133 people found this helpful

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Craig Steven Jepson

5.0 out of 5 stars I read this cover to cover six times.Reviewed in the United States on December 17, 2018
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This book is terrific; I read it cover to cover six times, and then listened to it twice on books-on-tape while driving across Texas. Of course, Dr. Hitchens had easy targets: deities and religions. He unravels both exposing them for the harmful, vessels of hypocrisy and sheer stupidity that both are. He reveals, for example, that Mother Teresa, who to her credit did not believe in god, nonetheless believed in the Church sufficiently to fly all the way from India, where her venom was reserved for the truly helpless, to Ireland to campaign against the bill (that eventually passed) legalizing abortion. Her advise to women beaten by drunken louts who they could not divorce was that they should pray. Hitchen treats all religions with the disrespect that they deserve. His treatment of Islam is particularly seething.

90 people found this helpful

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David Patterson

5.0 out of 5 stars GoodReviewed in the United States on August 22, 2017
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Wonderful perspective. So many arguments that I have explored over many years and yet was afraid to state. Christopher's perspective comes as a great relief that my own thinking is not unreasonable. The discussion is not so much about 'gods' but rather about 'religions' or 'churches' - and how through crass stupidity and self interest, they are destructively hypocritical - and get away with it. As Bill Burr suggested, one brushes off paedophilia like it was as unimportant as dandruff on shoulders. Yes, the enlightenment was the turning point, and humanitarianism is all we need for good behaviour.

70 people found this helpful

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Patrick S

5.0 out of 5 stars 'Holy' Hitchens!Reviewed in the United States on March 13, 2017
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This is a masterpiece. Along with "The God Delusion" by Richard Dawkins and "The End of Faith" by Sam Harris, this excellent work by the late Christopher Hitchens is one leg of the 'milking stool' of my atheism. It is provocative, insightful, and beautifully written in fluid and articulate prose. Even if you're a believer, I encourage you to read this book. It's not purely a polemic against religion; rather, it raises questions that every theist should consider and be able to answer.

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Tunia

4.0 out of 5 stars Great subject and full of brilliant observationsReviewed in the United States on August 21, 2017
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Great subject and full of brilliant observations. I would have given the book five stars, but many of the sentences were just way too long. At the end, I would have to go back to the beginning to remind myself of what the sentence was about, and I am used to (and enjoy) dense writing. The author was a great thinker and probably a great presenter in person; but he was not necessarily a great writer. Don't get me wrong. The book contained many breathtaking, jaw dropping insights. There just came every other page, with a lot of unnecessary sarcasm and snobbery in between. I wish I had had the opportunity to meet the man. He had great courage and an amazingly insightful mind. He needed a better, braver editor. But then again, I doubt many would haver had the courage to stand up to his.

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When Belief Dies
3.0 out of 5 stars I am all for honest conversationReviewed in the United Kingdom on February 28, 2019
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I really enjoyed this book. Mr Hitchens writes in a superbly eloquent way and structures his arguments around his wordplay, something I haven't seen done before. I also really struggled with this book. It attacks something that I don't feel has any connection to the belief system I adhere to.

Hence the 3 *'s

I understand that religion has been used to do a lot of harm and wrong. But I am also fully aware that the issue doesn't stop at religion, it goes deeper than that, into the hearts and minds of the people who use religion to share the toxic ideas and beliefs that they hold.

Religion can be used. As can politics, science, education and poverty. We can use the tools at our disposal to impact and elevate our ideas and the things we believe holds the most value. For good as well as for bad. We can all do this within our own lives - we do it every day.

Trying to push all religious beliefs into the same box, gaffer taping it up and labelling it as poison undermines the whole of society. I understand that some religious teachings and scriptures have moral questions that we SHOULD be talking about today - so let's talk!

Whether Mr Hitchens wants to admit it or not, we live in a society (in the West at least) that has formed from a religious belief structure. Religious ideas led to the enlightenment and to science holding the position within society that it does today. We need to recognise that this is a journey, like a tree spreading out its branches. Rather than a level in a platform game, that we complete, reach the next level and then forget about the path that took us here.

