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    • rothesay vineyard - sunday 17th june
      "defeating the principalities and powers - practical and mundane spiritual warfare"
    • jesuit conference - april 10th-12th 2007
      hayes conference centre, derby, uk speaking on social justice and conflict resolution (particularly in the context of northern ireland) - what should we as christians be doing? trying to deconstruct the 'us' and 'them' boxes to stagger closer to reconciliation.

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    • Walter Wink: Naming the Powers: Language of Power in the New Testament (The Powers : Volume One)

      Walter Wink: Naming the Powers: Language of Power in the New Testament (The Powers : Volume One)
      i like wink a lot. anyone who can write an essay entitled "how i got snagged by the seat of my pants while reading the bible" is an instant hit in my book. couple this with an astute academic mind and a sincere desire to discover what it means to follow god in this generation and the man rises to virtual sainthood! this is the first in wink's series on the principalities and "powers" mentioned throughout the bible. it is necessarily the most academic of the three as it sets the groundwork for the subsequent conclusions he pulls out on the other two books. but he writes well and covers the technical ground well. this is an important book (particularly for the evangelical church i feel). wink's central thesis is that both the evangelical tradition (in believing the 'powers' to be wholly other-worldly, AND the liberation theology tradition (in locating the powers solely in this present world) are mistaken. both are challenged here - though his writing will raise the heckles of conservative evangelicals moreso than the liberationists i think. this is a welcome surefire antidote to the inane and socially irresponsible teaching that spiritual warfare is conducted solely (or even mostly) on one's knees, rather than on the picket line, in the workplace, in the voting booth, in the day-to-day of normal living. read it and buy an extra copy for your pastor! (***)

    • David Bodanis: E=mc2: A Biography of the World's Most Famous Equation

      David Bodanis: E=mc2: A Biography of the World's Most Famous Equation
      an immensely readable account of the equation most people are likely to be able to quote but few can explain. bodanis takes each element in the equation and tells the tale of the people responsible for the major discoveries in that area to show upon whose shoulders einstein stood and what the consequences for the 20th and 21st centuries and beyond have been and are. don't be put off by the scientific nature of the subject matter, it really is written with the non-expert in mind. neat appendices tucked away at the back of the book and a web-site are where those wanting more detail are directed so as not to intimidate or overwhelm the masses. it really does read more like a social commentary/biography than a science book. enlightening and light. a rare combination. nice. (****)

