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 2017, which means it's time to review all the reading and listening I've done over the past calendar year. Last year, I set high-water marks in all categories (books, podcasts, comics, and scripts), while this year I fell short of my high scores in scripts and comics, but easily bested my top marks in books and podcasts... by a fairly considerable margin. Here's how 2016 breaks down:
FICTION 1000 Yards by Mark Dawson Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain Alien: Out of the Shadows by Tim Lebbon Altered Carbon by Richard K. Morgan American Demon Hunters by J. Thorn American Demon Hunters: Sacrifice by J. Thorn, et al Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery Anonymous Source, The by A.C. Fuller Art Forger, The by B.A. Shapiro Artemis by Andy Weir Bancroft Strategy, The by Robert Ludlum Brilliance by Marcus Sakey Bullet Rain by Robert Smallwood Buy A Bullett by Gregg Hurwitz Bypass Gemini by Joseph Lallo Calculating God by Robert J. Sawyer Camel Club, The by David Baldacci Cleaner, The by Mark Dawson Constitution by Nick Webb Darkness More Than Night, A by Michael Connelly Dead Key, The by D.M. Pulley Death Becomes Her by Michael Anderle Destiny Lost by M.D. Cooper Destroyer by Chris Fox Destroyer by Anna Carven Ember War, The by Richard Fox Emerald Storm (Rise of Empire, Book 2) by Michael J. Sullivan Eradication by Chris Fox Exiled by Chris Fox Fallback by David Archer First Ark, The by Chris Fox First Counsel, The by Brad Meltzer First Strike by Jack Paterson Fixer, The by T.E. Woods Force, The by Don Winslow Forever War, The by Joe Halderman Forgotten Room, The by Lincoln Child Geneva Decision, The by Seeley James Gone Bad by J.B. Turner Good Behavior by Blake Crouch Good Girl, The by Mary Kubica Gray Man, The by Mark Greaney Helix (Episode 1) by Nathan Farrugia Hellhole by Kevin J. Anderson & Brian Herbert Hero Born by Chris Fox Honky Tonk Kat by Karen Kijewski Honor's Flight by Lindsay Buroker Hundred Thousand Kingdoms, The by N.K. Jemisin Innocent, The by David Baldacci Invasion by Sean Platt & Johnny B. Truant L.A. Outlaws by Jefferson T. Parker Land: The Founding, The by Aleron Kong Legionnaire by Jason Anspach & Nick Cole Lies of Spies by Tim Tigner Life of Pi by Yann Martel Lines of the Devil by Zach Bohannon Lockdown by Sean Black Millionaires, The by Brad Meltzer Nice Dragons Finish Last by Rachel Aaron Ninefox Gambit by Yoon Ha Lee No Mere Zombie by Chris Fox No Such Thing As Werewolves by Chris Fox Nowhere Man, The by Gregg Hurwitz NPCs by Drew Hayes Nyphron Rising (Rise of Empire, Book 2) by Michael J. Sullivan On Basilisk Station by David Weber On Target by Mark Greaney Orphan X by Gregg Hurwitz Paper Money by Ken Follett Patriot's Betrayal, A by Andrew Clawson Phoenix Apostles, The by Lynn Sholes & Joe Moore Planetstrider by Chris Fox Provoked by Izzy Shows Pushing Brilliance by Tim Tigner Ransom River by Meg Gardner Raylan by Elmore Leonard Rewinder by Brett Battles Soon I Will Be Invincible by Austin Grossman Survivor, The by Gregg Hurwitz Tales From the Void by Chris Fox, et al. Tech Mage by Chris Fox Terran Gambit, The by Nick Webb Throne of Glass by Sarah J. Maas Timebound by Rysa Walker Torrent by Lindsay Buroker Vampires Don't Sparkle by Chris Fox Viridian Gate Online: Cataclysm by James Hunter Void Wraith by Chris Fox Void Wyrm by Chris fox Way of the Wolf, The by David Archer Winterbay Abbey by John Sladek & Davonna Juroi
NONFICTION 4-Hour Work Week, The by Tim Ferriss 5,000 Words Per Hour: Write Faster, Write Smarter by Chris Fox Art of Immersion: How the Digital Generation is Remaking Hollywood, Madison Avenue, and the Way We Tell Stories by Frank Rose Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream by Barack Obama Batman and Psychology: A Dark and Stormy Knight by Dennis O'Neill & Travis Langley Big Magic: Creative Living Beyond Fear by Elizabeth Gilbert Business for Authors: How to be an Author Entrepreneur by Joanna Penn Co-Writing a Book by J. Thorn & Joanna Penn Disaster Artist: My Life Inside The Room, the Greatest Bad Movie Ever Made, The by Greg Sestero Divine Direction: 7 Decisions That Will Change Your Life by Craig Groeschel Gather 'Round the Sound by Paulo Coelho God Has a Name by John Mark Comar How to Be a Bawse: A Guide to Conquering LIfe by Lilly Singh How to Make a Living with Your Writing by Joanna Penn Love Lives Here: Finding What You Need in a World Telling You What You Want by Maria Goff Nothing to Prove: Why We Can Stop Trying So Hard by Jennie Allen Of Mess and Moxie: Wrangling Delight Out of This Wild and Glorious Life by Jen Hatmaker Play With Fire: Discovering Fierce Faith, Unquenchable Passion, and a Life-Giving God by Biana Juarez Olthoff Reader Magnets: Build Your Author Platform and Sell More Books on Kindle by Nick Stephenson Six Figure Author: Using Data to Sell Books by Chris Fox Successful Author Mindset, The by Joanna Penn Surprised by Joy: The Shape of My Early Life by C.S. Lewis Talking as Fast as I Can: From Gilmore Girls to Gilmore Girls and Everything in Between by Lauren Graham Thanks, Obama: My Hopey Changey White House Years by David Litt Tools of Titans: The Tactics, Routines and Habits of Billionaires, Icons and World-Class Performers by Tim Ferriss What is the Bible? How an Ancient Library of Poems, Letters and Stories Can Transform the Way You Think by Rob Bell Why They Do It: Inside the Mind of the White-Collar Criminal by Eugene Soltes Write to Market: Deliver a Book That Sells by Chris Fox
For fiction, I highly recommend Gregg Hurwitz for thriller fans out there. His Orphan X book series is only two volumes at this point but already one of the best thrillers I've read in years. Blake Crouch's Letty Dobesh stories were also excellent. I've been on far more of a science fiction kick this year, though, and I read a lot of great stuff. Marcus Sakey's Brilliance was, well, pretty brilliant, and Andy Weir had a worthy follow-up to The Martian with his new book Artemis.. The Legionnaire series of books by Anspach & Cole is fantastic and something I'm really looking forward to continuing next year... and Chris Fox's many books, particularly his Tech Mage and Void Wraith series were worth reading for the way they blend genres.
