Logocentric (adj).Regarding words and language as a fundamental expression of an external reality (especially applied as a negative term to traditional Western thought by postmodernist critics).
Sometimes I just write whatever I feel like. Other times I respond to prompts, many taken from the following places:
I have always enjoyed the longer distance running and skiing. The Marathon in Summer Olympics and the 50km Mass Start in the Winter. My wife can't understand how I can watch the same race for several hours. But they are fascinating to me. I like the Downhill Slalom, Bobsled and Luge sports. Attending a Winter Olympics remains on my bucket list.
My favorite sporting events in the Winter Olympics are the Luge, Bobsled, Figure Skating and curling. Initially, I thought I would be bored with curling but I'm not. It's fascinating how they determine each glide's angle and potential score.
When my children were younger we built them a luge course, they loved it. We were lucky that winter to have lots of snow to build up the walls and with some help with pallets that we covered with snow, it kept them and the neighborhood kids busy until it warmed up and melted. I was a lot more at ease with the luge course than I was when they decided to try arial jumps off our house roof. Never a dull moment when you live in Maine.
I am reading ESV through the Bible this time. Like you, I've explored a bunch of translations. My church uses NIV but my women's Bible study group (part of the same church) varies based on what Bible study we're doing.
Hope you enjoy the Olympics! I agree that the every four year thing makes them feel more special.
I read the New American Bible, which is a Catholic Bible. (NABRE) They include Tobit, Judith, 1 & 2 Maccabees, which generally aren't included in other versions of the Bible. I would be curious to read an orthodox bible or the Ethiopian Bible as I hear they have differences as well.
As for the Olympics, I love the Winter Olympics. I'm just crossing my fingers I have time to watch!
In terms of the original texts the NASB has the best reputation among conservative scholars. It looks at more translations, has a sensible hierarchy of text selection and the best principles for approaching the translation task. It favors original texts when possible. The ESV and NKJV are on a similar level. The Net Bible gives the best overview of the discussions in its commentary. The NIV renders the original text to make it more readable. It is a more functional text which is why many churches use it but it is also less precise. Greek or Russian orthodox are more Septuagint orientated and there is a considerable amount of ethical or emotional rendering to the text.The disadvantage of the NASB is that it loses much of the Hebrew poetical style in its effort to be precise as this does not translate into the English
I'm very fortunate to have met some practicing and humble Christians. Truly humble people seek to serve, not attain power and influence. The actions of many Christians make me run the opposite way... as fast as I can.
In his book, Sit, Walk, Stand, Watchman Nee states: "Nothing has done greater damage to our Christian testimony than our trying to be right and demanding right of others. We become preoccupied with what is and what is not right. We ask ourselves,' Have we been justly or unjustly treated?' and we think thus to vindicate our actions. But that is not our standard. The whole question for us is one of crossbearing".
Jeff, this is an excellent book. Perhaps one for your reading list?
It's the end of 2020, which means it's time to review all the reading and listening I've done over the past calendar year. Here's how 2020 breaks down:
