Christian Retailing

Bible Beat CR October 2010 Print Email
Written by Production   
Thursday, 09 September 2010 12:25 PM America/New_York

MoodyRyrieMoody Publishers is releasing this month the Ryrie Study Bible in the New International Version (NIV) for the first time. The Soft Touch Bible is available in the New American Standard Bible version and the NIV, both in a brown or burgundy red-letter edition for $59.99 or a brown or burgundy red-letter indexed edition for $69.99. The study Bible includes 10,000 explanatory notes; and in-text supporting maps, charts, timelines and diagrams. Consumers will receive a code to go online and download The Moody Library software program.

 

Holman Bible Publishers is releasing the HCSB Study Bible—the first major study Bible based on the Holman Christian Standard Bible translation that became available in 2004—on Oct. 1. The Bible features approximately 15,000 study notes and is designed so that clarifying resources—notes, maps, charts, word studies or illustrations—are on the same page spread as the biblical text to which they refer. The HCSB Study Bible features a two-column text setting with center-column references, and comes gift-boxed. It has 290 word studies, 141 photographs, 62 timelines, 59 maps and 16 illustrations or reconstructions. The black deluxe leather edition retails for $150; black bonded leather for $69.99; black bonded leather indexed for $79.99; and black/gray Duo-Tone simulated leather indexed for $79.99.

 

Common-English-Bible Two New Testament editions with a brand-new Bible translation, which aims to reflect more closely how readers naturally speak, are releasing this month from Abingdon Press. The Common English Bible New Testament DecoTone Tan/Chocolate Brown and The Common English Bible New Testament Softcover are available for $15 and $5, respectively. The Common English Bible Committee is an alliance of publishers from 22 faith traditions, including Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), Episcopal, United Methodist, Disciples of Christ and the United Church of Christ. For more information, go to www.CommonEnglishBible.com.

 

The LeatherSoft King James Study Bible retails for $69.99. With thousands of notes and commentaries from respected conservative scholars, it includes doctrinal footnotes, personality profiles, archaeological information, special articles, in-text maps and more than 5,700 annotations. The study Bible from Thomas Nelson releases Oct. 3.

 

Zondervan releases the Bible Clutch in three designs—black, Caribbean blue/palm green and pink/chocolate—this month. In trim size, the Bible Clutch features the complete NIV text with contemporary Italian Duo-Tone cover designs with an enclosed pocket and a zipper closure. Less than an inch thick, it will fit into a briefcase or purse. Traditional features include a double-column format, words of Christ in red and a presentation page. Each clutch retails for $32.99.

 

The New Revised Standard Version translation is available for the first time in the popular thinline size. The Go-Anywhere Thinline Bible with the Apocrypha is less than an inch thick. Formatted in a double-column setting with gilded edges, a ribbon marker, presentation page and maps, the burgundy bonded leather Bible retailers for $29.99 and is available this month from Harper Bibles.

 

Matthew-Henry-Study-BibleHendrickson Publishers is releasing The Matthew Henry Study Bible this month in a variety of designs and price points. It is available in hardcover for $39.95; hardcover indexed for $49.95; Flexisoft leather for $69.95; and Flexisoft leather indexed for $79.95. All leather editions are available in mahogany/brown, blue/gray or black. The King James Bible includes Henry’s biography and book introductions, footnotes and in-text quotations from his writings.

 
Book Beat CR October 2010 Print Email
Written by Production   
Thursday, 09 September 2010 12:19 PM America/New_York

CrazyLoveSince its release in May 2008, Crazy Love has reached 1 million copies sold, publisher David C. Cook announced. The debut book by Francis ChanCrazy Love has appeared on multiple best-seller lists, including USA Today and Publishers Weekly. Chan has donated all royalties for the book to charity.

 

Drawing on recent research and in-depth interviews with young people leaving the church, Generation Ex-Christian by Drew Dyck offers profiles of real-world, young ex-Christians. The book also identifies seven kinds of leavers and offers practical advice for how to connect with each type. The Moody Publishers book releases this month and retails for $13.99.

 

WhatWomenTellMeHost and executive producer of Moody Radio’s “Midday Connection” Anita Lustrea has heard many a heartbreaking story from women across the country, but she has also seen God’s healing power at work. Sharing her own story and those of other women, What Women Tell Me: Finding Freedom From the Secrets We Keep, out this month from Zondervan, retails for $14.99.

 

In When the Hurt Runs Deep: Healing and Hope for Life’s Desperate Moments, best-selling author and Bible teacher Kay Arthur encourages readers from the study of Scripture as well as her own experiences and insights gleaned in counseling others. The WaterBrook Press book releases this month and retails for $22.99.

