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Loading... Do You Believe?: Conversations on God and Religion (Vintage)by Antonio Monda
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. A very interesting book where the author interviews famous writers, actors, and directors about their belief in God. It is interesting to see the contrasting perspectives between believers and agnostics/atheists. A wonderful concept for a book on a subject which has been written about sincethe Bible was originally penned. no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0307280586, Paperback)Some of the most well-known and well-respected cultural figures of our time enter into intimate and illuminating conversation about their personal beliefs, about belief itself, about religion, and about God.Antonio Monda is a disarming, rigorous interviewer, asking the most difficult questions (he often begins an interview point blank: “Do you believe in God?”) that lead to the most wide-ranging conversations. An ardent believer himself, Monda talks both with atheists (asked what she feels when she meets a believer, Grace Paley replies: “I respect his thinking and his beliefs, but at the same time I think he’s deluded”) and other believers, their discussion ranging from personal images of God (Michael Cunningham sees God as a black woman, Derek Walcott as a wise old white man with a beard) to religion’s place in American culture, from the afterlife to the concepts of good and evil, from fundamentalism to the Bible. And almost without fail, the conversations turn to questions of art and literature. Toni Morrison discusses Virginia Woolf and William Faulkner, Richard Ford invokes Wallace Stevens, and David Lynch draws attention to the religious aspects of Bu–uel, Fellini...and Harold Ramis's Groundhog Day. Informal, revealing, unexpected, Do You Believe? is a captivating and thought-provoking meditation how faith, in all its facets, remains profoundly relevant for and in our culture. (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:52 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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I don't think that the answers given by the people interviewed are up to par with the questions asked, and I would have liked to either have fewer interviews with longer questions, or simply having the questions pushed harder on the people having to answer them. Too many times is "I don't know" accepted, with the questioning going on.
Not a bad book, but not the best (or the longest, about an hour's worth of reading). Elie Wiesel's interview is particularly good, as well as Franzen's, but the quality overall left me wanting more. (