Love Is An Orientation by Andrew Marin: A Review
I have wanted to review this book for months but find it nearly impossible to organize my thoughts into a coherent review. Don’t get me wrong. I love this book and wholeheartedly applaud Andrew Marin’s bridge-building work between Christian and gay communities.
I first became aware of the book from a review at Internetmonk.com. After reading Love Is An Orientation I immediately bought five additional copies to give away. So, you see, while I struggle to write a review it has nothing to do with the content.
My problem, I find it difficult to write about this topic without my own emotions churning out of control.
I can’t discuss this book without my thoughts turning to a young family friend who practically lived at out house his senior year of high school. I didn’t know what was going on in his family, and didn’t pry. His only comment was that our house was quiet.
Years later this young man and his roommates were moving to a new apartment. I was helping them get the old place cleaned out. While the others took a load of furniture to the new apartment, he and I stayed behind to clean out the refrigerator. In the stillness of that empty apartment he told me everything. At 16 his parents found out that he was gay. They thought they could beat him into going straight.
He told me the whole story and the pain in my heart was unbearable. The next day, back home, I spent the entire day crying. How could parents do this to their own! Why?
Before that day, I would have said this really wasn’t my issue. After that day, after I cried until my eyes ached, I really didn’t have a choice. This cruelty must stop. We are also culpable by our silence. Do you know what compassion is, the compassion that Christ taught? It begins by looking at people as HUMAN! None of us are merely our sexuality.
Too often we look for one identifiable trait to label each person we encounter: The fat girl. The computer geek. The drunk. The great singer. The girl with a criminal record. The woman with the funny accent. That guy obsessed with politics. The boy with the really cool car. The annoying Christian. The man in the wheelchair. The gay guy. Once labeled it becomes so easy to file away in mental boxes marked Good and Bad or Desirable and Undesirable. Now, no longer diverse individuals with successes and failures, a past a future, emotions, aspirations, impulses and fragilities, we needn’t consider how much we may have in common. Once condemned or elevated by our labels, we may trample underfoot or place high up on pedestals. The labels make them, thems – maybe worse than us or better than us, but no way could they be us. And this, my friends, leaves no room for compassion.
Just as I suspected, I veered pretty far from the book I intended to review. But since some of you have also read Andrew Marin’s book, perhaps you will have more to say.
This is a close as I can get to a review:
If you are a parent and your son or daughter have just come out to you, or if you are a pastor and a member of your congregation wants to talk about same-sex attractions. If you are a teacher, friend, sibling, co-worker, neighbor, I beg you to read this book before you walk away and slam the door on this treasured individual.
Categories: A Time To Speak, And The Dominoes Fall, Christianity, Culture, Equally Human, Store Updates Tags: book review
Questions: And The Dominoes Fall
Author Sarah Mankowski answers questions from a reader about her novel And The Dominoes Fall
Categories: And The Dominoes Fall, Project Updates, Sarah's Updates Tags: ammunition, And The Dominoes Fall, bad shape, bureaucracies, career politicians, current state, dominoes, edible landscaping, fall, gas pumps, media game, mres, organism, preparedness, store shelves, storeroom, survivalist
Categories: And The Dominoes Fall, Project Updates, Sarah's Updates Tags: And The Dominoes Fall, civilization, drunk driver, earthquakes, fears, Florida, grandmother, humor, memorable characters, page turner, sensitive readers, violent volcanic eruption, wild ride, yellowstone national park
Survival After The Dominoes Fall
Did I ever have fun creating this Amazon list for readers of And The Dominoes Fall. If you have read the book, you will understand why many of the items were included.
Amazon List: Survival After The Dominoes Fall
Categories: And The Dominoes Fall, Project Updates, Sarah's Updates, WordThunder Updates Tags: Amazon lists, And The Dominoes Fall, preparedness, Sarah Mankowski, Survival
For Readers of And The Dominoes Fall, info about Seismic Activity at Yellowstone
But before getting too alarmed, probably a good idea to read an Interview with Dr. Jacob Lowenstern of the U.S. Geological Survey, top scientist at the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory:
No sooner is the novel available in print, we start hearing about earthquake swarms at Yellowstone. For interested readers I tried to collect some info and useful links
From the USGS YVO website:
December 2008 Yellowstone Earthquake And Ground Deformation Summary
Earthquake Summary:
Yellowstone seismicity increased significantly in December 2008 due to an energetic earthquake swarm that commenced on December 26. This swarm, a sequence of earthquakes clustered in space and time, is occurring beneath the northern part of Yellowstone Lake in Yellowstone National Park. As of this writing, the largest of these earthquakes was a magnitude 3.9 at 10:15 pm MST on Dec. 27. Through 5:00 pm MST on Dec. 31, the sequence had included 12 events of magnitude 3.0 to 3.9 and approximately 20 of magnitude 2.5 to 2.9, with a total of at least 400 events large enough to be located (magnitude ~1 or larger). National Park Service (NPS) employees and visitors have reported feeling the largest of these earthquakes in the area around Yellowstone Lake and at Old Faithful and Grant Village.
