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“A Year with G.K.
Chesterton will be a treasure, both for those who are coming to his wit and
wisdom as a fresh discovery, and for those who have known and loved his work
for years. . . . Chesterton’s talent for paradox, and his ability to embody
profound truth in simple images, makes him as compelling now as he was a
hundred years ago. . . . He was a prophet in his own time and a prophet for
ours, speaking out against insidious evils and kindling us all again to a
common love of the common good.”
—The Reverend Dr. Malcolm Guite, chaplain of Girton College,
Cambridge University
“This world of ours has some purpose; and if there is a
purpose, there is a Person. I had always felt life first as a story: and if
there is a story, there is a Storyteller.”
—G. K. Chesterton
A Year with G. K. Chesterton daily brings this truth to life. And we are
heir to the winsome, arresting, utterly original outpouring of Chesterton’s
reasons for hope. During his lifetime, a host of perspectives clamored for his
attention, but he saw nothing as vital and alive as Christianity. Readers of
this book will find their faith strengthened and enriched, even as they see the
many reasons why George Bernard Shaw called Chesterton “a colossal genius.”
A true anthology,
the best of Chesterton’s many works are presented in concise, memorable
selections. From New Year’s Day to New Year’s Eve, each page contains a passage
of Scripture and myriad moments for reflection, appreciation, and laughter.
“Chesterton once a
day? Well, that’s a start. It is good to see that someone is finally
recognizing the need for a daily minimum requirement of mirth and meditation
from GKC.”
—Dale Ahlquist, President, American
Chesterton Society
“Kevin Belmonte writes in the preface to this excellent book
that his editing of it has been a gift. As an author who has written regularly
on Chesterton I can understand his sense of gratitude at having been able to
spend so much time with a genius as genial as the great GKC. Thanks to
Belmonte's labor of love we can all spend a few moments of every day of the year
in Chesterton's inimitable company. All admirers of Chesterton and the
Christian truth he explicates so sublimely will be grateful to Kevin Belmonte
for this gem of a gift.”
—Joseph Pearce, author of Wisdom and Innocence: A Life of G. K.
Chesterton
"Who could not be grateful for a year spent with GKC?
The great subverter of everything taken for granted, he stretches and deepens
us with his insights, shakes us with his startling paradoxes and delights us
with his wit. Thank God there is no getting to the end of Chesterton."
—Os Guinness, author of A Free People's Suicide
441 pages, Kindle Edition
First published October 30, 2012
He who is faithful in what is least is faithful also in much. --Luke 16:10 NKJV
To love anything is to see it at once under lowering skies of danger. Loyalty implies loyalty in misfortune.
A Passage from Orthodoxy (1908): Had Christianity felt what I felt, but could not (and cannot) express -- this need for a first loyalty to things, and for a ruinous reform of things? Then I remembered that it was actually the charge against Christianity that it combined these two things which I was wildly trying to combine. Christianity was accused, at one and the same time, of being too optimistic about the universe and of being too pessimistic about the world. The coincidence made me suddenly stand still.
Certain types of books are always difficult to review: study Bibles, commentaries, and how-to books are all on that list for me. So, too, are year-long readers. Whether they be devotionals or selected excerpts from a famous author, books that require 365 days of reading are inevitably difficult to review fairly.
That introduction is my way of apologizing for giving a 3-star rating to a compelling collection of Chesterton quotes. A Year with G. K. Chesterton is one man’s attempt to present the reader with hundreds of Chesterton quotes, excerpted out of their context, and by and large, Kevin Belmonte succeeds beautifully.
I really do not see how reading GKC out of context could serve any greater purpose than to send someone on the way to the full work. He alludes to Dickens, Stevenson, and so many more writers who were classic or his contemporaries. An understanding of history (or the reader taking time to research GKC's references) is helpful.