 

Best-selling author and activist Tony Campolo offers a collection of stories from his life-long friendships and world travels in Stories That Feed Your Soul, published this month by Regal Books. Set around Rom. 8, the stories center on themes such as freedom from condemnation and living with hope. The hardcover book retails for $19.99.

 


More book news: For additional book news, including reviews, visit www.christianretailing.com.

 

 
Book Reviews CR September 2010 Print Email
Written by Production   
Wednesday, 18 August 2010 10:07 AM America/New_York

 

HopeUnseenHope Unseen

Capt. Scotty Smiley with Doug Crandall

Howard Books

hardcover, 256 pages, $24.99

978-1-439-18379-3

Smiley, a U.S. Army captain tells of his recovery from a life-altering injury in Hope Unseen: The Story of the U.S. Army’s First Blind Active-Duty Officer. Blinded by an Iraqi insurgent car bomb in 2005, Smiley forges a new way to serve his country, teaching leadership skills at the United States Military Academy.

Desiring a military career from an early age, Smiley descends into despair after losing his sight less than two years into his first deployment. He relies on his family to get through his rehabilitation, particularly his wife, who refuses to sign papers that would have discharged him as a wounded veteran. Smiley eventually accomplishes many things he had once written off as impossible: attending graduate school, extreme sports—surfing, skydiving, mountain climbing—and raising two sons.

Smiley’s autobiographical account is mostly chronological, though he flashes forward or back at appropriate times for effect. Readers will appreciate how Smiley’s faith gives him the will to believe that God still has a purpose for his life. The book includes eight pages of black and white photos.

—John Leatherman

 

FaithofSarahPalin

 

The Faith and Values of Sarah Palin

Stephen Mansfield and David A. Holland

FrontLine (Strang Book Group)

hardcover, 256 pages, $22.99

978-1-616-38164-6

Best-selling author Mansfield and writing partner Holland reflect on the life of 2008 Republican vice presidential candidate in The Faith and Values of Sarah Palin: What She Believes and What It Means for America. The book investigates the ways her faith informs and influences her personal and political choices.

Palin took seriously her youth pastor’s challenge to be salt and light, sensing she was destined to serve. Devoted to family, with husband Todd his own man but ever supportive, she is strongly pro-life, which led her to carry her Down’s Syndrome baby, Trig, to full term against medical advice. The authors also write of her stand to see the creation account given a fair hearing in public schools.

Seeking to explain Palin and her views, the authors pause after each of the book’s three sections to learn from her beginnings, reflect on her politics and even offer her advice. The reader will see her as a devoted servant of the people aiming to practice her faith in the public square.

—Christine D. Johnson

 

CityOnOurKneesCity On Our Knees

TobyMac

Bethany House (Baker Publishing Group)

hardcover, 224 pages, $19.99

978-0-764-20865-2

TobyMac’s song “City on Our Knees” took the Christian music world by storm, and now the musician takes his lyrics one step further with this book, which “reflects the message of the song,” he says.

In the song, 
TobyMac sings, “when we step across the line, we can sail across the sea”; in the book he illustrates the lyric with numerous stories of people who have stepped across lines of persecution, doubt, prejudice or despair to change the world one bit at a time. From Augustine of Hippo to young Alexandra Scott and her lemonade stand, from John Wesley to Haiti earthquake survivor Dan Wooley, all have helped create a better world.

Many stories are familiar—George Mueller’s orphanages, The Blind Side’s Michael Oher’s journey to football fame—but just as many aren’t, such as Jeannine Brabon’s work in a Colombian prison.

Yet all, including TobyMac with his own insights, will inspire readers with a strong message of action and love to step across the line.

—Ann E. Byle

 

StrongerDalyStronger

Jim Daly

David C. Cook

softcover, 240 pages, $14.99

978-1-434-76446-1

Daly, who serves as president and CEO of Focus on the Family, writes about one of the paradoxes of the Christian—the blessing of brokenness—in Stronger: Trading Brokenness for Unbreakable Strength.

No stranger to suffering, as a boy he was abandoned by his alcoholic father and then lost his mother to cancer. He not only shares vignettes from his own life—his marriage and his wife’s struggle with depression—but also relays the stories and struggles of others who’ve crossed his path, offering no easy answers to the “Why, God?” question.

Drawing from David’s Psalms and Paul’s writings, Daly explains that life’s tribulations cause people to become beaten, bitter or broken. The path of brokenness is the preferred road, he says, reminding readers of Paul’s signature philosophy in 2 Cor. 12:10: “For when I am weak, then I am strong.”

