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Loading... For the Time Beingby Annie Dillard
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. "Then before me in the near distance I saw the earth itself walking, the earth walking dark and aerated as it always does in every season, peeling the light back: The earth was plowing the men under, and the spade, and the plow." This is my 4th reading of the best spiritual book in the world. ( )Stellar. I love Dillard's writing. Sharp. Clear. Direct. I could not stop reading this book, over and over. I normally only read a book once. This is a book for anyone who has the BIG METAPHYSICAL QUESTIONS about life. Have you ever been to the surround theater at Walt Disney World – the one where you stand in an enormous room while majestic vistas are projected in panorama? I remember walking out feeling dizzy. Annie Dillard’s, For the Time Being, had the same effect. Reading Dillard made me feel infinitesimally small, teetering on the edge of insignificant. She tracks the journey of a grain of sand to a beach, the mass extinction of animals, and inexplicable “acts of god” challenging my delusions of self importance. I am small. And chances are this period of time I am in is not the most critical of all times as I secretly believe. In fact, does my life matter at all? I had to read the last quarter of the book slowly, digesting each notion, each sentence, and sometimes each word for the beauty and wonder. And though there are universes in every phrase, I did not find her ideas of God to align with my worldview. I do not agree that “God is out of the physical loop” or “God’s hands are tied;” however, Dillard made me think about my existence and perhaps, adjusted my inflated view of self importance. An excellent read for the quirky awe she inspires. Ashamedly, this is the first Dillard book I have read, but reading it definitely affected my reading list. This book should be read more viscerally than cerebrally—to do otherwise would leave a reader without an impression. This quilting together of science, Judaism, Catholicism, clouds, and stardust is consistent with purpose of the book. It creates a sense of impermanence in the earth’s ongoing processes and reminds the reader of the human limitation. Dillard's prose finds a profound and subtle way to speak of the cosmos—at least for the time being. no reviews | add a review
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There are, of course, facts aplenty here: the author is among our keenest living observers of the natural world (check out her soft-core account of two snails mating in chapter 7). But all roads lead Dillard back to God, who seems to be practicing a divine variant of benign neglect:
God is no more cogitating which among us he plans to be born as bird-headed dwarfs or elephant men--or to kill by AIDS or kidney failure, heart disease, childhood leukemia, or sudden infant death syndrome--than he is pitching lightning bolts at pedestrians, triggering rock slides, or setting fires. The very least unlikely things for which God might be responsible are what insurers call "acts of God."Natural calamity is an old fascination of the author's, going clear back to Pilgrim at Tinker Creek and Holy the Firm. Here it allows her to make her strongest argument yet on behalf of the Almighty's laissez-faire policy--while suggesting that His immanence in fact depends on our belief.
Yet even in her earnest pursuit of holiness, Dillard tends to hit the occasional speed bump. At one point she throws up her hands in exasperation and declares: "I don't know beans about God." This is hardly the stuff of an airtight theological argument, is it? But happily, Dillard possesses the same quality she ascribes to Teilhard, "a sort of anaerobic capacity to batten and thrive on paradox." So her contradictions are worth more to the reader than her consistencies. They enrich her narrative, yanking her back from the precipice of easy (or even moderately easy) belief. And Dillard's penchant for paradox ensures that For the Time Being--which aims, after all, to encompass God and all his works--always operates on a human, heartbreaking scale. --James Marcus
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:02 -0400)
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