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Singer Trilogy

The Singer/The Song/The Finale

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Hundreds of thousands have already thrilled to this extraordinary retelling of a life unmatched in human history. Through the story of the Singer, his Song and his battles with the World Hater, Calvin Miller has created a work full of life. Now you can find the complete, powerful tale of incarnation and redemption in one volume, with all three of Calvin Miller's books The Singer , The Song and The Finale . The Singer quickly became a favorite of evangelists, pastors, artists, students, teachers and readers of all sorts when it was originally published in 1975. Recounting the story of Christ through an allegorical and poetic narrative of a Singer whose Song could not be silenced, Miller's work reinvigorated Christian literature and offers believers and seekers everywhere a deeply personal encounter with the gospel. This magnificent reimagining of the story of Christ and his church gives young and old alike the opportunitiy to be immersed in the good news.

494 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1977

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About the author

Calvin Miller

176 books49 followers

Calvin Miller has written over 40 books of popular theology and inspiration. A former pastor, he is professor of preaching and pastoral ministry at Beeson Divinity School in Birmingham, Alabama. He and his wife, Joyce, have two grown children.

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5 stars
404 (54%)
4 stars
199 (26%)
3 stars
108 (14%)
2 stars
22 (2%)
1 star
11 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 79 reviews
Profile Image for Ray.
85 reviews6 followers
May 1, 2008
An amazing piece by Calvin miller, and one of my favorite books of all time. It is written entirely in poetry form with smaller poems and phrases as chapter introductions, for example "A god to big to walk in human shoes, has outgrow all hope of human use, and heavy skeptics weighed down with doubt can never rise to find what God's about" (or something really really close to that I'm going by memory) As for the separate books, each corresponds with a portion of the New Testament 'The Singer' - the gospels, Jesus' life, ministry, death, and resurrection. 'The Song' - work of the apostles in carrying out the ministry, establishing the Church, and enduring persecution. 'The Finale ' - Revelation, the last days and marvelous second coming of Christ.
It's been a long time since I read them, but it makes an excellent pleasure read with the chapters being usually short, and easy enough to read for something light, yet without disengaging your brain. The imagery and creativity in this re-telling was great, I know the style isn't for everyone but I would suggest at least reading 'The Singer', if for no other reason, it's originality, I have yet to find another book like it.
Profile Image for Bethanny Moore.
4 reviews
November 20, 2014
Poetic. In seeing the New Testament retold, it made me think about aspects in a new light.
Re-read it several times, and memorized The Song from book 3. Great classic that should live on. Loved it.
Profile Image for Lindsey.
Author 1 book13 followers
October 28, 2022
yes religious, but i am an atheists and still found the poetry beautiful and the images moving. Wonderfully written story.
Profile Image for Leo.
4,986 reviews629 followers
November 13, 2021
I thought this was a fantasy going into the audiobook but wasn't disappointed one bit. It was engaging, poetically written and had a great narrator. Found myself really enjoying this kind of story, if I had known it was religious heavy I've !ight not have read it. Sometimes it's great to go into a book rather blind
Profile Image for Jaymie Starr.
57 reviews13 followers
January 31, 2011
I used to own this beautiful Trilogy and lent it to a friend only to have it never returned. I forgot how much I loved it and would like to read it again one day. A precious picture of God's redeeming love.
Profile Image for Burgandy Ice.
120 reviews46 followers
April 6, 2012
Hugely quotable, thought-provoking.

It's a retelling of Jesus' life & ministry that connects to the Bible with poetic strings only. The Troubadour sings, fights, triumphs.

It's a hauntingly fast read that doesn't beg to be agreed with, just thought about. I love it.
Profile Image for Shawn.
436 reviews
April 18, 2021
I remember reading this trilogy 45 years ago as a new Christian. I enjoyed revisiting this allegory.
Profile Image for Lydia Batchelor.
187 reviews
June 6, 2025
I enjoyed this. My choir teacher gave me this for graduation, and this is definitely something he read when it came out and it's probably his favorite book, which tells you all you need to know about him. The third part was really long and dense so I didn't enjoy it as much, so my rating is probably closer to 3.5 or 3.75 stars.
Profile Image for Maggie Dew.
23 reviews1 follower
Read
December 19, 2025
This is an epic retelling of the New Testament with a strong voice into the dark moments / realities of history and humankind (good to note they were all written in the late 70’s). The storytelling through poetry is rich and full! I can see myself picking these books up every year!
Profile Image for Bethany.
49 reviews
May 18, 2018
Out of the three books in this collection, the second was definitely my favorite. Overall, this was a great read.
Profile Image for Shannon Overbey.
45 reviews2 followers
July 8, 2021
I really liked the allegory in the first section of this book; the second was pretty solid, too. But the third section got a little too abstract.
Profile Image for ValeReads Kyriosity.
1,487 reviews194 followers
March 21, 2025
Back in the ’80s, I found this wonderful and profound. We did a musical based on it, so it was a pretty significant thing in my late teen years.

Forty years later...meh. (But nostalgia will likely keep my print copies on my shelf forever.)