Believers will especially appreciate Daly’s teaching on the different facets of hope. Ultimately, he steers readers’ attention to the source of eternal strength, closing with a quote from Psalm 62: “Find rest, O my soul, in God alone.”

—Brian Smith McCallum

 

ImmanuelsVeinsImmanuel’s Veins

Ted Dekker

Thomas Nelson

hardcover, 384 pages, $25.99

978-1-595-54009-6

When advance publicity material warns that Dekker’s latest is for everyone, but “not everyone is for this story,” it’s either nervousness or clever marketing. Certainly in this tale of vampires and seduction set in 18th-century Russia, Christian fiction’s favorite provocateur once more pushes the boundaries as he depicts the lure of sin in a way that may make some frown. But there is a strong redemptive thread woven into the adventure for those who persist beyond any initial discomfort.

It’s not all subtle: IV (Get it?) features an ancestral being named Alucard. Yet, the story of warrior Toma Nicolescu’s heroic love for beautiful but bewitched Lucine Cantemir is fast-paced—like a period-themed music video—and rich in imagery about the power of blood to infect or deliver.

This edgy parable—while maybe not for everyone—could entice and then entreat “Twilight” fans to shine a light into the dreamy shadows cast by the vampire series and discover that temptation demands a price that only true love can pay.

—Andy Butcher

 

NaomiDaughtersNaomi and Her Daughters

Walter Wangerin Jr.

Zondervan

hardcover, 228 pages, $24.99

978-0-310-32734-9

Based on Judges and Ruth, Naomi and Her Daughters weaves the history of ancient Israel into the drama of Naomi’s life as a 
storyteller-poet.

Naomi enters the homes and hearts of the residents of Bethlehem where she ministers to their physical needs, and as their wise woman or Hakamah, teaches them their history. Wangerin’s Boaz becomes a grief-stricken wanderer through the ruins of Sodom and Gomorrah as he remembers Naomi’s stories.

With Wangerin’s descriptive touch, even characters briefly mentioned in the Bible seem to take on flesh and blood. Readers will come to care about the pain and struggles, the defeats and victories of Naomi’s contemporaries. The familiar story of Ruth and Boaz retold by this award-winning author affirms the founding of the lineage of Jesus Christ.

—Eilene Ishler

 

DancingWithMaxDancing With Max

Emily Colson

Zondervan

hardcover, 200 pages, $16.99

978-0-310-29368-2

Being a parent of a child with special needs can be isolating and difficult—and a challenge when it comes to faith—or so Colson found her experience with her now 19-year-old son, Max.

In Dancing With Max: A Mother and Son Who Broke Free, Colson shares her experience. Colson—whose husband left when Max was an infant—was overwhelmed with the lack of progress Max was making early on as she saw others his age get along in life just fine, while she suffered through his repeated setbacks and, at times, embarrassing incidents. Finally finding answers, she discovered that Max had autism, enabling her to move forward and grow with Max.

In sharing her discovery of God’s gift to Max of seeing the world with a different but uncluttered view, Colson will bring hope and encouragement to those who have a child with autism. The book includes a prologue and epilogue by author—and Max’s grandfather—Charles Colson.

—Heidi L. Ippolito


 
Bible Beat CR September 2010 Print Email
Written by Production   
Wednesday, 18 August 2010 10:00 AM America/New_York

Available this month, the KJV Outreach Bible from Hendrickson Publishers comes in a case of 24 and retails for $2.95 each. Designed for mass distribution, the black-letter, King James Bible includes How to Become a Christian, key Bible promises and a Harmony of the Gospels.

 

StartBibleStart: The Bible for New Believers from pastor Greg Laurie is a New King James Version Bible for new believers or believers who want to learn more about their faith. Start focuses on basic discipleship with articles and devotions on subjects such as prayer and being a witness. Core biblical themes are introduced at basic theological levels and presented in simple language. Thomas Nelson releases Start this month in a red trade-paper edition for $19.99, jacketed hardcover edition for $24.99, raven Leathersoft for $59.99 and raven Leathersoft, thumb indexed for $69.99. A New Testament edition in red trade paper retails for $7.99.

ESVCoolMint

 


The ESV Thinline Bible
releases Sept. 30 in a TruTone, cool mint, ivy design. The
Crossway black-letter reference Bible comes in single-column, paragraph format with a concordance, book introductions and more than 80,000 cross-references on the inside margin. It retails for $29.99.

 

Tyndale House Publishers’ Slimline Reference Bible NLT, Large Print, TuTone Center Column Reference edition is a compact LeatherLike Bible in a stylish design. Available in the New Living Translation, the Bible includes a dictionary/concordance, full-color maps, a ribbon marker and gilded edges. Releasing in September, it retails for $44.99, with the indexed edition for $49.99. Both come in dark brown/floral fabric and brown/tan.

