A Good Book List From A Mildly Surprising Source

From the Church [of England] Times: an intriguing list of the The 100 Best Christian Books. I don't think I've read more than half of them, though there are many others that I know by reputation. As far as I can see, there are only a few real clunkers in there, and they make up for Hans Küng by allowing one of the contributors to slam him in the commentary that runs alongside the list. And I was very pleased to see Four Quartets so high on the list.

If I were going to pick one the Narnia books, it wouldn't be The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe, which I think is a bit heavy-handed. I'm not sure it would make sense to pick any single one of the other six, though.

Anyway, I would have expected an Anglican list to be heavier on liberal theology and politics.

Lists are fun.


45 responses to “A Good Book List From A Mildly Surprising Source”

  1. Five by CSL, I think that’s at least 2 more than anyone else, and I see Gilead made the list.
    AMDG

  2. There are far more books on that list that I have read part of than books I have read all of.
    AMDG

  3. Probably true for me, too, if I were to count them up.
    I was glad to see Screwtape on there–it’s my personal favorite of CSL’s non-fiction (well, I guess it’s fiction of a sort). Probably because it was the first thing I read.
    If you click on a book in the list, you can see comments from some of the people who participated. They’re interesting. And you can leave comments, too.

  4. Not enough Chesterton.
    🙂
    But apart from that, it looks like an interesting list. And yes, rather surprising.

  5. No quarrel with their number 1 choice.

  6. Craig, You mean you like Augustine? Heavens.
    AMDG

  7. What else could I mean?

  8. I thought I’d commented on this, but apparently not. Very odd.

  9. My first thought was that the spam catcher had grabbed it, but it hasn’t. So…I don’t know.

  10. Craig. 😉

  11. I also have read about half of these. I suspect if this was a list made by a Catholic I would be around 80%…

  12. Robert Gotcher

    I’ve read 25 of them. I’ve read part of 14 more. As you move down the list it becomes less attractive. I mean, John Hick ain’t no Augustine or Newman. As much as I like Herbert’s poems, I’m not sure why he’s in the top ten. Seven Story Mountain isn’t Merton’s best. In Memory of Her should have been lower. I’m surprised Milbank is on the list. I like all the Newman!

  13. Robert Gotcher

    *Storey

  14. The fact that it’s an Anglican list has something to do with Herbert’s place, I imagine. And some of the other items as well. I wouldn’t put him that high, either, although I like that he’s on the list.

  15. Robert Gotcher

    I wonder what a Catholic list like this would be.

  16. There’s probably one out there somewhere. I’m surprised at how Catholic this one is. Surprised at the amount of Newman, for instance.
    Looking at it more carefully, I see my guess of roughly half is way over the mark. I probably haven’t really read more than 20 of them, though I’ve dabbled in others.

  17. This list is making me feel guilty. I’ve only finished 9, and I’ve started 34 more, several of them I have started to real 3 or 4 times. There’s very little in the last half that I have read–Diary of a Priest, which I’ve finished–some I’ve never heard of.
    AMDG

  18. Robert Gotcher

    Janet, don’t feel too guilty. I’ve only read as much as I have because I’m a theologian and have to read some of these and because I’m a great bookie and had to read some of the others.

  19. What makes me feel guilty is the ones I haven’t finished, many of which I really ought to finish.
    One annoying thing is that I bought Journal of a Soul at a used book store for a dollar years and years ago and never opened. When I went on retreat last month, the first Mass was on John XXIII’s feast day and the priest talked about how his spiritual director made him read that book in seminary, and he described what it was about, and said it had been formational for him. I gave it away about 6 months ago.
    AMDG

  20. Here is one attempt to do such a list for Catholics. Not a bad list at all (you can see the Table of Contents using the “Show Inside” feature) — except that Hans Kung makes an appearance there too!
    For the Anglican list, I’ve read (at least part of) 16 of the top 20, but only another 16 of the remaining 80.

