|
The Shack | 
enlarge | Author: William P. Young Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton Category: Book
List Price: £7.99 Buy New: £1.99 You Save: £6.00 (75%)
New (29) Used (6) from £1.99
Rating: 67 reviews Sales Rank: 20
Media: Paperback Pages: 256 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5.1 x 0.9
ISBN: 0340979496 EAN: 9780340979495 ASIN: 0340979496
Publication Date: July 17, 2008 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: All items BRAND NEW and despatched in 5 to 6 working days from our UK warehouse which stocks over 30,000 different titles.
| |
| Similar Items:
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 62 more reviews...
A book to make you think January 7, 2009 Mrs. Frances H. Brown (West Yorkshire, England) If this book does nothing else, it makes you look at the way our preconceived ideas about God influence the way we interact with Him. A book obviously written from the heart.
Enjoyed the difference of this book January 6, 2009 BeeReader (Merseyside) I read this without knowing a lot about it so wasn't influenced by anything. I found it a little slow to start with then got quite a surprise when it became obvious what the theme was. I am a christian and found the way the ideas about God were portrayed were very good - OK you might be able to argue here and there about the 'correctness' of some of it but the most important thing was that it gave a great way to understand God and goodness and how and why God doesn't intervene when things go so wrong for us. I enjoyed the unusualness of this book and it wasn't over-religious for those who might be worried!!
indifferent theology, but poor quality literature January 5, 2009 Christopher (England) As a Christian myself, I don't want to be too harsh on a book which seems to mean well, and has clearly spoken to many. But as a piece of writing, 'The Shack' really is extremely poor: wooden, cliched, pedestrian, and excruciatingly sentimental. Unlike other reviewers, I have no particular bones to pick with its trinitarian theology - but there are any number of accessible books that tackle problems of suffering and the nature of God better than this. (One thinks of the work of C.S.Lewis, for example, which stands head and shoulders above this nonsense.) I suspect its success is to do with the way in which `The Shack' has been marketed to an evangelical Christian constituency, in such a way as to persuade them that buying a whole set of these books for a friend is really an act of faith and evangelism - a marketing ploy that borders on the cynical. This sort of thing does no real credit to the cause of thinking Christianity. In short, if you are used to reading decent quality literature (whether you are religious or not), give this one a wide birth.
Typical American Schmalz January 5, 2009 Pamela Lake (Paris) People who say that this is the best book they've ever read have clearly not read many books and are totally ignorant of all the great literature of the world, past and present. Far from giving anyone faith, as so many claim, it is enough to put them off religion. It's badly written, sentimental and theologically dubious. A waste of time! I can imagine Walt Disney making a schmalzy film of it. And the 'Missy Project' publicized at the end of the book seems to me a typically American attempt to boost sales disguised in the form of an attempt save people's souls!
Sanctimonious and Nauseating - Give to charity instead January 4, 2009 J. Hipkiss Frankly, I feel as if I have been duped into buying this book. As an American, I am deeply ashamed that a fellow countryman is attempting to pass off this sanctimonious piece of nonsense as the truth behind God's relationship with mankind. Please. If you want to feel better about yourself and do the world some good, take your hard earned money and give it to charity. If you buy this book, you will only be lining the pockets of the charlatan who wrote it.
|
|
|
|
w73.net :: Healing Compendium
| |