If we begin to remove religion from our societies, then we saw away at the very branch that brought us to the place where we can honestly critique religion in the first place.

I am all for honest conversation - but we need to survey both lines of the battlefield and acknowledge the good religion has done as well.

Example? During the first 100 years after Christianity split from Jewdeism, we see small Christian groups within the societies it had spread to beginning to attribute value to the lowliest peoples within those societies. Salves, women, children, people with disabilities - Christians begin to see an intrinsic worth within all people, that the societies they lived in never saw, rather dismissing them without a second glance.

We take that idea of worth for granted now, but it wasn't always the case. Christianity changed the Greco-Roman world, and I think it is still doing so today.
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ode79
4.0 out of 5 stars Educational, Thought provoking and WittyReviewed in the United Kingdom on July 6, 2018
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Raised Catholic, attending schools run by nuns, church youth group until I was in my very late teens meant I never questioned my faith until around 9 years ago. I am now 39yrs old.
This book has opened my mind. The author is right in much of what he says in this book, Religion for a very long time has become a charter for war and human suffering, unfortunately its disciples are now deadly and some even incredibly deluded.

The majority of the book was not new to me but I loved the injected wit and I actually found some of the arguements actually entertaining.

Regardless of your religious beliefs, if you have an open mind and enjoy reading well written, fact-based, relevant nonfiction, then I would say that you will enjoy reading this book.
The deeply religious amoung us, may find certain parts of the book upsetting as fundamental beliefs are challenged with factual, cited information.

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epsilon
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating, educational read.Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 22, 2018
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A very interesting and informative book, which I’m glad I bought and read.
I tend to look at the one star reviews before purchasing most things on Amazon, but this time it’s clear that many of the poor reviews were written by people who hadn’t read the book all the way through.
We’ve all heard the phrase “preaching to the converted” and it’s true that this book won’t turn a religious person into an atheist. It’s more likely to just annoy them.
I began to have doubts about religion around the age of five or six, realising on my own that the Church of England was spouting a load of rubbish. What I hadn’t realised until recently was the number of people who also came to this conclusion.
This book has educated me further in the historical aspects of religion. I’d long thought that it was a method of controlling the mindless populace, I just didn’t realise how evil and cruel this control has been.
As to the comments about the title “god is not great” is obviously a play on the phrase “allahu akba” but this has gone right over the heads of some reviewers.
Honestly, read the one star reviews. Written by people who didn’t read the book “, or think themselves more knowledgeable than the author. If they can do better why aren’t their books available on Amazon?...
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Paul Casey
5.0 out of 5 stars nor does he fall into the trap used by so many theologians or self professed 'experts' like Dawkins, of preaching to his audiencReviewed in the United Kingdom on December 1, 2015
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I have this as both book and audio book. The first observation is that this book is more a reflection on the nature of human beings, or mammals (as Hitch likes to describe us and our titular religious leaders). For those people who believe in God, this book is not an attack on whether God exists or not, but on the origin, ethics and practice of religion per se. As such, it an essential read to both believer and non-believer as Hitch examines how religions and religious leaders function, or rather don't function, when examined from the perspective of a calm, rational mind. Although a renowned polemicist Hitchens is never patronising, nor does he fall into the trap used by so many theologians or self professed 'experts' like Dawkins, of preaching to his audience. Frequently humorous, he dissects the subject with rapier like logic, and succeeds in making the reader think, 'if God does exist, would he approve of the way religions are founded, organised, and who speaks in his supposed name?' (my quotes not his). The message is quite clear tho. If you believe in God, that's fine. If you don't believe, that's fine too. However, religion as a methodology is redundant. We should use the time dedicated to religion to instead concentrate on working toward a new enlightenment. An example of him pricking unthinking orthodoxy is highlighted by the anecdote of a US State Govenor, who when asked if the State should have a spanish edition of the Bible replied, 'If English was good enough for Jesus, its good enough for them'. He also directed a barb at Richard Dawkins pretentious and patronising suggestion that atheists should be renamed as 'The Brights'.