  21. Craig, you are so good.
    AMDG

  22. Robert Gotcher

    Craig, That list skews in the “progressive” direction, esp. towards the end, but it has some really great ones. I could see using it as a basis for a book club. That and the Anglican One.
    How would y’all like to meet in Milwaukee once a month to discuss these books?

  23. Memphis is more central.
    AMDG

  24. Marianne

    For a list with no Hans Kung, there’s this one by Father John McCloskey of Opus Dei.
    Has some unusual ones, like Walker Percy’s Lost in the Cosmos and the novel Quo Vadis.

  25. Robert Gotcher

    Marianne,
    Why do you call Lost in the Cosmos unusual? I mean, it IS unusual, but it doesn’t seem out of place on a list of great Catholic books.
    Ooh! It has The Intellectual Life by A. G. Sertillanges! If I had only had that book early in my career!

  26. I may like the Anglican one better than the first Catholic one, the one Craig linked to. (The Liberation of the Laity–never heard of it but the title provokes eye-roll.) And the McCloskey one a little better than either. But the Anglican is the only one that has Four Quartets On the other hand, both the Catholic ones have Kristin Lavrandsdatter.
    Lost in the Cosmos might be my top choice for a Percy book to include on a list of this sort, because it lays out the questions so well and so entertainingly. It is probably an unusual choice, but that doesn’t mean it’s out of place.

  27. Marianne

    Maybe “unusual” wasn’t the right choice of word for Lost in the Cosmos. I’d first written “interesting”, but then, no, lots of interesting books on the list. I think I meant unusual in the sense of being an uncommon choice. And the book is sort of quirky, too. Or maybe just to me, since I found some of it confusing. At least I think I did; it’s been a long time since I read it.

  28. At first I thought I liked the Anglican list better, losing Lewis, Sayers, and Williams was a blow. But now, looking at the lower part of that book index I see we get Percy, Powers, Day, Tolkien, Undset, Houselander and Waugh. And for Graham Greene we have The End of the Affair instead of The Power and the Glory. I like PatG very well, but EotA is probably one of my top 5 novels, at least in the top 10. I’ve read a lot more of these.
    AMDG

  29. Sorry, sorry, sorry

  30. Robert Gotcher

    You can delete my posts. I was just trying to see if putting an /em or /i would turn it off. It didn’t.

  31. The only reason I messed up the italics like that was because you were doing blog housekeeping and I wanted to contribute something to clean up.
    AMDG

  32. Don’t know why your end tags didn’t fix it, Robert.
    Back to the subject of ads: I’ve removed the Sitemeter script, and would be interested to know whether the blog seems to load faster.

  33. Well heck, you may as well have just removed the original comment.

  34. ? Which is “the original”?

  35. It does seem to load faster, which surprises me — I’m at work and usually everything loads more slowly here.

  36. The one that I made with the italics in it. I’m just saying that the discussion about the italics completely buried my comment, which of course, may have been less than memorable anyway. 😉
    AMDG

  37. Pruning away the undergrowth only displayed the beauty of your comment more fully.

  38. But the undergrowth is still there.
    AMDG

  39. Ha. Well some of it, and this is some more.
    But thanks for your efforts.
    AMDG

  40. I read nearly all of them – with the proviso that only insane people would read the Summa Theologiae or the Church Dogmatics from cover to cover.

  41. I read a book by Michael Novak once where he said he had read the Summa three times. Draw your own conclusions.

  42. I like him, both personally and as a thinker. It was very important for me 25 years ago to read a magazine (Novak’s Crisis) and books which argued that a Catholic doesn’t have to be anti-liberal. I have met him maybe half a dozen times and he is always polite and friendly.

  43. Oh yeah, I didn’t really mean any personal putdown of him, just taking off from your remark about the Summa. I’ve never been that impressed by his writings in particular, but have always thought he & others (Neuhaus, Weigel) said some things that needed to be said at that time (25-35 years ago).

  44. “I read nearly all of them – with the proviso that only insane people would read the Summa Theologiae or the Church Dogmatics from cover to cover.”
    Heh!
    I like to read the Summa in bits as the need arises.

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