Friday, February 21, 2014

Christian Faith in the Old Testament by Gareth Cockerill

I was sold a bill of goods. Well not really sold as I didn't purchase this book. But the title was a bit misleading.


This book should have been titled, A Brief Survey of the Old Testament. Cockerill fills the pages with PowerPoint-like charts and mind-numbing points.

I suppose this would be a nice book for a 101 course in a college; the information is what you would expect and basic, but for what I read in the title, it didn't meet expectations.

Thinking I would read how our Christian faith echoes the truth found in the Old Testament, all I found was paragraph summaries of the books.

I would recommend this book only for students jumping into Bible classes for the first time.


This book was provided for review, at no cost, by Thomas Nelson Publishing.

I review for BookLook Bloggers

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Alien: Out of the Shadows by Tim Lebbon

With an upcoming anniversary of the original Alien coming, it's time to check in with our friendly Xenomorph.


Tim Lebbon kicks off a new Alien trilogy with Out of Shadows, a story that takes place between the first and second Alien movies. In Shadows, we have a new mining crew and a new LV planet but, as is the case in Alien stories, something goes horribly wrong.

We're lucky in the fact that the action starts soon after the book begins. There isn't much character development to rush through. The larger mining ship is waiting for a couple dropships to return when they notice something wrong; you guessed it, aliens make their way onto the ship and people die.

The twist with this story is the awakening of Ripley well before the events of Aliens. (huh?) How can Ripley be involved in an alien adventure/horror story and not remember it or reference it in Aliens? Lebbon is tasked with creating a plausible explanation and I bet most of you can figure it out without reading the story.

There are moments of suspense, action, and horror. It has a nice mixed feel of the three decent Alien movies - combining elements of each to make it successful. Lebbon even introduces a new alien species to keep things interesting.

One criticism I have to share doesn't deal with the story at all but an editorial complaint. Throughout the book there were weird spacings in words that had the "f" letter. The spacings occurred so many times that they jolted me out of the story when I came upon them.

I can't wait to read the second and third books in this trilogy to see how they connect. This first story did Alien well.


This book was provided for review, at no cost by Titan Books.