    • Peter Rollins: How (Not) to Speak of God

      Peter Rollins: How (Not) to Speak of God
      How_not_to_speak_of_god_cover how (not) to speak of god is an important and beautiful book. we are living in a fractured time. we do not yet know what we are let alone where we are going other than (in rollins’ words) “away-from-here.” we are defined by what we are not (postmodern) and by the fact that we are moving, or emerging, but not yet by what we are or by any final destination. it’s easy to lose hope in this generation. all the enlightenment promises of certainty, provability and universal Truth now look jaded in the cold and often terrifying light of postmodern philosophical thought. into this arena steps my good friend, peter rollins and he is like a breath of fresh air. rollins is uniquely positioned to write this book of popular philosophical a/theology. he hails from the evangelical/charismatic tradition, so he is perfectly placed to offer a sensitive critique to that community; he has a doctorate in philosophy, so he is well-versed in nietzsche, jaques derrida, meister eckhart, jean-luc marion, hans-georg gadamer and so on and is able to appropritate their insights and criticisms into his and our theology; he has been a youth-worker and a conference speaker, so he has well-honed gifts in communication and is adept at making the profound intelligible to ordinary plebs like you and me; and he is actively involved in leadership of a christian community, so these issues are not theoretical to him, but deeply personal and practical. if you’ve heard pete speak you’ll know how passionate he is about these issues. if you have heard him on more than one occasion, then to be honest there will be little new here for you. but that is a long way from saying that the book is not worth buying and reading. i read my copy in one sitting and will no doubt return to it again and again. as i do with every book i read this with a pen and a yellow highlighter in hand so as to be able to remember the important bits and note where i disagreed or was provoked to think about something. it’s now with some sense of dismay that i flick through a book where practically every page has a radioactive glow to it! one of pete's chief gifts is in analogy and parable. how sad it is that jesus’ parables no longer take our breath away. truly great parables always have the audience nodding their heads as the story starts, thinking they know the ending right from the get-go only to be slapped in the face and completely offended by the shocking twist-in-the-tale. rollins stories are clever, poignant, offensive and often very moving. this is not a book of dull theology. this is a book of poetry. rollins’ concern is that people often ask him what he believes but never how he believes. in his view belief should always be transformative “the reversal from ‘right belief’ to ‘believing in the right way’ is in no way a move to some binary opposite of the first (for the opposite of right belief is simply wrong belief); rather, it is a way of transcending the binary altogether. thus orthodoxy is no longer (mis)understood as the opposite of heresy but rather is understood as a term that signals a way of being in the world rather than a means of believing things about the world… it is an approach which emphasises the priority of love: not as something which stands opposed to the knowledge of god, but, more radically still, as knowledge of god… orthodoxy, as believing in the right way, as bringing love to the world around us and within us … that will cost us everything. for to live by that sword, as we all know, is to die by it.” (pg 3.) if you find yourself agreeing with everything rollins says here, he’d probably say himself that you’re not reading carefully enough. this is a book to rock our comfortable boat, to provoke thought, to engage and begin a conversation with the reader. don’t read this if your theology is rock-solid and water-tight, this book will either shatter that faith completely or make you want to crucify the author as a heretic! i guess my only criticism of this book is that it’s left me hungry for more. i wish it had been two books rather than one. the first half of the book is the argument/discussion/theory; the second a series of ten liturgies, used by the ikon community in belfast to attempt to outwork the implications of living for christ today. liturgy needs to be experienced/said/shared to be truly effective. i want more of the thought-provoking insight contained in the first half. roll on book number two. i’m concerned that this review doesn’t do justice to the book. rollins is a much better communicator than i am. his words are much more poetic than mine. if i’ve made it sound dull, philosophical and high-brow i’ve misled you. if you think this is another book of wishy-washy new-age theology again that’s probably my fault, for nothing could be further from the truth. read this book and if you ever get the opportunity, go and listen to this humble pilgrim. it sounds like i’m on his payroll. to be honest i struggle with much of rollin’s insight and thought. as paul tillich points out, “most human beings of course are not able to stand the message of the shaking of the foundations. they reject and attack the prophetic minds, not because they really disagree with them, but because they sense the truth of their words and cannot receive it.” i may disagree with his thinking at times (though I fear he is right more than i like to admit) but his commitment to and love for god are never in question. this book is a call to love god and love people. sit up church. the voice of one calling “in the desert prepare the way of the lord.” there is a transformative message here for those who have ears to hear. (*****)

    • Bruce Ellis Benson: Graven Ideologies: Nietzche, Derrida & Marion on Modern Idolatry

      Bruce Ellis Benson: Graven Ideologies: Nietzche, Derrida & Marion on Modern Idolatry
      ah what a welcome book! at last an evangelical who actually understands and takes seriously what nietzsche, derrida and marion (as well as many others such as husserl, heidegger, leotard, gadamer...) say. i'm so tired of reading christians, who really ought to know better, wailing a lament for a non-existent time past when everyone 'knew' the Truth, God could be proved and placed in a little rational box, and everyone knew right from wrong. these writers herald deconstructionism and phenomenology as simple relativism leading to inevitable nihilism; they set postmodern philosophy up as a straw man, astonishing (and sedating) us with their intellectual prowess, as they proceed to scare the big, bad, postmodern bogeyman away. benson points out that not only is this bogeyman not going anywhere fast, but he should be welcomed as a friend.

      foundationalism is dead and gone - everyone (with the possible exception of the christian writers referred to above) knows this. the enlightenment deceived us. rather than nietzsche being the nihilist, benson points out that he simply pointed out the inevitable nihilism which results from modernism, and the christian morality which ties itself too closely with it.

      now that we know that there is no foundation for knowledge (and never has been) which cannot be undermined somehow, benson forces the evangelical church to sit up and ask, 'what now?' here we find help in surprising places (at least for some). benson shows how the three thinkers in his title offer us some possible paths through this crisis.

      his writing is clear and engaging and one quickly realises that this is somone who has read beyond the flycover of these authors - he has grappled with their thought at length. this would be a great first introduction to these philosophical greats, and really ought to be read by every thinking christian to see how we in the church ought to 'be' in our time.

      brilliant. go. read.

      now.

      that is all. (*****)

    • Stanley J. Grenz: Renewing the Center: Evangelical Theology in a Post-Theological Era

