Book Review: “The Mysterious Benedict Society and the Perilous Journey”

A little less than half a year since the four children of the Mysterious Benedict Society have seen one another, Mr. Benedict calls them together for a second mission. But while their first mission sought to stop the power-hungry Mr. Curtain, this mission will allow the children to enjoy themselves on an international scavenger hunt set up by Mr. Benedict. That’s the plan, at any rate.

But when Mr. Benedict is kidnapped, the Society begins a more dangerous mission–escaping the many protective (or not so protective) adults around them in order to rescue Mr. Benedict.

The perilous journey will send the children racing through Mr. Benedict’s scavenger hunt, trying to find him before it’s too late.

Like most sequels of truly superlative books, The Perilous Journey is a bit of a letdown. Not because it’s terrible, nor even because it’s mediocre, but because it’s simply “good”. The Perilous Journey is interesting, engaging, and thought-provoking–just not as much so as The Mysterious Benedict Society.

If you read and enjoyed The Mysterious Benedict Society and tend to like young adult fiction, you’ll still enjoy this one. If you’re not generally a fan of young adult fiction, no need to worry about missing this one (but give the first in the series a try!)


Rating: 4 stars
Category: Young Adult General Fiction
Synopsis: The Mysterious Benedict Society reunites for an adventure-filled getaway to save the kidnapped Mr. Benedict.
Recommendation: A good book for all lovers of young adult fiction.


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Book Review: “The Mysterious Benedict Society”

“ARE YOU A GIFTED CHILD LOOKING FOR SPECIAL OPPORTUNITIES?” Reynie Muldoon is somewhat surprised when he sees that the newspaper advertisement addresses itself directly to children. But he’s intrigued, and lobbies the orphanage director for a chance to take the tests that might qualify him for “special opportunities”.

After a series of odd tests–with an even odder series of encounters–Reynie finds himself as one of the four privileged (?) children who meet the green plaid clad Mr. Benedict and are invited to join a secret mission to save the world.

The newly minted “Mysterious Benedict Society” goes undercover inside the Learning Institute for the Very Enlightened. The four children’s intelligence and trust are immediately put to the test when they discover…well, I won’t tell you what they discover.

I picked up The Mysterious Benedict Society after having heard rave reviews of it from all over the bookie blogosphere. I was not in the least disappointed. The Mysterious Benedict Society is undoubtedly one of the best young adult novels I have read to this point. It has an engaging storyline, fascinating characters, and a truth to it that is altogether remarkable.

Without preaching, this book touches on topics as real and diverse as: trust, interdependence, intelligence, integrity, fear, temptation, control, desire, friendship, and truth. What’s more, Mr. Stewart engages these topics in a style distinctly unlike the moral relativity our day.

This book is a great book on so many different levels. It is a great book because it is truthful. It is a great book because it addresses real life. It is a great book because it makes the reader ask questions. It is a great book because it is READABLE and ENJOYABLE at the same time as it is all of the above. This is truly a FANTASTIC book.


Rating: 5 stars
Category: Young Adult General Fiction
Synopsis: Four children embark on the adventure of their lives as they attempt to save the world from ruthless madman.
Recommendation: Adults and children alike will enjoy reading this book–and will find plenty to think about within it.


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Name dropping down

Today, at a mini-conference/workshop thing we were holding at the health department, this guy came up to me and introduced himself: “You must be Rebekah. I’ve heard good things about you.”

Which is wonderful. I’m flattered.

But it also makes me wonder why. I mean, I’m familiar with name-dropping. I get it. What I don’t get is why people would bother dropping MY name.

For the uninitiated, allow me to reference Wikipedia on Name-dropping: “Name dropping is the practice of mentioning important people or institutions….It is often used to create a sense of superiority by raising one’s status. By implying (or directly asserting) a connection to people of high status, the name-dropper hopes to raise his or her own social status to a level closer to that of those whose names he or she has dropped…”

Which is why I’m so confused about why people would insert my name into their conversations about anything. My position, “Dietetic intern”, is far from elevated. My experience is miniscule. I can see no reason why anyone should reference me in conversation with another health professional–and especially to reference me in a complementary way.

Name-dropping down. Maybe it’s the new thing in corporate health care. Perhaps I should begin regularly referencing the janitor in my conversations with fellow professionals–after all, that’s not too far below my rank in the professional pool.

I should probably just accept it and go on–but the cynic in me still asks why. Why would someone bother to talk me up to the coordinator of one of the nation’s leading worksite wellness programs? It just doesn’t make any sense.


Groan with me

II Thessalonians 3:11 says “For we hear that there are some who walk among you in a disorderly manner, not working at all, but are busybodies.”

Yeah, I’ve heard the same thing. There’s someone, walking about, bringing disorder wherever she goes, not working in her own home, not working outside her own home, but determined to insert herself into everyone else’s homes.

The verse right before it, II Thessalonians 3:10, says “For even when we were with you, we commanded you this: If anyone will not work, neither shall he eat.”

