Tuesday, 23 December 23 Dec

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“Time we all made sacrifices”

Dean-elect Phillip Jensen has also been appointed Director of Training Ministry and Development - to recruit and train 11,000 new pastors. Full details are still being finalised but you can read the story so far here, and read the media release about his appointment as Dean here.

Family Matters

One of the six novels to be shortlisted for the 2002 Booker prize is Rohinton Mistry's Family Matters. The Indian-born author lives in Canada, but his writing is of his birthplace.

Bittersweet: The Story of Sugar

One of the growth markets in non-fiction has been the new genre of macro history. Histories of salt, the colour mauve and the Oxford English Dictionary have become bestsellers. Now Fermat's theorem, modern geology and the history of the calendar (my favourite, by David Ewing Duncan) are accessible to ordinary people.

Miracle at St Anna

It is a bitter irony that at the same time black Americans were being denied civil rights and were enduring extreme racial hatred at the hands of their countrymen, they were compelled to fight and die for their country.

How to Be Good

Goodness isn't a quality widely promoted in our culture. Since western society succumbed to advertising, we've become convinced we're important, significant and deserving of whatever we desire whenever we desire it.

Death in Holy Orders

After years of recommendations, I finally acquainted myself first-hand with the work of PD James, courtesy of a recent birthday gift of her new book, Death in Holy Orders. After being introduced to James through this latest offering, I can't wait to come back for more.

Anil’s Ghost

Eight years after the sweeping eloquence of The English Patient won the Booker Prize and captured the imagination of filmmaker Anthony Minghella, Michael Ondaatje has published another lyrical tale of human dislocation and betrayal.

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