      Stanley J. Grenz: Renewing the Center: Evangelical Theology in a Post-Theological Era
      stan grenz died in march 2005. his voice will be much missed in the contemporary debate within evangelicalism. although holding on to (too?) much traditional evangelical orthodoxy, grenz argues that evangelicals harken back to enlightenment principles (such as decartes' foundational view of epistemology) rather than facing up to the realities of the current thinking and new philosophical discoveries. this book is useful again as it addresses evangelicals in their own terms. no evangelical will be alienated by this book, but will find themselves gently nudged leftwards. therein lies my only criticism: the evangelical church needs dragged kicking and screaming and i wonder if this nudge is too subtle to really do the job. (***)

    • carl raschke: the next reformation: why evangelicals must embrace postmodernity

      carl raschke: the next reformation: why evangelicals must embrace postmodernity
      raschke writes from within the evangelical community. he writes with academic acumen and passion - a rare combination. this book is a really great introduction to the genuine postmodern debate, rather than the characature or straw man often presented in evangelical circles. raschke neither demonises nor lionises postmodernity, but simply shows the opportunities now facing church as a result of this new zeitgeist. rather than ignoring or rejecting culture outright, the church must realise that culture is amoral - available for appropriation and shaping - NOT immoral. that being the case, raschke is unrelenting in revealing just how completely the church has bought in to (or sold out to) modernity. the new challanges postmodernity presents us with as christians cannot be disregarded any longer. fore-warned is fore-armed. this book is apposite counsel. agree or disagree with raschke, he will not be easily dismissed. he is too briefly dismissive of the radical orthodoxy movement and his last couple of chapters are less rigorous and academic than the rest - he seems to come close to suggesting that the charismatic movement is the ideal representation of postmodern church. this could have been remedied by more rigorous editing as it is obvious they would be better suited to a more testimonial-type book. the rest, however, is excellent. (****)

    • E.P. Sanders: Paul: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introduction S.)

      E.P. Sanders: Paul: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introduction S.)
      this is a lovely series of books - beautifully simple presentation. this one is a reprint of sanders earlier "paul" (1971). he single-handedly changed the way the apostle paul is studied in theology - reponsible for the so-called "new perspective on paul". this is a very readable and enjoyable introduction to the most important christian theologian of all time. whether you've studied theology or not this tiny little book will whet your appetite for more! while you're at it buy a copy for your pastor/minister/priest. easy to fit in your pocket and read in a couple of hours on the train. (****)

    • John Caputo: On Religion (Thinking in Action S.)

      John Caputo: On Religion (Thinking in Action S.)
      ok so jack caputo's a total heretic. tell him something he doesn't know! this book is beautiful. caputo is an inspirational writer. his most mundane prose still rings with a poetry that puts most authors (never mind theologians!) to shame. his thoughts are always challenging (especially to those of an evangelical persuasion) but this is postmodern theology at its best. you don't have to believe everything he says to appreciate the beauty of his thinking. highly recommended. (****)

    • James D. G. Dunn: A New Perspective on Jesus: What the Quest for the Historical Jesus Missed (Acadia Studies in Bible and Theology)

      James D. G. Dunn: A New Perspective on Jesus: What the Quest for the Historical Jesus Missed (Acadia Studies in Bible and Theology)
      a genuinely fresh insight. james dunn's book attempts to do for jesus what he has previously attempted to do for paul - get back to the original. traditionally trying to get back to the 'real' jesus results in 'the jesus seminar' type approach - religating anything which smacks of the supernatural to get back to 'the historical jesus.' dunn argues tis approach is doomed to fail; that the ONLY record we have of jesus is that written through the eyes of faith. jesus' disciples talked about him, wrote about him, followed him BECAUSE they believed he was the messiah. the 'historical' jesus is therefore synonymous with the christ of faith. wonderful insight. easy to read and thoroughly engaging. a great counter to post-liberal scholarship. a valuable voice in the continuing debate over the nature and identity of jesus. (****)

    • Alain Badiou: Saint Paul: The Foundation of Universalism (Cultural Memory in the Present)

      Alain Badiou: Saint Paul: The Foundation of Universalism (Cultural Memory in the Present)
      an interesting find this one: an atheist writing on paul! now before you turn away in disdain, he's got some really interesting and profound insight. it's only 128 pages so it's not going to suck up your entire life to take some time looking it over. he argues that paul sees the world in terms of jews and greeks who look to prophets and philosophers respectively as sources of authority. badiou argues that paul is able to appeal for universal acceptance of the truths he proclaims by appealing to apostolic authority in opposition to jewish and greek authority figures. interesting, challenging and insightful. (****)