I only listened to the first book.
Profile Image for Seth.
74 reviews17 followers
April 22, 2008
Part of my childhood God-indoctrination. And my lifelong love of fantastical stuff. And my junior high appreciation of overwrought poetry. I can't decide if it's really wrong or really fabulous that those three things all go together.
Profile Image for Melissa.
131 reviews24 followers
October 2, 2016
I deeply appreciate the existence of this book. While I feel it didn't fully succeed in its attempt I love so much that someone blazed this trail.
13 reviews1 follower
May 23, 2021
This was the first book of poetry that I have ever gotten through, and I just want more. The Singer Trilogy is a very good set of books that is accessible and easy to read. Even more so if you know the source material, the New Testament. The prose makes me wonder if I am missing something, I don't see any initial structure like iambic pentameter, but it definitely flows. Calvin Millers' epic poem takes us on a mythic journey, telling us of the singer and the song he sings. The Singer is constantly against the World Hater, who despises everything that the Father created. The parallels with the New Testament are rather obvious, you don't need to study literature for years to catch them. Of course, I am only saying this after the first go, I think that Miller has things in his writing that pop out on the second go. On the whole, the trilogy follows the structure of the New Testament, the first part is the gospels, the second part is the story of the growing church, and the third is the end times. I would have to say that Millers' writing is great in the first, excellent in the second, and back down to great in the third. I really do think that the second book is the best. The imagery in all of these books is incredible and well done. Not to mention that the artwork throughout is very simple and well done. I enjoy the premise of reading a retelling because it shows different things that I never thought of before. In this trilogy, the focus on martyrdom and the sacrifices they made were so much more in your face than the New Testament. Miller not only took the New Testament, but he took some of the known historical events and made very potent scenes. I think that the characters are still well done, though I found it harder to connect to characters who are serving as representations of other characters. Something about that concept lost some of my connection, they were still well done though. The last book is probably my least favorite, it was rather strange. The idea that there are "death bombs" and dragon-like creatures make it all sort of hard to imagine. It's definitely not a futuristic scene, but it's more advanced than what there was before. What I enjoyed through all of the books was the little intros to each chapter. At the beginning of each chapter, there are little poems usually connecting to what's in the chapter, or giving some overall insight. I found them sometimes amusing or thought-provoking, and that's before I even read the chapter. I do admit that this is my second time trying to read this book. I tried to read this when I was around 12-13 and found that I couldn't concentrate on it. Of course, now I went all the way through, saw the biblical parallels, and enjoyed the whole thing. I recommend this to anyone, even someone who doesn't believe in what the New Testament says can enjoy the narrative, and anyone who does believe can find more insight. Millers' epic retelling of the New Testament is a must-read for older audiences. 4/5 Loved it, just wish the last book didn't make me feel it was the lesser than the other three.
Profile Image for Megan Willome.
Author 6 books12 followers
September 13, 2023
The Singer/The Song/The Finale Calvin Miller

I first read this trilogy in middle school, and the books have moved with me ever since, from bookshelf to bookshelf. I hadn't reread it until this month. Oh, I wanted to feel the same way I did about them back then, but I don't. I can't.

As I read through the comments of other Goodreads folks, it sounds like a lot of people first encountered these when they were teenagers. Maybe that's their best audience. After all, in the years since these were published in the '70s, there have been a lot of YA books that are narratives written in verse. Some of those are among my favorite books, like Jacqueline Woodson's "Brown Girl Dreaming" and Kwame Alexander's "The Crossover."

But this is different. This is Christian allegory, with each chapter encircled by pithy quotes (those are the pages I most dog-eared). The metaphor is of a singer, a song, and a finale, and that should totally be Made for Megan, and yet somehow it isn't quite. I still like The Singer the best. The Song has a lot of appropriately disturbing images. The Finale just made me want to revisit C.S. Lewis' The Last Battle.

And yet there are passages that are so lovely. I hadn't forgotten any of the characters, not after all these years.

I agree wholeheartedly with this Goodreads review from Melissa: "I deeply appreciate the existence of this book. While I feel it didn't fully succeed in its attempt I love so much that someone blazed this trail."

Thank you, Calvin Miller. You took a big swing and that ball is still in flight.

Here is the last stanza of The Singer:

"And those who know the Ancient Star-
Song watch with singing for the
sign of footprints in the galaxies
through which the little planet
ride sin routine cycles of despair.
But Joy seldom sleeps for long.
And someday in a lonely moment man-
kind will shake an unfamiliar hand
and find it wounded."
Profile Image for Erika Mathews.
Author 29 books175 followers
June 17, 2023
Apparently I read the first book in this trilogy once upon a time and rated it two stars.

I have no memory of that reading, nor any inkling of what I disliked about it. I presume at that stage of my life I did not understand nor enjoy the writing style.

Well, this time I read the entire trilogy in a day.

And wow, are there some profound and memorable quotes. Thought provoking is the only word for it.

See, for instance:

“But Joy seldom sleeps for long. And someday in a lonely moment mankind will shake an unfamiliar hand and find it wounded.”

Or:

“And now the great reduction is begun: Earthmaker and his Troubadour are one.”

