Jonathan  Lovelace

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Jonathan Lovelace’s Followers (40)

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Dylan West
540 books | 212 friends

Rachel ...
182 books | 21 friends

Stef M
66 books | 72 friends

Keith M...
2 books | 76 friends

Jake
126 books | 14 friends

Allison...
237 books | 3 friends

Faith
1,376 books | 138 friends

Katie D...
2,003 books | 136 friends

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Jonathan Lovelace

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in The United States
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January 2013

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Jonathan Lovelace is a thirty-something writer from Michigan. A software developer and technical writer by training, worldbuilder by inclination, and poet by inspiration, he published his first collection of poetry in 2014.

Average rating: 3.0 · 1 rating · 1 review · 2 distinct works
Dreams and Prayers: Verses ...

liked it 3.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 2025 — 3 editions
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A Year in Verse

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0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 2014 — 3 editions
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* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.

2025 Year-in-Review, Hopes for 2026

For years, this blog had an ambitious posting schedule, with sometimes as many as five posts a week in various “departments.” But as my backlog of material for posts to draw from dried up, I tended to slip into “hiatus”. But in mid-2022 I brought the blog “back out of hiatus,” and while the level of activity is still nowhere near that “height,” it has still “kept going strong” throughout 2025. Thi

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Published on December 31, 2025 17:00
Green Dragon
Jonathan Lovelace is currently reading
by Rachel Newhouse (Goodreads Author)
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Institutes of the...
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Techniques of fic...
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Jonathan’s Recent Updates

Jonathan Lovelace rated a book it was amazing
Wordsmithy by Douglas Wilson
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Very little here is new to me, but that's part of the point. This little book is chock-full of good advice, and nearly as full of hilarious wit, usually the one by means of the other. I hope to reread this before too long, perhaps early next year, to ...more
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The Visible Word of the Unseen God by Steven M. Bryan
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The Debate that Changed the West by Ruben Alvarado
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How To Be a Tudor by Ruth Goodman
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The Prince And Betty by P.G. Wodehouse
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Jonathan Lovelace rated a book really liked it
Von by Rachel Newhouse
Von (Red Rain #7.5)
by Rachel Newhouse (Goodreads Author)
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This is probably my least favorite in this series so far ... but that's because of me, not the story.

In both books and movies, among the stories I enjoy least are those where I know going in that the story will end in disaster. Even if there is not o
...more
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Live Like a Narnian by Joe Rigney
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Strangely Bright by Joe Rigney
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Jonathan Lovelace started reading
Green Dragon by Rachel Newhouse
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Jonathan Lovelace rated a book really liked it
Von by Rachel Newhouse
Von (Red Rain #7.5)
by Rachel Newhouse (Goodreads Author)
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This is probably my least favorite in this series so far ... but that's because of me, not the story.

In both books and movies, among the stories I enjoy least are those where I know going in that the story will end in disaster. Even if there is not o
...more
More of Jonathan's books…
Dorothy L. Sayers
“Perhaps [the critics are right and] the drama is played out now and Jesus is safely dead and buried. Perhaps. It is ironical and entertaining to consider that at least once in the world’s history those words might have been said with complete conviction, and that was on the eve of the Resurrection.”
Dorothy L. Sayers, The Whimsical Christian: 18 Essays

Charles   Williams
“I generally give the title-page a fair chance," Roger said. "Once can't always judge books merely by the cover.”
Charles Williams, Shadows of Ecstasy
tags: books

Charles   Williams
“, Stanhope delayed a moment behind Miss Fox to add: "The substantive, of course, governs the adjective; not the other way round."
"The substantive?" Pauline asked blankly.
"Good. It contains terror, not terror good. I'm keeping you. Good-bye, Periel," and he was gone.”
Charles Williams, Descent into Hell

Charles   Williams
“An hour's conversation on literature between two ardent minds with a common devotion to a neglected poet is a miraculous road to intimacy.”
Charles Williams, War in Heaven

Charles   Williams
“There was presented to him at once and clearly an opportunity for joy--casual, accidental joy, but joy. If he could not manage joy, at least he might have managed the intention of joy, or (if that also were too much) an effort towards the intention of joy. The infinity of-grace could have been contented and invoked by a mere mental refusal of anything but such an effort. He knew his duty--he was no fool--he knew that the fantastic recognition would please and amuse the innocent soul of Sir Aston, not so much for himself as in some unselfish way for the honour of history. Such honours meant nothing, but they were part of the absurd dance of the world, and to be enjoyed as such. Wentworth knew he could share that pleasure. He could enjoy; at least he could refuse not to enjoy. He could refuse and reject damnation.

With a perfectly clear, if instantaneous, knowledge of what he did, he rejected joy instead. He instantaneously preferred anger, and at once it came; he invoked envy, and it obliged him. He crushed the paper in a rage, then he tore it open, and looked again and again-there it still was. He knew that his rival had not only succeeded, but succeeded at his own expense; what chance was there of another historical knighthood for years? Till that moment he had never thought of such a thing. The possibility had been created and withdrawn simultaneously, leaving the present fact to mock him. The other possibility--of joy in that present fact--receded as fast. He had determined, then and for ever, for ever, for ever, that he would hate the fact, and therefore facts.”
Charles Williams, Descent into Hell

87935 Outread Aubrey! Challenge — 74 members — last activity Jan 06, 2016 12:29PM
Can you read more than I can? This is an easy, fun, and just-a-tad-bit-silly reading challenge. The premise is simple--read more books than I do in 2 ...more
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