    • ed. Merold Westphal: Postmodern Philosophy and Christian Thought
      i liike westphal. this book is clear and challenging and includes many diverse responses to postmodernist thought. there is no doubt at all that we are moving beyond modernism yet (as with most things) the church has been slow to respond. this reader, although academic, is very approachable and clearly written. Contributors include: Steven Bouma-Prediger, John D. Caputo, George Connell, Andrew J. Dell'Olio, Garrett Green, Lee Hardy, Brian D. Ingraffia, Walter Lowe, Jean-Luc Marion, Gary Percesepe, Merold Westphal, W. Jay Wood, Norman Wirzba, and Edith Wyschogrod. if there's not someone in that group who gets under your skin and makes you itchy for more, you're just not trying! (****)
    • Brian D. McLaren: A Generous Orthodoxy: Why I Am a Missional, Evangelical, Post/Protestant, Liberal/Conservative, Mystical/Poetic, Biblical, Charismatic/Contemplative, Fundamentalist/Calvinist, Anabaptist/Anglican, Methodist, Catholic, Green, Incarnational, Depressed-yet-Hopeful, Emergent, Unfinished CHRISTIAN

      Brian D. McLaren: A Generous Orthodoxy: Why I Am a Missional, Evangelical, Post/Protestant, Liberal/Conservative, Mystical/Poetic, Biblical, Charismatic/Contemplative, Fundamentalist/Calvinist, Anabaptist/Anglican, Methodist, Catholic, Green, Incarnational, Depressed-yet-Hopeful, Emergent, Unfinished CHRISTIAN
      What a breath of fresh air Brian McLaren is. He's another one like Jimmy Dunn who encourages me to stay within the evangelical church. he's DELIBERATELY provocative and abstruse to encourage and open up discussion rather than close it down (a point many of his detractors seem to forget!) He tries to take the best from the many traditions within Christendom while generously overlooking their weaknesses. of course i don't agree with all he says. but of course i've never found an author with whom i totally agree. How dull if i did! that's what makes them thought-provoking and challenging to me! fresh and inspiring. (*****)

    • D. A. Carson: Becoming Conversant with the Emerging Church : Understanding a Movement and Its Implications

      D. A. Carson: Becoming Conversant with the Emerging Church : Understanding a Movement and Its Implications
      ok so it's carson so you prety much know from the outset where he's coming from. I'm fascinated by the emerging church movement (no doubt you'll read more and more about it on this site.) The biggest criticism i have of the it is that often it's a movement in search of a theology. although carson critiques the movement from the right he gives a more sympathetic hearing to emerging church than you might think. it's certainly a good book to introduce mainstream to conservative evangelicals to the opportunities (as well as what carson sees as some pitfalls) presented by living in our times. (***)

    • G.K. Chesterton: Orthodoxy

      G.K. Chesterton: Orthodoxy
      what do you mean you haven't read this???!!! Stop wasting your time on the internet and GET THIS BOOK!!! I first read this book 15 years ago but i think it's only now that i'm appreciating the sheer genius of the man! If anyone can read chapter 4 'The Ethics of Elfland' without a huge smile on their face i'll eat ... well at least a donut on your behalf!! Truly postmodern apologetics at it's best. Chesterton argues persuasivley that the MOST real and factual things we know do not come through science or mathematics but fairy tales. GENIUS!!! (*****)

    • Leonard Sweet: Church in Emerging Culture: Five Perspectives

      Leonard Sweet: Church in Emerging Culture: Five Perspectives
      Another book that gives me hope. The Church in general and the evangelical church in particular seems hell-bent on ignoring culture at best or, in the scant attention it does pay, seems to be focused soley on denouncing rather than on understanding and assimilating where appropriate. This book is a good popular attempt to support a dialogue within the evangelical church on various options for progress. The foramat of this book is also novel and interesting. Each of the authors writes their owb chapters (coming from very disparate theological stances within evangelicalism) which are interspersed in grayscale with supportive or argumentative responses from the other authors. [Not really sure i'm communicating that well. Take a wee look at the book and you'll instantly understand what i'm talking about.] The overall impression becomes one of an emerging conversation and discussion rather than a univocular polemic. This isn't an academic book (i mean that in a good way!) so definitely pick it up and give it a go. (****)

    • Anthony C. Thiselton: The First Epistle to the Corinthians (New International Greek Testament Commentary Series)