Whatever else your view of religion is, this book WILL have you thinking long after the last page is turned. And I'm sure that's exactly what Hitch intended.
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DAVID BRYSON
5.0 out of 5 stars LUCRETIUS REDUXReviewed in the United Kingdom on April 12, 2019
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This book has received extravagant praise from many quarters and comment of the opposite kind from others. It stands to reason, I suppose, that a pugnacious atheistic tract will divide opinion in just such a way. What does not stand to reason is the veracity or probability of even the most revered scriptures, and that much seems to be true of all religions. One obvious instance springs to mind, the Agony in the Garden, as recounted in St Matthew. The first and most obvious absurdity is that the supposed witnesses to these events were all asleep. However there is more to it than that, and in his splendid The Evolution of the Gospel’ Enoch Powell (yes, that Enoch Powell) finds the whole tale to be ‘transparent fiction’ without even relying on that particular detail.

Back to what stands to reason, then. What surely stands to reason is that religious faith does not take its stand on reason. Nor is that any matter of fine shades of interpretation. ‘Beliefs’ that men (and women) will kill or die for are self-commending. Indeed, so strong is their persuasive power in some quarters that they can be required as a matter of religious law. Hitchens’ text does not delve deeply into the question ‘What is this thing called faith anyhow?’ To me for one the truth seems to be that only our actions can be subject to someone’s commands, or even to our own decisions; and holding a belief is not an action, it is a state of affairs, like having a headache.

Continuing our lesson in truisms, people who think thoughts like these had better be careful how, when, where and in whose presence they give expression to them. Hitchens presents this matter vividly, calling on such mighty figures as David Hume in his support. Hume ca’ed canny and did not provoke dangerous reactions. So why did he need to? What is it about religious doctrines that they exert such control? Ordinary reason subverts them, and I wonder what exercises there are in the application of thought via Housman-style textual criticism of the texts that underlie them. Not, I suppose, that such instances as the miracles that abound require any Housman to refute them. Any one of us can do that, provided we want to.

One very deep and thoughtful book that may be found of help in this connection is one that I was surprised not to find cited by Hitchens. The book is In the Shadow of Mount Sinai, and it is by Peter Sloterdijk. As the title suggests, Sloterdijk restricts himself to the Abrahamic religions. So does Hitchens for the most part, although he determinedly expands into Asiatic religions for a shortish stretch of the book. What Sloterdijk studies is the need for authority, either personal leadership or abstract authority (often focused on some idol or other) that cultures and ‘nations’ experienced in their cultural development. Naturally this was no matter of the likes of Hume, Dawkins or any of those, it was a matter of an underlying need. I have no learning or expertise in such matters, but at a superficial ‘helicopter’ level this makes sense to me in attempting to account for the religious focus on the irrational and the power it exerts.

So what does one suppose Hitchens is trying to achieve with this book? He is a brilliant journalist and a brilliant writer, and his book is a pleasure to read, at least when the reader is receptive to the author’s cast of mind and personal values. I had the impression that he saw himself as a soldier of rationality fighting the good fight for reason against what he perceives as superstition, indeed often as plain old nonsense. He recognises that the fight has been going on for a while, and he cites Lucretius in the first century BC. I had never before thought of Lucretius as witty, but our author here is no doubt more perceptive than I am. One phrase often used by Lucretius is ‘patrii sermonis egestas’ – ‘the poverty of my native language’ – to complain about how difficult the doctrines of Epicurus were to represent in Latin. For the student that usually flagged a warning that we were in for a hard bit too. More accessible, and closer to our own era, is Arthur C Clarke’s short but awesome novel Childhood’s End. In this mighty story one aspect of the Overlords’ utopia is that they gave humanity extensive glimpses of humanity’s own history that humanity’s own resources had denied them. And as this unfolded, Clarke remarks laconically that religions which had bolstered mankind for centuries now dissolved in the face of proper knowledge. Hitchens was no Karellen, but he makes a worthy and strenuous effort of his own to help us understand.
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