_Jayber Crow_ by Wendell Berry: completed, but not completely satisfying to me.  Berry *does* give one a sense of longing for place and a sense of what belonging must mean.  His writing is simple, but somehow profound.  But this book failed to move me on the whole.  I may give _Hannah Coulter_ a try and see if Mr. Berry's fiction grows on me...
_Peacemaking Women: Biblical Hope for Resolving Conflict_ by Tara Klena Barthel and Judy Dabler:  Almost done studying through this with our Women's Fellowship at church.  It is excellent, and I highly recommend it.  I think it's weakest sections are the ones on marriage and family, but there is a plethora of good material on those topics, so I will excise that.  The rest is challenging and biblical.
_Standing by and Making Do: Women of Wartime Los Alamos_ ed. by Jane S. Wilson and Charlotte Serber:  this is not tremendously well written, but it is a fascinating look at my adopted "hometown".  It is a little slice of what these women went through as Los Alamos was founded.  I loved the descriptions of people waiting outside here in Los Alamos, looking southward, waiting for the first atomic test to be visible.  Fascinating.
_The Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment_ by Jeremiah Burroughs:  I reread about half of this timeless classic, and have laid it aside for a time.  Anyone who has not read this, ought to do so.
And new on my nightstand:
_Life at the Bottom: The Worldview that Makes the Underclass_ by Theodore Dalrymple: Fascinating, sobering, and I think full of insight. Dr. Dalrymple, a psychoiatrist in England, discusses his discovery that poverty is not so much about lack of wealth, but about poverty of soul and ideas in the West. I can't read it at bedtime, because it gives me nightmares, and makes the people you see on the Jerry Springer Show seem real...
_Lord Peter: The Complete Lord Peter Winsey Short Stories_ by Dorothy L. Sayers: Just for fun :-)