For nonfiction, and speaking of Chris Fox, his write to market series of books are a fascinating look at how data and research can play into a writer's business plan. Lilly Singh and Jen Hatmaker had great books if you need to be uplifted and want a good laugh, but Elizabeth Gilbert's book on living a creative life was probably the best book I read all years... if not several years. For anyone who wants to be a writer, she gives great advice as someone who's had both incredible success and heartbreaking disappointment.
99% Invisible - 26 episodes
Amazon Secrets - 2 episodes
Bad Christian Podcast - 2 episodes
Black List Table Reads - 6 episodes
Business of Film - 6 episodes
Cinema Squad Podcast - 40 episodes
Creative Penn, The - 54 episodes
Daily Hope with Rick Warren - 2 episodes
Dave Bullis Podcast, The - 2 episodes
Dead Pilots Society - 16 episodes Ezra Klein Show, The - 22 episodes
Fifth Estate, The - 1 episode
Freakonomics - 44 episodes
How Story Works - 32 episodes
How Stuff Works - 10 episodes
Imaginary Worlds - 23 episodes Impact, The - 8 episodes
It's Been a Minute - 14 episodes
Kiss Me Quick - 12 episodes Lovett or Leave It - 44 episodes
Majority 54 - 7 episodes
Moment w/ Brian Koppelman - 3 episodes
My Dad Wrote A Porno - 3 episodes
Nerdist Podcast - 5 episodes
Nerdist Writer's Panel - 37 episodes
NPR Politics Podcast - 122 episodes
Planet Money - 61 episodes Pod Save America - 115 episodes
Pod Save the People - 11 episodes Pod Save the World - 49 episodes
Q&A, The - 6 episodes
Residual Income Podcast - 2 episodes
ROCKHARBOR Podcast - 4 episodes
Rocking Self Publishing Podcast - 11 episodes Sci-Fi & Fantasy Marketing Podcast - 50 episodes
Scriptnotes - 57 episodes
Sell More Books Show, The - 47 episodes Self-Publishing Formula - 74
Self-Publishing Podcast - 54 episodes
Slate Political Gabfest - 57 episodes
Story Grid - 8 episodes
Story Works Roundtable - 35 episodes
Stuff You Missed in History Class - 7 episodes
TED Radio Hour - 9 episodes
This Week In Marvel - 2 episodes
VOX Podcast - 57 episodes Weeds, The - 49 episodes With Friends Like These - 11 episodes
Women of Marvel - 1 episode
Writing Excuses - 53 episodes
With such a turbulent year in politics and world news, I listened to a lot of current events podcasts. The Crooked Media podcasts were all great for different reasons. The guys on Pod Save America and Lovett or Leave It were great about distilling down the issues and expressing the same concerns and frustrations I had; Pod Save the World was great about giving me a new perspective on world affairs; the other podcasts (Majority 54, Pod Save the People, With Friends Like These) were excellent about providing different perspectives on a variety of issues.
I also found quite a few new self-publishing podcasts that I really enjoyed. I'm still fascinated by the process of self-publishing but some of the longtime favorites of mine are starting to feel a little stale and out-of-touch with entry-level writers, so it was refreshing to find some new voices in the field.
Batman (2011) #1-7, 13-17
Civil War: Front Line #1-3 The Red Ten #9-10
Not a lot of comic reading from me this year, but they did finally publish the final two issues of The Red Ten so I was finally able to finish the series after almost three years of waiting for them to slowly trickle the issues out.
PRODUCED
Black Panther
Thor: Ragnarok (1st Draft)
Thor: Ragnarok (2nd Draft)
UNPRODUCED
Allah in the Family
Angry Angel (Pilot)
Bachelor Party (Pilot)
Big (Pilot)
C-Company (Pilot)
Caution to the Wind
Dogwood
Fat Girl Gets Revenge
Food Fight
Galaxy Fighter
Gauntlet of Phillip Montega, The
Hounds of House Reardon, The
Housewives, The (Pilot)
Jetpackula (Pilot)
Light Loafers
Lower End, The (Pilot)
Maggie's Dawn
Miss Christmas Pageant
My Cousin Thor (Pilot)
Promise, The
Rachel Back Gate
Robot Daughter (Pilot)
Rollerworld (Pilot)
Selznick's Folly
Starlight
Third and Last Meeting of the South Tampa Coral Reef Painting Committee
Time Upon a Once
Tuned (Pilot)
When in Rome
Women & Girls (Pilot)
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.