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Have a Nice Doomsday: Why Millions of Americans Are Looking Forward to the End of the World by Nicholas Guyatt
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Have a Nice Doomsday: Why Millions of Americans are Looking Forward to the…

by Nicholas Guyatt

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507122,422 (3.47)6
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Ebury Press (2008), Paperback, 336 pages

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Showing 1-5 of 7 (next | show all)
This book gives an excellent history of the various end-of-the-world Christian beliefs. ( )
  kaelirenee | Oct 18, 2009 |
(posted on my blog: http://davenichols.net/have-nice-doom...)

The Skinny: Guyatt clearly put in a lot of time and effort on this book, he's delivered a read worthy of your time, but lower your expectations a bit. Three stars.

...

Nicholas Guyatt takes a level-headed first-hand survey of several well-known apocalyptic prophecy 'experts' in the USA, and comes away with an interesting story about differing goals with competitive and contradictory interpretations, and puts a human face on these merchants of End Times. The author strings several interviews together with interludes of historical background as he winds his narrative in a familiar and easily-digested manner.

My major beef with this book is due to the subtitle. "Why Millions of Americans are Looking Forward to the End of the World" was very inaccurate. Guyatt didn't attempt to survey 'millions' of Americans, just a few. His effort was solid in what he did, but he left the reader with an unsatisfactory answer to the subtitle's query. Worse, he took a shortcut to his answer through nothing short of wishful thinking.

Guyatt tells the reader this story in a curious but concerned mood. He never quite calls out his interviewees as crazy, but he's carefully darting incredulous looks out of the corner of his eye throughout every passage. His message, though not delivered particularly strongly or with much depth, is that there are crazy nuts out there who honestly believe they are living near the End Times, who are nonetheless pleasant to converse with in person.

To be fair, the reader is left with a humane view of these men (with the exception of John Hagee) to whom the author has given a fair deal of opportunity to make known their prophetic opinions through his book. The reader is not often given the courtesy of a reasonable fact check, though it is clear from reading between the lines that the author is aware of his subject's misleading, contradictory, or otherwise questionable 'facts'. Guyatt states in an addendum section that he is anticipating writing a follow-up to this book focused on creationism, so maybe he is trying the Bob Woodward method of playing nice now and scalding them later. More likely, he simply chose a less confrontational narrative than other secular writers would have delivered in order to explain apocalyptic Christianity to people who don't understand it.

We know, thanks to the book, why a handful of the movement's unique middlemen and top dogs are into prophecy and End Times, but Guyatt doesn't attempt to apply this to the rest of the 'millions'. In fact, he equivocates a bit by offering near the end of the book that he doesn't really believe that most apocalyptic Christians (a group he defined broadly as those who bought Left Behind books) are as nutty as the guys he interviewed or talked about (such as Hal Lindsey and John Hagee), and perhaps they could be reasoned with by the secular world. He does a bit of self-bashing by asking liberals and secularist to play a bit nicer with these folks, not to push them harder into the arms of the hardcore apocalyptic crowd.

He never really answers why so many people 'look forward' to the End Times, and worse, he goes another step in the wrong direction by ignoring most of the evidence he presented throughout the book. Most of these guys are hardcore. Some believe they should cheerlead decisions which push the world to the brink, a few offer a more restrained version. There was only one guy that the author appears to have considered reasonable, level-headed, and practical, and yet, to Guyatt, the untold majority of those 'millions' he asked about are more like the exception and less like the rule? Sorry, Nicholas, but that's a pretty strange bit of wishful, non-empircal deduction from an author who should know better, especially after heavily investigating a subject fraught with wishful, non-empirical deduction.

