Filed Under: books
Posted on: July 12, 2010
Tags: bruce feiler, dave eggers, frank schaeffer, greg mortenson, l. jon wortheim, mike krzyzewski, rebecca skloot, warren st. john
Reading update
Having read far fewer books over the past several years than I would have liked, my goal for 2010 was to try to read a minimum of 3 books a month, or 36 books for the year. I should finish number 20 in the next day or two, and should be able to knock out number 21 by the end of the month. That would put me right on track, so hopefully I can do so and then keep it up for the last 5 months.![]()
Anyway, here’s what I’ve read over the last few months, since my last reading post in early April:
Beyond Basketball: Coach K’s Keywords for Success
Mike Krzyzewski
As a Duke basketball fan, I read most of what coach Mike Krzyzewski writes. And if you’re familiar with him and/or his coaching style at all, this is exactly the kind of book you’d expect him to write. This is a nice collection of stories and suggestions centered on various “keywords for success” – adaptability, commitment, excellence, integrity, trust, etc. Krzyzewski uses these words with his own teams and here communicates how these keywords and concepts can be applied in various settings – business, home, family, etc. Granted, it’s nothing groundbreaking, but a nice reminder nonetheless.
Three Cups of Tea: One Man’s Mission to Promote Peace…One School at a Time
Greg Mortenson & David Oliver Relin
Descending from a failed climb in Northern Pakistan to the summit of K2 – the worlds second highest peak behind Everest – Greg Mortensen found himself separated from his group and stumbled into the small mountain village of Korphe. After weeks of recovery in the village, Mortensson noticed the children of the village had no school building, instead learning in the cold temperatures outdoors, using sticks to write in the dirt. Because of the hospitality they had shown to him, Mortenson vowed to one day return to Korphe and build a school for their children. Mortenson knew nothing of raising funds and getting things done in this culture far different from his own, but he was determined. After some bumps along the way, he eventually did return to Korphe and build that school. And since, he has founded the Central Asia Institute and built schools for villages all over northern Pakistan and now into Afghanistan. There is much to this story, but Mortenson believes that education – particularly for girls – is the key to slowing (and eventually stopping) the terrorism that is born in this part of the world. And he may very well be right. A remarkable story that everyone should hear.
America’s Prophet: Moses and the American Story
Bruce Feiler
A few years ago I read Feiler’s book Abraham and enjoyed it a great deal. His most recent offering is a look at how the story of Moses and the Exodus has always been important in the American story throughout it’s history, from the time the pilgrims journeyed across the sea to the present day. Feiler argues that Moses’ influence on this country is greater than any other figure, including Jesus, and provides numerous examples to back it up. I suppose it’s debatable, but I found the book quite enjoyable, and particularly enjoyed it’s historical nature.
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks
Rebecca Skloot
In the early 1950′s, a poor, black woman from Virginia was treated for cervical cancer at Johns Hopkins. While she died after a brief treatment, doctors there took a tissue sample from her cervix, which, over time, continued to reproduce and live while other such cell lines would eventually die. Since that time, these cells (known as HeLa) have been instumental in all types of medical research and breakthroughs, including cancer, AIDS/HIV, and the polio vaccine. Skloot tells the story of both Henrietta – her life, her family’s life since (her children didn’t even know that her cells were still alive until nearly 20 years later) – as well as the story of her cells and the medical and scientific discoveries which they aided. A fascinating, true story.
Patience with God: Faith for People Who Don’t Like Religion (or Atheism)
Frank Schaeffer
As the subtitle suggests, Schaeffer desires a faith for those like himself who are unsatisfied with typical fundamentalism, be it the religious funamentalists that most are well aware of, or those on the other side of the fence – the so-called “new atheists” (see Dawkins, Hitchens, et al.) Part-critique, part-biography, he rejects the dogmatic certainty promoted by many of these people, and instead believes that there is plenty of room for both faith and doubt in our spiritual journeys. While many everyday evangelicals will find much here with which they would disagree, it spoke to me and my own journey quite a bit. A very good read.
Strokes of Genius: Federer, Nadal, and the Greatest Match Ever Played
L. Jon Wertheim
This was a nice little book, probably more like 3.5 starts instead of 4. Federer & Nadal have been so enjoyable to watch not only because of their exceptional skill, but because they are indeed really nice guys, too. While this book is about that historical match 2 years ago, it also shares a fair amount about the players lives and supports the nice guy image that they have. They’re the two best players on the court still today, but they’re not you’re typical superstar athletes, which makes you like them all them more and want to cheer for them. While I’m a huge Nadal fan, I’ve become a Federer fan over the years as well. This was truly an epic match on Centre Court 2008 (whether it was the greatest ever is, of course, debatable), and so I enjoyed this book quite a bit.
Outcasts United: A Refugee Team, An American Town
Warren St. John
Luma Mufleh grew up in a very priveleged family in Jordan, and then came to the US for college. After she finished, she decided – much to the displeasure of her father and family – to stay in the US and make it on her own. After bouncing around a little, she ended up in the Atlanta area, and began a youth soccer program for children of refugees (from Africa, Europe and the middle East) who had settled in the area. She not only helped the kids by coaching their soccer teams, but also by investing in their lives, including their parents. She developed a tutoring program to help the kids – often struggling with English – in their schoolwork, and help their parents in myriad ways with adjusting to a new culture. This is a fascinating and beautiful story about people from many cultures around the world coming together and making a difference in each others’ lives.
Zeitoun
Dave Eggers
Abdulrahman Zeitoun is a Syrian-born painter and contractor in New Orleans who chose to stay behind when his family fled just days before hurricane Katrina hit. This is an account of his and his family’s experiences after the storm – his days there following the storm, his families travels while waiting to return to the city, the help Zeitoun provided in rescuing various neighbors and strangers from their homes after the floods came, and the grave injustice of his inexplicable arrest and three-week imprisonment by the post-Katrina police and military, despite never being charged with a crime. (hint: he is a middle-eastern born muslim.) While non-fiction, it reads like a novel, and is an outstanding book. Everyone should read it.
So that’s it, that’s the list. At least for now. I’m trying to finish up Alister McGrath’s Glimpsing The Face of God: The Search for Meaning in the Universe right now, and then am looking forward to reading Ozzy Osbourne’s autobiography I Am Ozzy.
Now that should be entertaining.