      Anthony C. Thiselton: The First Epistle to the Corinthians (New International Greek Testament Commentary Series)
      Well it's not exactly a quick read weighing in at an astounding 1480 pages but this commentary is EXCELLENT. What can i say. I've had the privilege of being taught by Anthony. He's a legend. Reading Anthony is like reading EVERYONE who's ever said ANYTHING theological about 1st Corinthians. It's easy to become overwhelmed with the sheer enormity of the research this volume represents, but Anthony's style is always fresh and engaging. He gives his own translation from the Greek and then gives lucid and (IMHO) balanced comment on the various positions that have been taken on this letter while not hesitating to nail his own colours to the mast. This is highly recommended for anyone who has an interest in hermeneutics or Pauline theology in general or 1st Corinthians in particular. (*****)

    • James Dunn: The Theology of Paul the Apostle

      James Dunn: The Theology of Paul the Apostle
      jimmy dunn's a bit of a star. he's one of the authors that keeps me calling myself an evangelical. if there's room for the likes of him there's room for me. his writing is easy to read, scholarly and engaging - an unusual mix! add to this dunn's ability to take on board the latest theological discoveries on Paul without losing the wonder of the salvation Paul himself seeks to describe and proclaim and you've got a great theology text. (****)

    • Bible & Culture Collective: The Postmodern Bible

      Bible & Culture Collective: The Postmodern Bible
      an interesting collection of essays on various approaches adopted by postmodern theologians to biblical criticism - including reader-response, deconstructionalist and a host of others. (***)

    sites to see

    • atto :: helloatto.com
      this is the site of my good friends pete and heather. you've just gotta take a wee look. they're doing some really lovely things in visual communication. their main focus at the moment is on interactive children's books which are really quite delicious. pete worked for me when madministries was a thing. he made me look good. the site's still there (www.madministries.com) if you want to go see though mad* has expired long ago and is no more. everything that looks lovely here, from web design to posters for cheap date all originated in his wee head. how clever!
    • emergingchurch.info : a touching place for the emerging church
      this is a place which intrigues me. you'll be challenged, provoked, infuriated and hopefully enlightened (maybe even altered?!) especially check out pete rollins wee interview at http://www.emergingchurch.info/stories/cafe/peterollins/index.htm. nice.
    • ikon - belfast
      a rare and beautiful thing: an emerging church with thought and theology behind it! the founding guy behind it, pete rollins (philosopher/theologian/prophet/guru/teller of tales) is a good friend of mine. i miss seeing him more regularly now we live over in chester but i don't think there's anyone in my life who challenges my thinking more than pete. he's probably the smartest person i've met but isn't totally arsey with it - another rarity! we disagree frequently and vigorously but pete has an integrity linking his theology to his life which means he is always worth listening to and learning from. he says people ask too often what he believes but rarely want to know 'how' he believes; how his belief alters him, betters him, makes him more like jesus. in this vein i think pete believes well.
    • madministries.com
      well the site may look a little outdated now but back in the day it was way ahead of the field thanks to the genius of pete kerr. what's more important is the content. i founded mad* in 1999 and worked for it for three very happy years before moving over to Chester. read some of the testimonies of people who where impacted by this ministry. it was such a privelege to be involved. hopefully Fake will take things in a new and even more exciting direction.
    • Third Way Magazine
      i've subscribed to Third Way for over a decade now. every issue there'll be at least one article which will cause you to think. the only christian magazine in the uk worth handing over your hard-earned cash for. essential reading!
    • wee alli's page
      this is the page of my beautiful, smart wee wife alli, with all her thoughts and musings on life and stuff. click constantly on it as she's much more faithful at updating than i am! o and she's nice.
    • Welcome to Emergent Village
      it was brian mclaren who first switched me on to this project. come and be.

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    city life - je me souviens!

    IMG_1955 it feels great to be back on the road. we’re travelling the 1500km to guelph, ontario for the wedding of alli’s great aunt pearl to ted. pearl is in her 70s (never tell a lady’s exact age!) and has more energy than i do. pearl’s life hasn’t been the easiest and now she’s fallen in love with a guy who treats her like she’s a princess. it’s a little fairy tale and we’re going to help her celebrate.

    the reids (alli’s vast clan) need little excuse for a get-together and a party and so the wedding will be hiving with cousins, uncles, nieces and the like who have flown in from all over the place. we’re most excited about seeing alli’s dad and his wife noreen who are coming to stay with us for a couple of weeks after the party dies down - there could well be snow on the ground by then!

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    john mcadam (1756 - 1836) we salute you!

