What do you think?
Rate this book


112 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1982
He speaks not just through the sounds we hear, of course, but through events in all their complexity and variety, through the harmonies and disharmonies and counterpoint of all that happens.Buechner gives us his life story in three movements: "Once Below a Time" (the period of childhood when timelessness reigns), "Once Upon a Time" (the moment and days when the fragility and temporality of life takes hold), "Beyond Time" (hearing the voice of God in the listening to one's life happening as part of [God's] plot for one's life).
It seemed to me then, and seems to me still, that if God speaks to us at all in this world, if God speaks anywhere, it is into our personal lives that he speaks." (p. 1)Certainly, Buechner points us to Scripture (albeit vaguely) from time-to-time, and I want to believe he does not elevate personal ponderings to the level of holy writ, otherwise he leaves me scratching my head as I did when a young college student told me years ago, that God told her what to wear -- every day. Happily, such is missing from the reflective "life pondering" of Frederick Buechner.