So she’s not working. We’ve established that one. But she’s eating–voraciously. Not physically–it’s not like she’s going over to people’s houses and insisting that they feed her dinner. No, she’s eating emotionally and spiritually–going over to people’s houses or calling them on the phone and slurping up every spare ounce of emotional and spiritual energy they have.

And then she vomits and sucks some more.

II Thessalonians 3:12 says “Now those who are such we command and exhort through our Lord Jesus Christ that they work in quietness and eat their own bread.”

I wish I knew that I could apply this verse to that situation. I wish I could be certain that I could just tell her to go home, find a job (or even just start taking care of your children!), and learn to be emotionally and spiritually self-sufficient.

II Thessalonians 3:13 says, “But as for you, brethren, do not grow weary in doing good.”

I’m definitely not doing very well on this one. Of course, it’d help if I knew whether continuing to try in this relationship were indeed GOOD. It feels a lot more like casting pearls before swine.

Can’t I just do as II Thessalonians 3:14 says?
“And if anyone does not obey our word in this epistle, note that person and do not keep company with him, that he may be ashamed.”

I mean, I could handle a good long vacation from her. I could use a bit of time without her company. In fact, I can think of a half a dozen women who’ve already been sucked dry and could really benefit from some time away from her spiritual bulimia.

The hard part is II Thessalonians 3:15, “Yet do not count him as an enemy, but admonish him as a brother.”

She is a sister–a fellow believer in Christ. But it’s very hard to think of her as a sister when she’s acting like a leach. My little antibodies are bristling–wanting so hard to attack her–she’s destroying the body. Except that she is a part of the body. How can that be?

I don’t know how to deal. I don’t know what to say.

I doubt you know either.

But, please, please pray. For me. For the many women who’ve been emotional exhausted by this woman. For the woman. Pray for wisdom. For humility. For grace. Pray that she’d stop–oh, I don’t even know what to ask in regard to her. I guess, just groan for me, for us, please.

“Likewise the Spirit also helps in our weaknesses. For we do not know what we should pray for as we ought, but the Spirit Himself makes intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered. Romans 8:26


Simple Sunday: Mazda 3

Mazda 3 console

Thankful for the rental car that I’m driving while waiting for insurance to pay me for my totalled car. I don’t know what I’d do if I had to try doing this community rotation without a vehicle.

(And check out this gal’s “Red Hat Society” console–it makes me smile every time I have to drive in the dark.)

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Book Review: “Forever, Erma” by Erma Bombeck

Forever, Erma cover

In a world where humor is euphemism for vulgarity and attacks on traditional morality, Erma Bombeck is sweet relief. Her columns addressed home life with humour and class–without requiring the “potty language” and liberal venom so characteristic of today’s “humor”.

Forever, Erma is a collection of Erma Bombeck’s best columns compiled post-humously. The short columns address everything from teaching your children about the “birds and the bees” via fish, the power of a mother’s saliva for cleaning a child’s face, dealing with a child saying “you don’t love me”, never being able to find a pencil when you need one, and the never ending mystery of the uncoupled sock.

Erma primarily focuses on day-to-day home life–things everyone can identify with, either as a parent, a householder, or as a child within a household. The columns in this collection were written from 1965 to 1996–but they carry timeless appeal. As long as the laundry still needs done and carpools still need managing, Erma Bombeck’s writing will remain current.


Rating: 4 stars
Category: Humour
Synopsis: a gentle look at the humour of everyday life as a homemaker and mother
Recommendation: A great chance for homemakers and mothers (stay-at-home or work-away) to laugh at life without feeling sorry for themselves.


Book Review: “The Endurance: Shackleton’s Legendary Antarctic Adventure” by Caroline Alexander

The Endurance Cover

I’ve written about Sir Ernest Shackleton’s Antarctic adventures before when I reviewed Frank Worsley’s Endurance: An Epic of Polar Adventure. Caroline Alexander’s coverage of the story couldn’t be more different–but is still perfectly satisfactory.

While Worsley’s memoir focuses on the main characters involved in the adventure (from Worsley’s point of view), Alexander’s history gives a clear chronology of the events of the failed Antarctic Expedition. Alexander makes liberal use of the various adventurers’ journals and memoirs to compile a straightforward history of the events the Expedition endured.

Although I’ve read several books and watched several movies and documentaries covering this story, I still learned a good deal as I read The Endurance: Shackleton’s Legendary Antarctic Adventure. I was able to get a feel for the boredom of being stuck in the ice, for the distress and loss of hope after being stranded on a floating pack for months on end, for the tireless vigor with which several men stepped up to overcome impossible odds.

Worsley’s memoir brought the leaders of the expedition into sharp relief and emphasized the acute attacks of the elements. Alexander’s history helped me understand the less exciting, but certainly no less perilous odds the men had to overcome: the monotony of daily life on a floating pack, the weariness of seeing the same landscape day in and day out, the shock having to kill daily in order to eat, the delirium of seeing land for the first time in a year. This history brought the psychological elements of the Expedition into focus, emphasizing the delicate path Shackleton was forced to trod to maintain morale.

Frank Hurley’s breath-taking photos of the Endurance, its crew, and the Antarctic landscape are sprinkled throughout this book, increasing the depth of its already fantastic coverage of Shackleton’s Expedition.


