Christa Parrish

Christa Parrish’s Followers (116)

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Amanda ...
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Christa Parrish

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January 2010


Christa Parrish is the award-winning author of five novels and founder of Narratology, a fair trade non-profit social enterprise. She is also a homeschool parent, speaker, and editor. She is currently at work on her sixth - and seventh! - novel.

Average rating: 3.81 · 3,395 ratings · 585 reviews · 5 distinct worksSimilar authors
Home Another Way

3.80 avg rating — 1,068 ratings — published 2008 — 11 editions
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The Air We Breathe

3.80 avg rating — 702 ratings — published 2012 — 7 editions
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Stones For Bread

3.78 avg rating — 688 ratings — published 2013 — 8 editions
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Watch Over Me

3.81 avg rating — 514 ratings — published 2009 — 11 editions
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Still Life

3.91 avg rating — 424 ratings — published 2015 — 8 editions
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More books by Christa Parrish…
Celestial Bodies
Christa is currently reading
bookshelves: currently-reading
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Mullumbimby
Christa is currently reading
bookshelves: currently-reading
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Quotes by Christa Parrish  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“Do everything as if unto the Lord. Offer up everything as if for the Lord, including jars of olives to the food pantry or leftover loaves of bread. Years later, that's finally how I make sense of it, where it settles out for me. If Jesus knocks on my door today, will I rummage through my home and give him the food I don't like, the outgrown jackets with stains and a broken zipper, the dirty Crock-Pot in the basement, the one with the chipped lid and mice nesting inside I've yet to find time to toss into the Salvation Army's dumpster?”
Christa Parrish, Stones For Bread

“But then Oma tells me of bread, of the six hundred kinds made throughout her homeland, white and gray and black in color. Loaves heavy with pumpkin seeds. Pumpernickel. Rye. All with long, dense names like 'Sonnenblumenkernbrot' and 'Roggenmischbrot'. Each word is music to her. She has never eaten a tinned bread bagged in plastic with a little twist tie, a pride she wears all over. 'It matters,' she tells me. 'Wes Brot ich ess, des Lied ich sing.'
Whose bread I eat, his song I sing.”
Christa Parrish, Stones For Bread

“Bread plays favorites.
From the earliest times, it acts as a social marker, sifting the poor from the wealthy, the cereal from the chaff.
The exceptional from the mediocre.
Wheat becomes more acceptable than rye; farmers talk of losing their 'rye teeth' as their economic status improves. Barley is for the most destitute, the coarse grain grinding down molars until the nerves are exposed. Breads with the added richness of eggs and milk and butter become the luxuries of princes. Only paupers eat dark bread adulterated with peas and left to sour, or purchase horse-bread instead of man-bread, often baked with the floor sweepings, because it costs a third less than the cheapest whole-meal loaves. When brown bread makes it to the tables of the prosperous, it is as trenchers- plates- stacked high with fish and meat and vegetables and soaked with gravy. The trenchers are then thrown outside, where the dogs and beggars fight over them. Crusts are chipped off the rolls of the rich, both to make it easier to chew and to aid in digestion. Peasants must work all the more to eat, even in the act of eating itself, jaws exhausted from biting through thick crusts and heavy crumb. There is no lightness for them. No whiteness at all.
And it is the whiteness every man wants. Pure, white flour. Only white bread blooms when baked, opening to the heat like a rose. Only a king should be allowed such beauty, because he has been blessed by his God. So wouldn't he be surprised- no, filled with horror- to find white bread the food of all men today, and even more so the food of the common people. It is the least expensive on the shelf at the supermarket, ninety-nine cents a loaf for the storebrand. It is smeared with sweetened fruit and devoured by schoolchildren, used for tea sandwiches by the affluent, donated to soup kitchens for the needy, and shunned by the artisan. Yes, the irony of all ironies, the hearty, dark bread once considered fit only for thieves and livestock is now some of the most prized of all.”
Christa Parrish, Stones For Bread

Polls

This is the poll for May's Books of the Month. Pick the one you'd like to read most & the two with the most votes will be our reads.

Edenbrooke (Edenbrooke, #1) by Julianne Donaldson Edenbrooke by Julianne Donaldson
 
  9 votes 21.4%

The Air We Breathe by Christa Parrish The Air We Breathe by Christa Parrish
 
  7 votes 16.7%

Trinity Military War Dog (A Breed Apart #1) by Ronie Kendig Trinity: Military War Dog by Ronie Kendig
 
  6 votes 14.3%

Against All Odds (Heroes of Quantico, #1) by Irene Hannon Against All Odds by Irene Hannon
 
  5 votes 11.9%

Evidence of Mercy (Sun Coast Chronicles, #1) by Terri Blackstock Evidence of Mercy by Terri Blackstock
 
  4 votes 9.5%

Buried Secrets (Men of Valor, #1) by Irene Hannon Buried Secrets by Irene Hannon
 
  4 votes 9.5%

Catch a Falling Star by Beth K. Vogt Catch a Falling Star by Beth K. Vogt
 
  3 votes 7.1%

The Third Target (J. B. Collins #1) by Joel C. Rosenberg The Third Target by Joel C. Rosenberg
 
  2 votes 4.8%

Unintended Target (Unintended #1) by D.L. Wood Unintended Target by D.L. Wood
 
  1 vote 2.4%

Stranded (Stranded #1) by Don Prichard Stranded by Don Prichard
 
  1 vote 2.4%

Undercurrents (Undercurrents, #1) by Traci Hunter Abramson Undercurrents by Traci Hunter Abramson
 
  0 votes 0.0%

42 total votes
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Topics Mentioning This Author

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