FICTION: SCI-FI/FANTASY Alien Prison Ship by Terrance Mulloy Apocalypse by Kyle West Arsenal by Jeffrey Haskell Axillon99 by Matthew S. Cox Balanced on the Blade's Edge by Lindsey Buroker Bionics, The by Alicia Michaels Blue Fall by B.B. Griffith Breakers of the Dawn by Zechariah Wahrer Caledonian Gambit, The by Dan Moren Cartwright's Cavaliers by Mark Wandrey Deadland Drifter by J.N. Chaney Death of Captain America by Larry Hama Depth by Lev AC Rosen Dying World by Chris Fox Eden Paradox, The by Barry Kirwan Emperor's Edge, The by Lindsay Buroker Escape from Virtual Island by John Lutz Forget Nothing by Jason Anspach Flash Gold by Lindsay Buroker Gates of Hell by J.F. Penn Glass and Gardens: Solarpunk Summers by Sarena Ulibarri Hard Luck Hank: Screw the Galaxy by Steven Campbell Hatchling by Chris Fox How to Defeat a Demon King in Ten Easy Steps by Andrew Rowe In Time For Revenge by Jasper T. Scott Interview with the Robot by Lee Bacon Junkyard Cats by Faith Hunter Last Call at the Nighshade Lounge by Paul Krueger Map of Shadows by J.F. Penn Memoirs of a Time Traveler by Doug Molitor Messengers, The by Lindsay Joelle Momentary Stasis by P.R. Adams Necrotech by Chris Fox Nevada Necromance by Joe Moe, et al. Never Hero, The by T. Ellery Hodges New Avengers: Breakout by Alisa Kwitney Nighthawks by Jeremy Flagg Other Worlds Than These by John Joseph Adams Peculiar, The by Stefan Bachmann Project Destiny by Justin Sloan Queen of Sidonia by Richard Fox Rebel Sword by Peter Bostrom Robot Uprisings by Daniel H. Wilson & John Joseph Adams Sol Arbiter by J.N. Chaney Sol Shall Rise by G.P. Hudson Star Wars: Thrawn by Timothy Zahn Stuck by Chris Grabenstein Three by Jay Posey Titanborn by Rhett C. Bruno Virtue of War by L.O. Addison Wings of Hope by Pippa DaCosta
FICTION: MYSTERY/THRILLER Alpha by Steve Konkoly Blood Ridge by D.S. Kane Clean Kill in Tokyo, A by Barry Eisler Dark Sky by Joel Canfield Driver, The by Hart Hanson Forgotten Room, The by Ann Stroup First Family, The by Michael Palmer Frame-Up, The by Meghan Scott Molin Getaway, The by Greer Hendricks Haunting of Hill House, The by Shirley Jackson Hidden by Rebecca Zanetti Innocent Justice by David Archer Into the Fire by Gregg Hurwitz Legion by Robert Swartwood Little Death in Dixie, A by Lisa Turner Midnight House by Alex Berenson Murder on Embassy Row by Margaret Truman Never-Open Desert Diner, The by James Anderson Never Say Spy by Diane Henders Shanghai Tang by Mick Bose St. Paul Conspiracy, The by Roger Stelljes To Die in Vienna by Kevin Wignall Truly Devious by Maureen Johnson
FICTION: OTHER Agent 355 by Marie Benedict In the Courts of the Sun by Brian D'Amato Pride and Prejudice and Zombies by Jane Austen and Seth Grahame-Smith
NONFICTION All You Can Ever Know: A Memoir by Nicole Chung Author Life, The by J. Thorn Authorpreneurship 101 by Jessica Leeann Born a Crime: Stories from a South African Childhood by Trevor Noah Dan Rather: Stories of a Lifetime by Dan Rather Fire Your Boss by Jonathan Green Get Published by Paul G. Brodie Happiness Project, The by Gretchen Rubin How to Make Money Writing Nonfiction Books by Marc Guberti How to Write Funny by Scott Dikkers Incomplete Book of Running, The by Peter Sagal King of Sting: The Story of Australia's Greatest Conman by Justin Armsden, et al. Level Up: Quests to Master Mindset, Overcome Procrastination, and Increase Productivity by Rochelle Melander Nice Try: Stories Stories of Best Intentions and Mixed Results by Josh Gondelman No-Drama Discipline by Daniel Siegel & Tina Bryson Nut Jobs: Cracking the Case by Marc Fennell On Speaking Well by Peggy Noonan One More Thing by B.J. Novak One With All The Writing Advice, The by Sean Platt & Johnny B. Truant Outsource Your Book by Alinka Rutkowska Own the Moment by Carl Lentz People's History of the United States by Howard Zinn Purpose-Driven Life, The by Rick Warren Science of Sci-Fi, The by Erin Macdonald Semicolon: The Past, Present, and Future of a Misunderstood Mark, The by Cecilia Watson Show, Don't Tell by Sandra Gerth Side Hustle: From Idea to Income in 27 Days by Chris Guillebeau Unbelievable by Katy Tur Upstairs at the White House: My Life with the First Ladies by J.B. West Worry Trick, The by David Carbonell Write A Book Now by Stefanie Newell Wrong End of the Table, The by Ayser Salman Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion Your First 1,000 Copies by Tim Grail
This year, I spent a lot of time clearing out my Kindle of all the impulse buys and discount books that I've picked up over the year. That basically meant a lot of mediocre stuff, a lot of which I didn't finish. There were a few high points, though, including Last Call at the Nighshade Lounge which was a fun urban fantasy adventure with a unique magic system, and Peter Sagal's Incomplete Book of Running which I found particularly endearing and more heartfelt than I anticipated.