Rating: 4 Stars
Category:History
Recommendation: A spectacular overview of Shackleton’s Antarctic adventure, this is a must read for lovers of history and adventure.



Simple Sunday: Medical Textbooks

Medical textbooks

Thankful for my sister’s medical textbooks (on the right) that have allowed me to get a good background on a disease before I figure out how to treat it with diet. I don’t know what I’d do without them (see my books on the left?)

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A Time to Cry

I’ve been a bit emotional lately, crying at the drop of a hat–and no, it’s not about the car accident. It’s just that I’m so blessed.

Tuesday at work was insane. My pedometer read that I had walked 1400 steps during the 9.5 hours that I was there. (Yep, I stayed an extra hour.) By the time it was over, my feet were killing me and I was tireder than tired. I went to the library, where I finished the book I needed to return. On the drive home, I contemplated the dishes. I’d been too busy or tired to dishes in almost a week–and we’d managed to use nearly every pan in our cupboards (I think there were 8 or 9 unwashed pans sitting on the counter). I entertained a little dream that a fairy would come and do the dishes like the Shoemaker and the elves–or that maybe my roommate would do dishes. When I opened the garage door to find that Casandra’s car wasn’t there, I knew that the latter couldn’t be true. So imagine my surprise when I discovered that the light was on in my kitchen and Grace was elbow deep in dishwater. I almost cried.

Wednesday, I walked into work at 6:25 as usual and the greeter at the front door said hi. Then he stopped me to tell me how much he appreciates that I’m always happy and friendly when I come in. I teared up.

As I was about to leave Wednesday afternoon, my office-mate told me that I was the most professional intern they’ve had yet. He struggled to explain himself, mentioning how I was task oriented and stayed busy. Which, to me, is a pretty high compliment. I turned my face back towards my computer as my eyes got watery.

Then came the car accident. I was rear-ended, pushing me into the car in front of me, giving me a bit of whiplash, and decimating my car. It took the police 45 minutes to show up (of course). I was so thankful that I had several books in my bag and could read while I waited. I read two (long) chapters of The Endurance: Shackleton’s Legendary Antarctic Expedition, a chapter of The Cost of Discipleship, and a Taste of Home Magazine before all was said and done. I didn’t cry, but I felt pretty blessed to have those books there with me.

After I couldn’t start my car, I called my parents to see if someone could come and get me. Dad came along and we dropped by Simply the Best Autos to talk to our good friend Robin. Robin and Dad went out to see if they could get Jack (my car) while I watched the shop (gulp!) They brought Jack over to the lot and I only looked stupidly, stammered, and handed out business cards to two gentlemen who were asking about the prices on cars. Then Robin loaned me a car for today and gave me the information I needed to deal with insurance agents. I could have cried.

I got to the folks house and soon had a concerned bevy about me. Mom, Dad, Josh, and Dan all wanted to hear. They asked questions and shared reassurances. And they laid hands on me and prayed for me. I cried again.

Dad did the hard work of calling the last guy in line’s insurance company and getting the ball rolling on insurance claims. I’m so thankful he was willing to go through the insurance rigmarole for me.

Daniel went to my house and got Schindler’s List from my desk so we could watch it together while I re-cuped. I cried all the way through.

We were hungry but didn’t feel like making anything (imagine that!), so I called the kids to see if they could pick up Popeye’s on their way home from youth group. My roommate paid for our meal, even though she had errands to run and couldn’t join us for it.

The movie got over and the kiddos started telling me about how Jeremy said something in his sermon that evening because I wasn’t there. He said that Eve sinned first–and that he could say that because I wasn’t there (I would, naturally, protest that Eve was deceived per I Timothy but Adam was the first to willfully sin.) Then, the kids tell me, he went on to tell the students that I was one of the best sponsors he’d had and that I was just wonderful–telling them anecdotes about stuff I’d done and everything. I cried as they told me.

Anna called, concerned once Daniel told her the news, and gave me all sorts of advice. She told me I shouldn’t be stoic and should go to the doctor to get some narcotics if they pain got too bad (by God’s grace, it hasn’t been that bad yet). She worried over me a bit, and told me I could sleep in her bed tonight (since climbing into my loft is not exactly the easiest thing when my back and neck are screaming at me.) Then she texted our other part-time roomie, who promptly Facebooked me her concern and that she was praying. I’m too blessed.

Perhaps I should be worried because I’m without a car and starting my community rotation (in which I will have to do a great deal of traveling) on Monday. Perhaps I should be upset that my wonderful, reliable Jack is totaled. Perhaps I should be overcome by the pain in my back and neck. But instead, I’m overwhelmed by the grace and favor of God.

Some days are just a time to cry.


Simple Sunday: Jonah

Jonah

Thankful for Jonah. While I was playing Noah’s ark with him this afternoon, he showed me the toucan and named its many colors–green, blue, yellow, pink, white, and black. I asked him how old he was. “Two and a half,” he said, and then counted his fingers for me. “One, two, three, four, five.” I’m thankful for the opportunity to enjoy this delightful little guy.

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