The hypocenters of the swarm events cluster along a north-south-trending zone that is about 7 km long. The vast majority of the focal depths are shallower than 5 km. It is not possible to identify a causative fault of other feature without further analysis.
Analysts are currently processing the backlog of seismic data from these events. The current analyst-processed catalog is believed to include all events of magnitude 2.5 and greater through Dec 31 at 5 pm MST, but hundreds of earthquakes remain to be processed. The total of more than 400 locatable events is based on automatically-determined locations and magnitudes for the swarm events.
The December 2008 earthquake sequence is the most intense in this area for some years. No damage has been reported within Yellowstone National Park, nor would any be expected from earthquakes of this size. The swarm is in a region of historical earthquake activity and is close to areas of Yellowstone famous hydrothermal activity. Similar earthquake swarms have occurred in the past in Yellowstone without triggering steam explosions or volcanic activity. Nevertheless, there is some potential for hydrothermal explosions and earthquakes may continue or increase in magnitude. There is a much lower potential for related volcanic activity.
The National Park Service in Yellowstone has been kept fully informed of the ongoing seismic activity via electronic means and by phone contacts with the University of Utah and the U.S. Geological Survey USGS). The Wyoming Office of Homeland Security is reviewing Earthquake Response Plans and monitoring seismic activity.
Earthquakes are a common occurrence in the Yellowstone National Park area, an active volcanic-tectonic area averaging 1,000 to 2,000 earthquakes a year. Yellowstone’s 10,000 geysers and hot springs are the result of this geologic activity. A summary of Yellowstone’s volcanic history is available on the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory web site (listed below).
The University of Utah operates a seismic network in Yellowstone National Park in conjunction with the National Park Service and the U.S. Geological Survey. These three institutions are partners in the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory. Seismic data from Yellowstone are transmitted to the University in real-time by radio and satellite links from a network of 28 seismographs in the Yellowstone area and are available on the web.
Seismologists continue to monitor and analyze data from this swarm of earthquakes and provide updates to the NPS and USGS and to the public via the following web pages.
Information on U.S. earthquake activity including Yellowstone can be viewed at the U.S. Geological Survey web site:
Information on earthquakes can also be viewed at the University of Utah
Seismograph Stations web site: http://www.seis.utah.edu/.
Seismographic recordings from Yellowstone seismograph stations
An article on earthquake swarms at Yellowstone
Ground Deformation Summary:
Through December 2008, continuous GPS data show that much of the Yellowstone caldera continued moving upward, though at a lower rate than the past few years. The maximum measured ground uplift over the past 53 months is ~23 cm at the White Lake GPS station, north of Fishing Bridge. An example
The general uplift of the Yellowstone caldera is scientifically important and will continue to be monitored and studied closely by YVO staff.
A discussion of the current uplift episode at Yellowstone and long-term ground deformation at Yellowstone -
The Yellowstone Volcano Observatory (YVO) is a partnership of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), Yellowstone National Park, and University of Utah to strengthen the long-term monitoring of volcanic and earthquake unrest in the Yellowstone National Park region. Yellowstone is the site of the largest and most diverse collection of natural thermal features in the world and the first National Park. YVO is one of the five USGS Volcano Observatories that monitor volcanoes within the United States for science and public safety.
And if you still want more about supervolcanoes, I came across this YouTobe clip
Categories: And The Dominoes Fall, Project Updates, Sarah's Updates Tags: And The Dominoes Fall, december 26, earthquake activity, earthquake sequence, earthquake summary, earthquake swarm, earthquakes, faith, focal depths, grant village, ground deformation, links, magnitude, mst, national park service, novel, old ful, s, seismic data, space and time, summit elevation, undefined, volcano, yellowstone national park




