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Obras de Aaron Ivey

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This is an excellent book! I don’t think I’ve ever read a biography about Charles Spurgeon before, but I’ve heard his name a lot, and have read a few of his writings. This book tells his story, and it also tells the story of a former slave, Thomas Johnson. Before I read this book, I’d never heard of Johnson. I also didn’t know that Spurgeon struggled with depression most of his life, or that he and his wife had so many health issues. It was an encouraging read because even though there weren’t any quick fixes in his path (and he suffered from depression right up until the end of his life), Spurgeon remained faithful to the Lord throughout and tried to surround himself with people who spoke the truth to him. After reading this book, I’m looking forward to learning more about him and reading more of his writings. This was well-written and engaging—one I’d like to have on the shelf one day!… (más)
 
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EstherFilbrun | 3 reseñas más. | Jan 13, 2023 |
A wonderful surprise!! I had never heard of this, but it came up as I searched through some surgeon books.... Fiction, but based on thorough research. Narrator on Audible was fantastic. Totally ready for Susie now!
 
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Isaiah40 | 3 reseñas más. | Sep 7, 2021 |
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I have heard of Charles Spurgeon as a well known preacher and theologian, but knew very little about his life. I also love historical fiction.

This book starts off by telling the stories of two different men as they grow up and come to faith. Charles Spurgeon and Thomas Johnson lived in the same time period, but their experiences were worlds apart. Eventually their stories intertwine and we learn about their unlikely friendship.

Towards the end I was in tears, this book was so well written and moving, it felt like I knew the characters. I definitely would love to learn more about both Charles Spurgeon and Thomas Johnson.

I wish I could tell which quotes were actually from Spurgeon/Johnson and the other characters versus the authors of the book. But I guess that just means I will have to do some non-fiction reading on these men. I will probably pick up Spurgeon‰ÃƒÂ›Ã‚ªs Sorrows in the future.

If you love historical fiction, then you should give this book a try.

I received a free digital copy of this book through the publisher and Netgalley.
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wordswithrach | 3 reseñas más. | May 2, 2019 |
Steal Away Home: Charles Spurgeon & Thomas Johnson - Unlikely Friends on the Passage to Freedom by Matt Carter and Aaron Ivey, is a novel that tells of a friendship between those two men. One was a pastor who became quite famous, and yet had a lot of troubles in his life, and the other a former slave who became a preacher and then a Missionary to Africa. This book is an attempt to imagine their lives leading up to their ultimate meeting and friendship. Various chapters deal with either the perspective of Spurgeon or that of Thomas in a particular year. The time advances through the chapters, showing the growing perspective of the men individually.

I really wanted to like this book, but sadly I didn't. First, , as I was reading this book I kept running across parts where the thought kept nagging me that something about the depiction wasn't right. I went and looked at some other books I have on Spurgeon and realized the thought was generally correct. The authors don't seem very concerned about getting the history right.

I'll give a couple of examples: First, when Spurgeon's wife, Susannah, heard Spurgeon preach and laid eyes on Spurgeon for the first time, the book describes Susannah as struggling with conviction, focused upon a spiritual question provoked by Charles' sermon. But in real life Susannah herself says, "Alas, for my vain and foolish heart! I was not spiritually minded enough to understand his earnest presentation of the Gospel and his powerful pleading with sinners", rather she remembers that his odd attire attracted most of her attention and caused her some amusement. The portrayal afterward when they met at dinner seemed odd as well, Spurgeon and Susannah are depicted as flirting with each other, even though they were only just meeting each other! I never understood that to be the case. Another inaccuracy in the book is that Susannah is present in the building at the time of the Surrey Gardens Music Hall disaster and Spurgeon runs to her immediately after attempting to conclude the message. In reality Susannah was not there, she was at home having not yet recovered from childbirth. I understand that this is a work of fiction, but I understood that it was going to be building around the historical facts, not changing them. This just seemed like an attempt to make the events romantic, when they were not.

Second, I didn't like that Charles and Susannah are portrayed together in bed. Nothing really indecent is described there but I feel really uncomfortable with that type of thing. The conversations that this book depicts them having in bed could have been had in the living room during the day. There was also at least one description of Spurgeon touching his wife that make me feel uncomfortable, it seemed slightly sensual. Maybe I'm just too picky, but I don't need to picture them caressing each other in order to realize that they loved each other. I don't understand why this needs to be depicted?