Over the past five years, I've averaged reading about 100 books a year (108, to be exact), but this year I think I'm going to scale it back and focus on being more intentional with my reading. I'm not sure what my reading goal will be in terms of actual number of books because I have a lot of titles lined up that are longer and more complex than what I've typically been reading over the past five years, which means I may not be able to plow through them at quite so quick a pace. That said, I do have a fair amount of Kindle "fluff" left (around 60 titles), so I guess we'll just have to see where the reading muse takes me.
Bulletproof Screenwriting - 5 episodes
By the Book - 28 episodes
Canopy Church Podcast - 5 episodes
The Creative Penn Podcast - 39 episodes
Dead Pilots Society - 11 episodes
Dirt Cheap - 9 episodes
Dreampath Podcast - 1 episode
The Dungeoncast - 26 episodes The Ezra Klein Show - 71 episodes
Freakonomics - 21 episodes
Gaslit Nation - 3 episodes
Genius Recipes - 2 episodes
How Did This Get Made? - 4 episodes How I Built This - 9 episodes Imaginary Worlds - 21 episodes The Impact - 10 episodes
Impeachment Explained - 4 episodes
Indie Film Hustle - 1 episode
Lovett or Leave It - 48 episodes Pod Save America - 118 episodes
Pod Save the World - 51 episodes
The Q&A - 8 episodes
The Rewatchables - 31 episodes
Rubicon - 5 episodes
Scriptnotes - 34 episodes
The Self-Publishing Show - 36 episodes
The Sell More Books Show - 15 episodes
Six Figure Authors - 45 episodes Slate Political Gabfest - 62 episodes
The Story Studio Podcast - 12 episodes
Story Works Roundtable - 23 episodes
TED Radio Hour - 11 episodes Untitled Female Driven Podcast - 9 episodes Weeds, The - 97 episodes
What A Day - 234 episodes
The Wilderness - 7 episodes
Writer's Panel - 7 episodes
Writing Excuses - 36 episodes
Ironically, two of my favorite new podcasts didn't even make my end of year "favorite" () or "also really enjoyed" () list because I got tired of both of them pretty quickly. But By The Book (the hosts live out the advice of self-help books to the letter and then report back) and Dirt Cheap (dramatic reading and comedic analysis of bad pulp fiction from decades past) are great ideas for podcasts that were fun to follow along with for a time. Similar to the iconic My Dad Wrote A Porno podcast, they are clever ideas that just ended up getting a little old for me after several episodes. Pod Save America remains probably my favorite podcast which kept me sane during this crazy election year, and as always, the Ezra Klein Show and The Weeds were incredible resources for deep dives on a variety of topics.
Like with books, next year I'm going to scale back on my podcasts. There are several on the list this year that I'm starting to tire of, particularly all the self-publishing stuff. I think I'm hitting a critical mass where I don't feel like I'm learning as much as am just kind of going through the motions listening, so that's probably a good time to re-evaluate the time I spend listening to them.
Black Cat (2019) #1-#3 Hellions (2020) #1-#3 X-Men/Fantastic Four (2020) #1
I didn't read many comics this year, although I think I'm also forgetting to include all the various ones that I skimmed through during the writing credit arbitration on the upcoming Black Widow feature film. My goal for 2021 is actually to read more comics because I really enjoy them and I've been missing reading them over the past few years.
UNPRODUCED Aether Arab Spring Bulletproof Code 5 Edge of Sanity Eight Elsewhere Eternally Yours Family Movie Night Feel So Good Into the Darkness Judas Curse Life After Harley The Mayor of Shark City Miraloma Park Most Likely Neurotransmission Problem Child Prom Night Blitz Revival Scratch Superman Training Room Untitled Vampire Feature Widow
I'm not putting any favorites or highly recommended on the script section of my reading list because a lot of the writers on this list are my friends and/or colleagues and I don't want to play favorites with my friends and business associates.