Funny, wry, and revealing, the stories in "A Pilgrim's Digress" describe one man's quest for the righteous path and what he discovers about the country's spiritual zeitgeist. This description may be from another edition of this product.
Maybe because I'm as lapsed as John Spalding is I took great delight in his exploration of the sillier side of religion. I think it's possible to take it all too seriously and in our American quest for political correctness we've hogtied our funny bones. I laughed out loud frequently while reading about his interchanges with characters like Alpha and Omega, the Christian wrestlers, and Whatsyourname? the itinerate street preacher. I'm a former English teacher and anyone who can satirize "A Pilgrim's Progress" gets on my reading list. Pick it up on a day when you need a deep belly laugh.
I pick it back up as soon as I put it down
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago
John Spalding's writing is both intelligent and funny, not always an easy thing to pull off. He has found people across this land who seem like fictional characters. The fact that they aren't fictional is both an interesting social commentary, and just plain hilarious. This is a VERY engrossing book.I went to see John's reading at his book release, and he is as genuinely nice as he is intelligent, and he's plenty of both.
Biting, flippant, and right on target!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago
Spalding holds a mirror up to American culture, particularly American *spiritual* culture, and shows us something quite peculiar! In the "Celestial City," we find Spalding on a Midwest excursion to elucidate an American obsession with spiritual expression -- all 113 tons of it! On the other side of the Atlantic, Spalding discovers the shocking truth about John Wesley and his health "methods."Whether it is riding around in a coffin stashed in a pink hearse, or doing the bidding of a popular theologian who rants about the pope's "mania for virginity," Spalding keeps the reader's interest much more than piqued! And, much more than sardonic laughter (though there is plenty of that!), the reader also must explore the truth of the matter *with* Spalding and ask, "Really!?"Pick it up, it's a great read!
Thought-provoking and laugh-out-loud funny
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago
A brilliant interweaving of the sublime and the ridiculous that highlights the amazing (sometimes disturbing) varieties of religion in America. The people John Spalding writes about may have peculiar faith practices, but Spalding lets you see beyond the strangeness to the humanity, and even the validity, of their perspectives. He lets his subjects speak for themselves, adds some historical background to give grounding, and suffuses it all with his unique sense of humor. I must say I chuckled my way through the essay about the man who drilled a hole in his head to relieve stress, but by the end I was thinking there might be something to his approach!
"A Polgrim's Digress: My Perilous, Fumbling Quest . . ."
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago
I couldn't put this book down, reading 80 pages the first night I received it. It is really great reading -- kind of a Charles Karault journey through Christianity -- humorous and includes little-known and interesting facts. Simply excellent! Barb in Florida
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