And then, ironically, some of Spurgeon's struggle with depression is depicted in a depressing way. Spurgeon is shown to struggle with various fears, fear about his wife dying, about himself dying with no one to mourn him, fearing that too many people need him, feeling that no one needs him, and he has struggles with the "why" of his and his wife's sufferings. Things like that. He finally finds peace late in the book when Johnson talks to him, but that doesn't make much sense. I don't understand that what Johnson told him was different from what he had already been contemplating himself, in real life and in the book. And I really didn't think that Spurgeon's almost despairing "why?" was in keeping with his character.

I never thought that Spurgeon lived through a good portion of his life doubting the sanctifying purpose of God in suffering. From what I've read, he seemed to understand it most of his life as a Christian! And I always thought that good deal of his sadness and depression stemmed from his grief for others. That he mourning for the souls of people and their not caring for God rather than fearing that they did not care about him. That he mourned for the state of the church and the indifference of so called Christians to getting the Gospel right and Biblical doctrine right. I also remember his grieving that he didn't preach adequately. In a way, a lot of Spurgeon's sorrows seemed to me to be godly sorrow, rather than worldly sorrow. But perhaps I misunderstood Spurgeon's depression in my readings of biographies about him, or perhaps I just don't remember correctly.

But the way they have him deal with his depression (or not deal with it) also bothered me. One spot talks about him using nature: "Whether it was a starry night on the patio, a morning in the garden, an afternoon with bees, or a week in the countryside with a friend, Charles did his best to surround himself with things that felt natural, real, and truthful. Because when a person wars against depression, and tries with all their might to push away the haunting darkness……that person pays very close attention to the things that illuminate truth. Like sunshine after a weeklong shower, truth is wonderfully bright to a depressed heart." That didn't make biblical sense to me. That the things which are seen illuminate truth and, by implication, provoke faith? Doesn't that contradict what Hebrews 11:1 says about faith? And other Biblical passages as well? Truth is found by hearing the Word of God, and faith comes by that Word, not by staring at nature or finding things to stir up one's emotions or feelings.

The portrayal of the two wives, Spurgeon's wife and Johnson's wife, gave me an impression that the wives were the spiritual leaders of the families. I know in Spurgeon's family that wasn't the case in real life. Spurgeon was his "wifey's" spiritual leader. That change grated at me, but maybe I just read it the wrong way. And then Spurgeon seemed too, how shall I describe it? Too flighty? Too mystical? He didn't seem as grounded in the truth of God's Word as the real Spurgeon was.

The book didn't talk about the DownGrade controversy, or Susannah's book fund for pastors who were struggling financially. Facts like those would have been interesting to have delved into and contemplated. Showing Spurgeon's fight to keep to the truths of the Bible rather than give in and promote the doctrines of men. Instead the book just seemed to desperately be trying to interweave Johnson and Spurgeon's lives more than they probably actually were. Even at the very end, they portray Susannah softly singing "Steal Away" to Spurgeon as he is dying. Maybe she did, though I don't remember it. I remember having read in a biography that the song that was sung close to the time Spurgeon died was "Emmanuel's Land", which, as nice as Steal Away is, has a lot more biblical concepts than the latter.

I have focused on the book's portrayal of Spurgeon and his wife because I don't know much about Thomas Johnson. But, knowing how they portrayed the Spurgeons, I'm not sure I'd completely trust the portrayal of Johnson or his wife either. I am very disappointed. The book was well written, I just didn't find this Spurgeon to be the Spurgeon I read about in the biographies. Historical Fact is more fascinating than historical fiction, and the individual facts of history were all ordained of God, so we can't make them any better! The facts God ordained, events, people, times, how much people met, how little they met…etc, are all perfect! Work with those! I really wish that the authors of this novel had grounded their fiction more solidly in the facts God ordained rather than amending them to fit some other storyline they wanted to run with.

Many thanks to the folks at B&H Publishers for sending me a free review copy of this book (My review did not have to be favorable)
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SnickerdoodleSarah | 3 reseñas más. | Aug 31, 2017 |

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4
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