    Dsc_1319 well we made it back to civilization! we ended up traveling over 1000km (600 miles) on that dirt road! some parts of it were pretty scary as we trawled through deep gravel with the car fish-tailing all over the place and i must be honest and say that i've never been so thankful to see a fully tarmaced road as i was at the end of that excursion!

    all in all we covered 6000km on this little trip to newfoundland and back - quite a distance for 19 days of driving. but the whole thing was well worth it. newfoundland and labrador is definitely a must-see province. every bend uncovers a new breath-taking vista, especially on the coastal roads. everywhere there feels little altered from what it must have been like a century or more ago.

    Dsc_1336 one myth to bust: ever since we arrived in vancouver over a year ago people (who had never been) were telling us that we had to go see newfoundland and labrador. there is a genuine inter-provincial rivalry right across canada, with each one vying for prominence - this province is the most beautiful, the most wealthy, the most filled with natural resources, the biggest, the quaintest, the most resplendent, the most neglected or over-looked... on and on it goes. the bizarre thing is that, in our experience, everyone, from coast to coast, agrees that newfoundland and labrador has the friendliest people in the country. you'll be walking down the streets of st. john's and you'll bump into complete strangers who'll invite you to come stay with them after only talking for a couple of minutes. to be honest, having been there, we'd have to dissent from this majority position.

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    serendipitous meetings

    Dsc_1269 so we made it through to cartright on the first part of the trans-labrador highway. the road wasn’t all that scary but was spectacularly remote and we saw another bear – this time, a young one, up close and thrillingly personal!

    only two generations ago cartwright was the biggest whaling centre in north america. much has changed since those heady days of plenty. now cartwright is a poor, stripped out shell of a town with a skeletal population holding on to its place on the map only because it is the only place from which one can get a ferry to happy valley–goose bay to continue eastwards to the rest of labrador and québec. the town is renowned more for the black flies which infest it for the greater part of the short summer than for the all-but-extinct fishing industry on which it was founded.

    Dsc_1292 and here we are stuck. we arrive on friday. the ferry leaves on saturdays and mondays and we’ve journeyed in hope of catching the saturday sailing. we have a reservation for monday but have made better time than we thought and now the thought of having to spend three full days in this dead-end settlement fills us with something of a sense of dread. so, we get up at 7:30am to queue for the ticket office with opens at 9am in order to get our names onto a standby list. we won’t know till 5pm whether we’ve made the cut or not.

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    homeland - new found

    Dsc_1042it took us a while, but we’ve now been to every province in the amazing land that is canada. for the  past two weeks we’ve had the privilege of travelling the length and breadth of the island of newfoundland and are, just now, on the ferry bound for the mainland of labrador.

    so much here gleams with the faintly familiar; everywhere we are reminded of ireland. it is strange that in travelling coast to coast in this elephantine country there is little to distinguish accents from one province to the next, while back in ireland i can often tell where a person has been brought up within 10 miles. the countrywide uniformity changes slightly in the maritimes where sentences are often marked and asserted with a nod of the head and an intake of breath, but it really is only in newfoundland that the accent is unmistakeably unique. often it’s more like being in cork than north america, so thick is the brogue!

    Dsc_1004_2 the only reason the accent can have survived along with so much irish tradition, music and myth is the extreme remoteness of this land. we’ve covered over 3000 kms in getting here and around. it’s july, yet many days the temperatures hover just into double digits and in a couple of months the snows and the long, long winter will set in. even while we’ve been here we narrowly missed a tropical storm which caused many millions of dollars worth of damage, leaving many homes ruined and roads impassable.

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    starlight express (sic)

    Img_5649 so we finally got on board the coast starlight, overladen with baggage. fortunately for us, the train is characteristically late (only two hours so far in its journey from seattle) so we embark at the wholly respectable time of 11am. trains are always interesting; tiny microcosms of society and culture; a meeting-point for disparate and strangely wonderful individuals, and this train is no different.  i’m silent party to dozens of conversations; the participants knowingly ignorant of my eaves-dropping.

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    the rock

    Img_5395 alcatraz is a paradoxical place. situated in the middle of the beautiful san francisco bay, only a mile from the shore, the island boasts stunning panoramic views of the city and of both the bay and the golden gate bridges. yet this island idyll now epitomises hell on earth.

