Greta Christina
Author of Why Are You Atheists So Angry? 99 Things That Piss Off the Godless
About the Author
Greta Christina is donating 10% of her income from this book to atheist organizations, charities, and projects.
Image credit: The Bolingbrook Babbler
Series
Works by Greta Christina
Associated Works
Looking Queer: Body Image and Identity in Lesbian, Bisexual, Gay, and Transgender Communities (1998) — Contributor — 112 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1961-12-31
- Gender
- female
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Chicago, Illinois, USA
- Places of residence
- San Francisco, California, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
I love the conversational and compassionate, empathetic style of writing she has. In addition to that, while this book is more or less geared toward atheists who are thinking of coming out, there is more than a little something in here for everyone. For atheists who are already partially out, already completely out. Even theists can get something out of reading this. Great book.
An interesting essay explaining why the author rejected religion and providing a thorough critique of various types of religious (mainly Christian) forms of belief. This is, unsurprisingly US-centric. Strongly felt, but also very logical.
I would have liked this book more if it spent more time on the comforting thoughts about death and less on the nothing to do with God -- I've been an atheist for my entire life and don't need that kind of affirmation. It felt like the majority of the book was arguing for a secular/non-religious framework, and I wish there'd been more detail on the comforting thoughts. Instead, they were quickly enumerated and not discussed in the detail spent on tearing down a religious framework.
I really, really love this book. It came early in the mail and I was excited to see it! I was also surprised at the size of it. It was kind of small. But, boy, does it have a lot of important stuff packed in there!
It wasn't exactly what I was expecting when I read the title and decided to buy it, but it turned out to be even better!
I was expecting maybe a lot of quotes and anecdotes and stories from or about atheists who had something to say to comfort people who had gone through experiences show more where a loved one died and were tired of hearing about religion and prayer from everyone around them. Maybe even a poem or two. Kind of like Chicken Soup for the Soul except without the soul bit.
Don't get me wrong, there was definitely some of that in there (no poems, though) but a lot of it was about the difference between secular ways of viewing and coping with death, our own and that of our loved ones (even our pets), and how it's possible to derive comfort from secular philosophies about life and death. About why we shouldn't concede the point of comfort to religion alone.
The author doesn't just say those things, though. She explains why she feels that way, and I think she makes very compelling arguments for that.
This book is not just written for people who are already secular. This is also a book I think religious people could find useful, as well. And indeed, it seems that the author intended it that way.
There's also a handy resource guide at the back of the book that gives you suggestions for looking into the subject matter further.
I'm definitely glad that I picked this up. It's a short read, reasonably-sized font, and doesn't take up a lot of time. At the same time, I think it's the kind of book that you'll put on your shelf and go back to many times. Definitely worth the buy and I'd certainly recommend it! show less
It wasn't exactly what I was expecting when I read the title and decided to buy it, but it turned out to be even better!
I was expecting maybe a lot of quotes and anecdotes and stories from or about atheists who had something to say to comfort people who had gone through experiences show more where a loved one died and were tired of hearing about religion and prayer from everyone around them. Maybe even a poem or two. Kind of like Chicken Soup for the Soul except without the soul bit.
Don't get me wrong, there was definitely some of that in there (no poems, though) but a lot of it was about the difference between secular ways of viewing and coping with death, our own and that of our loved ones (even our pets), and how it's possible to derive comfort from secular philosophies about life and death. About why we shouldn't concede the point of comfort to religion alone.
The author doesn't just say those things, though. She explains why she feels that way, and I think she makes very compelling arguments for that.
This book is not just written for people who are already secular. This is also a book I think religious people could find useful, as well. And indeed, it seems that the author intended it that way.
There's also a handy resource guide at the back of the book that gives you suggestions for looking into the subject matter further.
I'm definitely glad that I picked this up. It's a short read, reasonably-sized font, and doesn't take up a lot of time. At the same time, I think it's the kind of book that you'll put on your shelf and go back to many times. Definitely worth the buy and I'd certainly recommend it! show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 8
- Also by
- 2
- Members
- 388
- Popularity
- #62,337
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 11
- ISBNs
- 14
- Favorited
- 1













