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We are busy and constantly bombarded. Notifications, pings, alerts:
we carry in our pockets devices that are designed to capture and
keep our attention. We are never fully present, always thinking
ahead to the next thing, distracted by an email, playing worries
over in our minds. But what effect is this having on our lives,
relationships and, most importantly, our spiritual health? We need
rest – the rest that only Christ can give. But this book is not
simply meant to get you off your phone, make more time to stop, or
help you simplify and digitally detox. Instead, you are invited
into the greatest life imaginable, where we have the openness to be
interrupted by God and used in a way that will bring Him glory. At
the end of each chapter, Thomas encourages us to take time to
ponder and pray – or Selah – and gives us guiding questions to
consider. A challenging read for anyone who feels overwhelmed by
all that calls on their attention and for those who long for peace.
In this third short story collection, following up on "Midnight
Call" (2008) and "Tempting Providence" (2010), Jonathan Thomas
continues to demonstrate the skill and emotive power that have made
him a dynamic new voice in contemporary weird fiction. This volume
opens with a quartet of tales elaborating upon Lovecraft's Cthulhu
Mythos, including "Mobymart After Midnight" (a delightful skewering
of Walmart culture) and "King of Cat Swamp," an ingenious riff on
"The Call of Cthulhu." Other stories treat a variety of weird
themes: "Way Up When," about a man who has remarkable precognitive
powers; "The Comeuppance Hour," in which the makers of a skeptical
TV show about occult phenomena find more than they bargain for; and
"A Retouch in Camonica," about strange happenings in an Italian
archaeological site. The volume concludes with a "Swedish-American
Triptych," in which various protagonists encounter the bizarre in a
far Baltic land. Each tale is crafted meticulously and enlivened by
a wit and mordant satire that renders them unique in recent weird
writing.
"Jonathan Thomas pushes us toward . . . fresh hells, as in his
pages we recognize the still startling twenty-first-century
disjunction between our own fragmentary human skull and our own
residual ape-like jaw."-"From Barton L. St. Armand's Foreword"
"Jonathan Thomas has an enviably impressive range-from the gentle
to the gruesome, from science fiction through fantasy to the
spectral and horrific-but his wit is reliable, and so is the
clarity of his eye, and the precision of his prose. He's an asset
to all his fields."-"Ramsey Campbell"
Will Rollins, a greenhorn--cheechako--(chee-chock-oh) is miserable
in his new Alaska life. In addition to the bully after him, he
can't seem to make any friends in school and doesn't know a thing
about dogsleds, riverboats, hunting, or surviving at 40 degrees
below zero. Even though he doesn't feel very brave, Will darts out
alone onto rampaging river ice to rescue a stranded dog. His
bravery wins him a valuable, trained sled dog, Blackie, and a new
human friend as well, an Alaskan Indian boy named Elias. It's Elias
who challenges and inspires the cheechako to become a rugged
outdoorsman and a real Alaskan. Will starts out by feeding,
harnessing and then driving a sled dog team. He learns to throw a
hatchet-and hit what he aims at He learns to snowshoe and stay
alive in the cold, to challenge his fears and to push on when
everything he wants to do is quit. Best of all, he learns to be a
good friend. But when a fierce, Siberian blizzard rampages across
central Alaska, stranding Will's family, nearly burying their log
cabin in wind-blown snow drifts, it will be up to Will and Blackie
to try to make it out alive. With Elias injured and Will's family
in danger of freezing, can a cheechako save them? Can he save
himself?
Jonathan Thomas follows up the critical and popular success of his
collection from 2008, Midnight Call and Other Stories, with this
new and substantial volume of weird tales long and short. The title
story is a marvelous evocation of Providence yesterday and today,
with much for the ghost of H. P. Lovecraft to dislike in the way
his city has evolved. Providence is the setting for several other
tales-tales that introduce us to such anomalies as a Lord of the
Animals who seems to have an inexplicable sympathy with our
four-footed friends, and a man whose quest for an extremely rare
psychedelic album leads to something much stranger . . . In these
twelve stories, Thomas fulfills the promise of his earlier work and
shows that he has become one of the leading figures in contemporary
supernatural horror. "Myth and archetype, as well as the influence
of masters of the Gothic tale, seep in from the groundwater in
Jonathan Thomas's world, but the landscape is wholly his own. The
stories amuse, challenge, and unsettle." - From Sherry Austin's
Foreword "I found 'Tempting Providence'] by Jonathan Thomas
unexpectedly charming (if it's permitted to describe a horror tale
as charming), not least in its evocation of old Providence . . . It
certainly brought back memories of my own wanderings around the
city in the '60s, the same 'wistful daydreams' his hero engages in,
the sense that, if only HPL hadn't died so young, he might still be
renting rooms in one of the neighborhood houses and enjoying a
sundae or an evening stroll." - T. E. D. Klein
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