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    soaked to the skin in 'sunny' san fran

    Img_5441 i realise that by calling our present locale ‘san fran’ i’ve already alienated my entire west coast readership (presently hovering between one and two!) a equally unforgiveable faux pas would be to refer in any way to ‘frisco’ (though i blame otis reading for that one) apparently only ‘san francisco’ will do. so here we are on the streets of san francisco, made famous by a million and one movies, probably most notably, steve mcqueen’s incredible car chase in bullitt (he claimed to have done all his own driving!). this is the city of trams and cable cars where the streets are pitched at almost impossible angles; the city paradoxically synonymous with alcatraz and san quentin, and gay pride. it is home to the largest chinese population outside of china, a large number of  vietnamese people and so many hispanics that in some areas english has been completely usurped by spanish as first language of choice.

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    west coast megalomania and un/natural relations

    Img_5204 once out of death valley we head ever westward through verdant rolling hills, more reminiscent of the cotswolds than anything ‘american’. we hurry through a chain of ugly industrial towns which runs like a slick through otherwise stunning landscape, till we finally burst onto the pacific coast again. being the movie geeks that we are, we make a pilgrimage to hearst castle, built by the newspaper mogul william randolf hearst who is immortalised by association with orson wells’ derogatory masterpiece, citizen kane.

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    death valley

       

    area 51 - the truth is out there!

    Img_4986 travelling through the glorious mountains of utah is amazing. the snows cover the mountains and whisper across the road in drifts. Img_4985one of the roads we have to take climbs to 10,000 feet, blisteringly cold and close to lethal to travel, but crisply beautiful nonetheless. we pass frozen rivers and lakes and clear cobalt skies fade through vivid purples and pinks to almost perfect black bar the brilliant white harvest moon which shines out like god's flashlight.

    utah has more national parks and fewer roads than any other state, making it a haven for wilderness-hunters like us. there are places here hardly footprinted and rarely seen. we can only skirt the border because the caustic cold threathens to sear the very flesh off our bones in our little van, and so we can only begin to appreciate something of utah's grandeur before we are racing through nevada on our way to ufo-central and the hyper-mysterious area 51.

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    the biggest hole on earth!

    Img_4860_1ok, this is where our camera and our vocabulary prove utterly inadequate. if you ask travellers for a list of 'places you must see before you die' the grand canyon almost invariably figures somewhere in it. the problem is that many of the places cited are  somewhat anticlimatic in actuality. this is one of the few which lives up to, and surpasses, all possible superlatives and expectations.

    Img_4838 the canyon is 277 miles long, 1.25 miles deep and 12 miles across at its widest point. formed by a combination of techtonic plate-shift and erosion by the silt-full colorado river, this great hole in the ground really has to be seen to be believed. it is truly epic.

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    yea though i walk through the valley... thou art with me.

    Img_4773john ford found this epic scenery ideal for many of his most famous westerns (such as stagecoach and the searchers). it was here that marion morrison became john wayne. Img_4801clint eastwood's nose-bleed inducing brush with death in the eiger sanction was filmed here also as were many many other movies (back to the future 3 to name only one). this is monument valley, on the arizona/utah border and the scenery it offers has become synonymous with the wild west in the minds of movie-goers world-wide.

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    ghosts of the ancestors

    Img_4531 so it's been unbelievably cold here. not good news when you're sleeping in a van! we woke up before sunrise this morning with ice on the inside of all the windows. a couple of nights ago we checked in to the palace hotel in silver city, the place where billy the kid spent most of his youth and, according to the legend) killed his first man at the age of 12.

    Img_4537it's been a welcome luxury having a shower in the mornings and fresh sheets to sleep in. rejuvenations coffee shop provides a mellow oasis for us to recoup our energies and formulate a plan.

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    seduced by the wild wild west

    Img_4455driving west is like drinking a glass of water on a hot day. after the claustrophobic east, where everyone lives cheek-by-jowl, we find we can finally breathe again in the vast expanses of widerness which stretch into immeasurable horizons whichever way we turn. Img_4385not since we left our beloved canada have we felt this sense of liberation and euphoria at the landscape around us. almost every turn is breath-taking in its own way.

    we were made for this landscape (or, as my anthropocentric christian worldview prefers, we are humbled to think that these incredible vistas were made for our delectation).

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    drama at the starlight theatre

    Img_4294 so we're sitting here in the starlight theatre in the old ghost town of terlingua a million miles from nowhere. graham weber is playing very mellow guitar for the crowd of a dozen. we're drinking whiskey and smoking cigars with some really great people.

    when i tell him that i'm going back to the uk to do a doctorate in theology, darren starts into a big discussion about god, the universe and everything. turns out he's pretty erudite and well-read. he moved out hear about 15 years ago to get away from it all and makes his living as a wilderness guide. i end up passing on a list of recommended reading in the hope that the conversation will continue online.

