Best Books of 2013

It's hard to keep up with books as they come out. It's not unusual that I will discover a great book more than a year after it is released, at which point it's too late to call it "the best book of the year" in a year-end list. So I make this list with the understanding that there are probably books that I will discover this year that should have ended up on this list.

However, there are books that I catch right as they come out, either because I follow the author on Twitter or because of a recommendation by someone that I trust enough to push a book to the top of my ever-growing stack.

The books on this list are the ones that were released in 2013 that made an impact on me in one way or another. Feel free to comment below and add any books that were released int he past 12 months that deserve a hearty recommendation. (They are listed alphabetically by author because I didn't want to rank them. That said, Pastrix was my favorite)

Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood, and the Prison of BeliefLawrence Wright

 

What would you add to this list? Have you read any of the books here? What did you think?

Best Movies & Music of 2013

I know I've been trying to keep things all spiritual here on the blog, but it's the end of the year, and I really love end-of-year lists. So today I'm posting lists of my favorite movies and music from 2013. Later this week I'll post a list of my favorite books, and things will go back to the spiritual stuff.

My favorite film of the year is Inside Llewyn Davis. I'm a huge fan of the Coen brothers, and I had been waiting for this film all year. It is beautiful, haunting, and poetic. I knew by the end of the first scene that I was watching something special.

So here are my Top 5 movies of 2013-

 

1. Inside Llewyn Davis

2. The Way Way Back

3. 12 Years a Slave

4. Mud

5. Sound City

Honorable Mentions: Philomena, Captain Phillips, Fruitvale Station, and Blackfish

 

And now, the best music of the year-

Top 5 Albums of 2013-

1. The Wild Feathers.  by The Wild Feathers

2. Stories Don't End.  by Dawes

3. The Civil Wars.  by The Civil Wars

4. Southeastern.  by Jason Isbell

5. Trouble Will Find Me.  by The National

Honorable Mentions: Mutual Friends by Boy, All the Time We Had by Ivan & Alyosha, and Kids Raising Kids by Kopecky Family Band. Also, the soundtrack to Inside Llewyn Davis.

 

What about you? What were some of your favorite movies and music of the past year?

 

How Birth Teaches Us About Christmas

Today's blog post was written by my talented and amazing wife Caroline. She is a gifted birth photographer whose work you would almost certainly enjoy. So read the post and then check out her photography!

 

When I tell people that I am a birth photographer,

they usually think it is strange and,

probably, 

a little gross.

It's hard to make people understand why 

I love what I do so much.

I spend a lot of time in delivery rooms, be it in hospitals or homes,

hiding in corners, 

listening to the sounds of birth.

Mothers, fathers, doctors, midwives, 

coaxing babies into this world.

I love everything about it -

watching a new mom and dad go through the hard work of labor,

partnering together, sharing strength.

Capturing their faces the moment they meet their loves.

The joy of hearing the first cry, counting fingers and toes, 

aquatinting themselves with the person they've known in their hearts for months.

 

There is a moment, right before the baby takes that first breath,

when I hold mine,

marveling that moments ago there were just a few people in the room,

but now there is one more

and the world will never be the same 

as it was.

 

To think that the Savior of the world

came to be born from his mother's belly, into her arms and love,

just exactly the way I was, 

it is almost unfathomable.

More-so, for me, to think that Mary,

a girl in her teens, went through the same uncomfortable months

of worry and wonder that I did in pregnancy,

then gave birth to a son through sweat, and pain, and fear, 

through courage, and strength, and determination,

just as I did.

 

It is a phenomenal moment when you become a parent,

and know that nothing will ever compare to

the visceral love that worries and cares, 

shelters and comforts,

carries and lays itself down.

 

How could Mary know that her baby

would do the same for all of humanity?

That when Jesus was born, 

nothing would ever be the same

as it was?

 

It's no wonder that the Christmas season

turns me into a walking mess of tears and joy. 

The idea of birth that I am already so passionate about 

colliding with the ultimate gift of grace 

pierces my heart.

The carols I've sung my whole life have new meaning to me as a mother.

Each one right down to "Away in a Manger" reduces me to a blubbering sap.

Don't even get me started with "Mary did you know" or "Breath of Heaven".

 

I'm more convinced than ever that birth is the perfect picture of Salvation -

God, in all his mercy, coming to this earth as a baby,

like any other baby,

to love me as much as I love my own children.

that we participate in the story of Christ through bringing lives into the world, into our families,

and teaching them to live 

and love 

like Him. 

What a great honor and what a humbling calling.

 

"Today in the town of David 

a Savior has been born to you; 

he is the Messiah, 

the Lord."