But truly, you need context to appreciate these quotes. The allegory is profound and on point. Perhaps not perfect, but isn’t profound enough to drive the point home—to point you to the True Earthmaker and Singer?

This isn’t even to mention the delicious poetic use of words. Sometimes a few well chosen words drive the point home far better than paragraphs. And this trilogy is full of that.

Perhaps the third book sports allegory of theology that doesn’t seem to be 100% correct. Who’s to say? It’s a parable, and the questions it raises and meditations it drives hold spiritual and Biblical thoughts that perhaps you’ve never considered. What is life, and what is life in Jesus, and what does Jesus do for us, and how can we advance His kingdom, and how does He live and move within us?

These are questions of a lifetime, and this book addresses them, albeit indirectly through metaphor and analogy.
Profile Image for Maya Joelle.
630 reviews104 followers
December 28, 2020
This is a poetical reimagining of the Gospels. If you have a solid grounding in the Biblical accounts, this is enjoyable and beautiful; if you don't, hopefully this will make you want to read the true story.

Recommended for YA and adult readers. Some mature content.

The Father and his Troubadour sat down
Upon the outer rim of space.
"And here, My Singer," said Earthmaker, "is the crown
Of all my endless skies - the green, brown sphere
Of all my hopes."
He reached and took the round
New planet down, and held it to his ear.
"They're crying, Troubadour," he said. "They cry
So hopelessly." ...

Earthmaker set earth spinning on its way
And said, "Give me your vast infinity
My son; I'll wrap it in a bit of clay.
Then enter Terra microscopically
To love the little souls who weep away
Their lives."
"I will," I said, "set Terra free." ...

And now the great reduction has begun:
Earthmaker and his Troubadour are one.
And here's the new redeeming melody -
The only song that can set Terra free."


---
read April 2016
Profile Image for Andy Zach.
Author 10 books97 followers
July 24, 2023
In the tradition of John Bunyan and CS Lewis, Calvin Miller has written a poetic allegory. What is it about? Nothing less than the whole Bible, from Genesis to Revelation.

The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are called the World-maker, the Singer, and the Invader respectively. Satan is called the World-hater. Through poetic imagery Mr. Miller depicts the creation, the fall of mankind, and redemption through Christ. He continues the story through the church age and the spread of the gospel, right up to the new heavens and the new Earth and the end of Satan.

Those who know and love the Bible will love this book. So will those who delight in imaginative descriptions and detailed metaphors. The book has my highest recommendation.
Profile Image for Moriah Mc.
10 reviews3 followers
November 10, 2022
“He knew that they would say to him:
‘You are no singer! And even if you are you should sing the songs we know’
And well he knew the penalty of the law. A dreamer could be ostracized in hate for singing songs the world had never heard.

Such songs had sent a thousand singers to their death already.

And the song which dogged his aching steps and begged him pleadingly to sing it was completely unfamiliar. Only the stars and mountains knew it… daily now it played upon his heat and swept his soul”
Profile Image for Grace T.
1,005 reviews3 followers
September 13, 2018
Absolutely beautiful writing. I'd read the second book during a class last fall, and getting to reread it in context was great. There may be a few theological issues, but those mainly stem from the difficulties of applying allegory to the Incarnation. And I was bugged a tiiiiiny bit by some approximate rhyming here and there. But otherwise, I really enjoyed this.
Profile Image for Tim.
752 reviews8 followers
May 17, 2018
This takes a while to get into, but once you get the hang of it (allegory), it is intriguingly fresh. It portrays the life of Christ, the early church, and the end of the world, using very different terminology in order to re-express a well known story in a new way.
Profile Image for Eric C 1965.
430 reviews42 followers
October 2, 2018
Allegory, poetry are not my usual reading material so l found this work difficult at times. But I can still recognize a good story and this, like Dante and Bunyan, is great, maybe not to quite that degree of greatness. Still, it was fun reading his reimagining of Bible stories, easily recognizable.
Profile Image for Julia Garcia.
445 reviews73 followers
June 15, 2019
An interesting take on the New Testament, it covers from Jesus' ministry and Crucifixion through Acts, to Revelations. The entire book is told in poem-form and there are neat little sayings at the beginning of each section.
35 reviews
September 3, 2023
Technical inaccuracy in the Revelation allegory section, to the point of being problematic. If you can ignore that, fantastic minimalist retelling of the Bible. Inaccuracy aside, I aspire to be such a fantastic storyteller.
8 reviews
December 3, 2024
A Classical rendition of the New Testament

I love the style. Intriguing the mind and heart to work harder to catch the meaning...combining stories carefully interwoven from many layers of history into a tale of the battle of Good and Evil at their core.
Profile Image for Jay Budzilowski.
76 reviews11 followers
March 23, 2018
I definitely see the beauty of Miller's artistry, but I just don't find myself enjoying it.
6 reviews6 followers
June 11, 2018
This was a book that I read multiple times as a teenager! It is one of those wonderful books that becomes real. The images draw you into a deeper understanding of the beauty of the Gospel message.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 79 reviews

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