 

Thomas Nelson is issuing a pair of two-tone editions of the Deluxe Personal Size Giant Print Reference Bible, KJV in Leathersoft for $44.99 each. Available in champagne/deep taupe and sapphire blue/tuscany, the Bibles are slated for release Sept. 14 and offer easy-to-read type, self-pronouncing text, full-color maps, the words of Christ in red and a giant-print concordance.

 

The KJV Personal Size Giant Print Reference Bible from Hendrickson Publishers comes in a cream/raspberry, two-tone Flexisoft design. It features 11.25-point type, end-of-verse cross references, concordance, full-color maps, gilded page edges and ribbon marker. Releasing this month, the King James Version Bible is available to U.S. retailers in the company’s value-price program with a $29.95/$19.97 sticker.

 

MessagePinkPythonReleasing Sept. 17, The Message Compact Bible Pink and Pink Python offers a leather-look cover, ribbon marker and single-column format for $34.99. NavPress also offers the compact edition in teal and brown python.

 

Tyndale’s NLT Study Bible, Personal Size releases this month in softcover for $24.99, hardcover for $34.99 and LeatherLike brown/tan or dark brown/blue fabric for $59.99.

 

The New Spirit-Filled Life Bible, NKJV from Jack Hayford, founding pastor of The Church on the Way, addresses issues of Spirit-filled living. Word Wealth and Kingdom Dynamics features are placed throughout the Bible. Out Sept. 21 from Thomas Nelson, the toffee-colored Leathersoft edition retails for $69.99.

 
Book Beat CR September 2010 Print Email
Written by Production   
Wednesday, 18 August 2010 09:55 AM America/New_York

ThingsIWishIKnownMarriage counselor and No. 1 New York Times best-selling author Gary Chapman aims to help couples make their marriage last, in Things I Wish I’d Known Before I Got Married. Chapman explains how couples can develop a loving and mutual beneficial marriage in the Northfield Publishing/Moody Publishers book that releases this month and retails for $12.99.

 

Howard Books’ suspense novel Drift by Sharon Carter Rogers (April) has been named winner of the 2010 International Book Award for Religious Fiction. The supernatural mystery is Rogers’ third novel, after Sinner (RiverOak Publishing/David C. Cook), a 2007 National Best Books Award finalist, and Unpretty (Howard). Rogers’ name is a pseudonym for a former English teacher who now writes full time.

 

The Message: Solo New Testament Pink from NavPress is a leather-look devotional that uses an ancient approach to exploring the Scriptures, lectio divina, or “divine reading,” encouraging readers to “Read, Think, Pray and Live.” The devotional includes a topical index and 162 numbered devotions. It releases Sept. 13 and retails for $14.99.

 

Pastor and best-selling author Andy Stanley shows how God’s grace can transform a life in The Grace of GodBarbourLydiasCharm from Thomas Nelson. Releasing this month, the jacketed hardcover book retails for $21.99.

 

Adding to the Amish fiction category, Barbour Publishing releases Lydia’s Charm by best-selling author Wanda E. Brunstetter this month. Set in Ohio’s Amish country, the stand-alone novel retails for $14.99.

 

Believing that the simplicity of biblical discipleship has become lost in today’s postmodern church, international church planter Floyd McClung encourages readers to use Christ’s life as a pattern for living in Follow: A Simple and Profound Call to Live Like Jesus. The David C. Cook title releases this month.

 


 

More book news: For additional book news, including reviews, visit www.christianretailing.com.

 
Q&A: Sandy Coughlin, author, 'The Reluctant Entertainer' Print Email
Written by Christine D. Johnson   
Wednesday, 21 July 2010 01:05 PM America/New_York

In The Reluctant Entertainer, you say that every woman can offer hospitality. So you don't have to be a Martha Stewart?

That's right. You don't have to be a Martha! We get too hung up that entertaining or hosting a dinner party has to look "the part"--gourmet, fancy, impressive. I think American women need to come back to the reality of what hospitality really is-it's the simplicity of making a person feel warm and welcome. People are hurting in America right now and we need each other, which may mean coming together for an easy meal.

 

How did you learn the value of hospitality?

I was fortunate to have parents who taught me as a little girl the value of hospitality. Because of that gift being handed down to me, I've been able to pass the torch on to my three kids, who are all now teenagers. But there's hope for the person who maybe didn't receive the same gift that I did. Find a role model, someone that you really respect and can learn from, and ask if she'd be willing to mentor you. It really works!

Read more...