Anyway, that last point is more of an overly-critical assessment of the book (in hopes that Guyatt will be more rigorous with his next subject), and I did enjoy this read. I got a background of many players in the apocalyptic Christian game which I've not read elsewhere, and a few behind-the-scenes opinions of those guys were insightful and troubling. Guyatt clearly put in a lot of time and effort on this book, he's delivered a read worthy of your time, but lower your expectations a bit. Three stars. ( )
2 vote IslandDave | May 2, 2009 |
A very interesting, if not particularly original, look at millennial belief in the US and how it may affect its responses to other countries especially the middle east. A bit like a cross between Deer Hunting With Jesus and What's The Matter With America?: The Resistible Rise Of The American Right, though not quite up to the standards of either. ( )
  CarlGreatbatch | Oct 12, 2008 |
A pretty good report on the phenomena of Apocalyptic Christianity in America. The tone was more respectful than the goofy title and cover led me to believe it would be (which is a good thing). At the same time this is no somber report. The book is breezy and conversational. More an overview than an in depth study.

The history of End Times belief is followed from its origins in England and we are shown how those beliefs moved to the New World even as they faded from Europe. I agree with the other review that pointed out that this history was pretty light, but that wasn’t my primary interest in the book, so I didn’t mind it.

By far the most interesting parts of the book for me were the interviews with the End Times superstars and also-rans. Tim LaHaye and Joel Rosenberg are interesting guys. While I don't doubt they sincerely believe their End Times eschatology, you can't help but feel that they aren't glorying in their celebrity a bit. Guyatt lets them skewer themselves with their own words. It never felt like he was holding these people up for ridicule, though he didn’t gloss over some of the negative image they project on their own.

The real revelation (pardon the pun) for me were some of the guys 'in the trenches'. The host of a cable access show: Final Hour, the guy who felt a calling to sell his home and travel the country in an RV and Mel Odom, a Christian contract writer of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Sabrina the Teenage Witch novels who was hired to write a Tom Clancy-esque spin-off series to the Left Behind books. These are regular work-a-day guys doing what they believe in but wrestling with some of the stickier questions of End Times belief.

The author gets them to grapple with their seemingly contradictory views that things must get worse in order to trigger The Rapture and at the same time that Christians should exercise their influence in politics in order to make America a more Christian nation.

Over all I would say Have A Nice Doomsday is a good introduction to End Times belief for anyone who’s seen those Left Behind books and are wondering what that whole Rapture thing is about. ( )
1 vote jseger9000 | Apr 18, 2008 |
I give this 2 stars because the author is clearly trying to understand this topic. But he doesn't go far enough...meaning, he doesn't really read the true source behind it all, which is the Bible itself. Yes, there are plenty of so-called Christian out there in this world, including pastors, who don't walk the talk, and as such, they are still living for the world, not for the Lord. You should not let this be the basis for why you reject Christianity. And as for the previous reviewer who states that the Tribulations won't really be all that bad, I would seriously advise that person to read the Revelations on this again. In the end, why be foolish and take chances on the eternal life when you can be saved right now and start living for God? ( )
  NemesisClaws | Apr 1, 2008 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0061152242, Paperback)

In Have a Nice Doomsday, Nicholas Guyatt searches for the truth behind a startling statistic: 50 million Americans have come to believe that the apocalypse will take place in their lifetime. They're convinced that, any day now, Jesus will snatch up his followers and spirit them to heaven. The rest of us will be left behind to endure massive earthquakes, devastating wars, and the terrifying rise of the Antichrist. But true believers aren't sitting around waiting for the Rapture. They're getting involved in debates over abortion, gay rights, and even foreign policy. Are they devout or deranged? Does their influence stretch beyond America's religious heartland—perhaps even to the White House?

Journeying from Texas megachurches to the southern California deserts—and stopping off for a chat with prophecy superstar Tim LaHaye—Guyatt looks for answers to some burning questions: When will Russia attack Israel and ignite the Tribulation? Does the president of Iran appear in Bible prophecy? And is the Antichrist a homosexual?

Bizarre, funny, and unsettling in equal measure, Have a Nice Doomsday uncovers the apocalyptic obsessions at the heart of the world's only superpower.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:57 -0400)

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