    Img_4325 the bartender pours our drinks while her husband cooks up some excellent food for us at a bargain price. they've been travelling forever and have come to settle here in terlingua cos it's affordable and utterly breath-taking. they're presently living in a tent while they build their house on their own tract of land: living the dream; settling in a ghost town in the middle of some of the most beautiful scenery the states have to offer.

    it's a great night of good music, food and drink and excellent, genial company.

    "i'd rather wake up in the middle of nowhere than in any city on earth." ~ steve mcqueen

    Img_4229ok so it's been two and a half months since we arrived in the united states and it's taken us all this time to find the kind of countryside we'd become used to in glorious canada! driving west of san antonio on highway 90, we very quickly hit wilderness and it's glorious!



    Continue reading ""i'd rather wake up in the middle of nowhere than in any city on earth." ~ steve mcqueen" »

    more weird americans / new friends!

    Img_4142 we spent a relaxing week with justin and margaret in san antonio. alli'd caught something of my former disease, so we hardly stepped over the threshold during the daytime. nightimes, however, were a vertable smorgasbord of delights. justin's heading for the pastorate by way of computer programming (don't ask!) and margaret works with the kids of families in difficulty.

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    exhaustin austin

    Img_3939it's been a while but we're still alive and kicking over here (well alive but not kicking so much really). i've now fully recovered from that flu/contagion/disease thing passed on by those evil evil kennedy people and now alli is similarly afflicted.

    Img_3888 from north carolina we travelled down the 444 mile natchez trace parkway which is one of only 27 all american roads in the states - considered to be the most scenic the us has to offer. to be honest it was nice but not really that spectacular, certainly nothing like the blue ridge parkway or many, many of the roads we travelled in canada.

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    wishing for a happy new year

    Img_3879 well happy 2007 everyone!

    new year's a weird time, especially for us now. normally a time for perspective and reflection, this year i'm writing from my bed in a holiday inn where i've been for the last two days suffering from a really debilitating flu-ish thing. my temperature's through the roof, my neck's swollen and sore to the touch and i'm clammy and aching all over. so, yea, happy new year and all!

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    a cool christmas at hot springs

    Img_3787 well for the first time since we bought out minivan six months ago in victoria, the magees have splased out on accomodation!

    we spent 3 nights from christmas eve in a lovely wee hotel in hot springs north carolina, a town with a population of around 600, imaginatively named after the natural hot springs which have been used by europeans since 1792 and by the native americans for centuries before that.

    as i said i felt pretty rough most of the time since i caught the kennedys' contagion but that didn't stop us having a really special christmas, just we two!

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    some lessons learned

    Img_3757 well as you've seen santa was good to me this year! alli and i spent just over 2 weeks with the kennedys and loved it all. there's no doubt we inhabit very different worlds, but our visit left us all challenged and hopefully changed. after staying with these guys and wendy and andy in new brunswick, alli and i are coming away with a profound sense of admiration and respect for the home-schooling movement. if we ever have kids of our own we'll definitely seriously consider it, even though it's very much a minority movement in the uk.

    Img_3732 my school days were some of the worst in my life. on reflection, the main lessons i learned were that i had to learn much that didn't interest me at all if i wanted to 'succeed'; that the 'technique' of passing exams mattered more than genuine knowledge, wisdom or understanding; that those in authority and power over me were to be obeyed simply because of the position they occupied, rather than because they were inspiring mentors or necessarily possessed of any admirable quality; and that, in the grand popularity contest of adolescence, i was too ugly to be one of the beautiful and cool set, too poor a fighter to be one of the hard set (though that wasn't for want of trying!) and not smart enough to be one of the really intelligent set (some of which was for the want of trying!) - i was average. why would i ever want to put any children i am entrusted with through that same hell?

    Img_3736 of course there are issues with home-schooling: the potential for ghetto-isation and the fact that opportunities for social interaction (especially with people from whom one is different) must be sought out, rather than being readily available; the lack of specialist teaching (particularly an issue for post-eleven education) and the possibility of the kids simply being too mollycoddled to cope well in the dog-eat-dog world in which we live. however, it seems to me that none of these issues are unassailable and in return the method of teaching/learning gets moulded for the individual needs of the child, rather than the one-size-fits-all approach that necessarily pervades any state education system.

    Img_3701 in addition, the kids get to learn from someone they love and trust, rather than a stranger and the family as a whole is infinitely flexible to travel and explore the world without education necessarily being interrupted. mmm. food for thought for us anyway!

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    my great christmas present from alli