Why I Read Fiction

I read a lot of books. Not as many as some, mind you, but more than the average person. (Side note: In going down a short rabbit trail of how many books the average American reads in a year, the linked article notes that less than half of the respondents actually read a book in the previous 12 months… that is probably worthy of another post on its own)

In the amount of reading, I strive for a decent balance of both fiction and non-fiction. This is slightly weighted more towards non-fiction with a balance between Spiritual/Bible study, self-improvement/leadership, and other general categories of nerdy pursuit. The last few years have been weighted even more so in that direction with my Graduate studies leading into my current doctoral program. 

Even still, I find myself needing that change of pace offered by a good fiction book. Breaks between semesters like those around summer and Christmas allow that time to get lost in these books. This is in opposition to a remark I’ve heard occasionally over the years– even as recently as last month from a college professor– that is that reading fiction should be done sparingly if at all. 

This got me thinking: “Why do I read fiction.” 

So, naturally, I sat down and wrote out a *few* of the reasons I read fiction. This was by no means an exhaustive list, but it is the ones that have stuck out to me most over the years. As I read through my list I noticed that they all boiled down to the following two ideas.

  1. Reading fiction gives your mind a break without turning it to mush. 

This is a major problem with other forms of entertainment and diversion. Entertainment that is screen-based has progressed further down the path of extremes. TV shows go to extreme measures to hold viewers’ attention, Netflix auto-plays the next episode in the series in order to promote “binge-watching,” and social media platforms from Facebook to Youtube to TikTok use highly refined algorithms to curate individualized streams of the most addicting content leading to the dreaded “doom-scrolling.” These culturally normative forms of diversion have only eroded our attention span to the point that concentrating on cognitively demanding topics is seen as a superpower in the modern workplace. 

The answer, then, is to replace attention-sapping recreation with higher forms of entertainment. When your brain needs a break, turning to addictive, screen-based diversion is the mental equivalent of eating junk food because you are hungry. Instead, consuming high-quality entertainment satisfies the mental hunger for diversion while avoiding the inevitable crash after consuming too much addictive material. 

Good fiction books solve this problem. They divert the attention and allow the mind to rest while also feeding it quality content. And understandably, this is not the only form of high-quality entertainment. There are a plethora of forms of fine art that would satisfy this need. From actual art to music, when humans consume fine art, they are enjoying one of the chief differentiators between humanity and the rest of creation. We are created in the image of God and therefore create like our Creator. We are reflecting Him to the world around us. So, in enjoying the creations of others we are enjoying one of God’s good gifts to humanity. And, as we’ll see in a second, weaving a creative story is one creative act that God has been doing throughout history. 

  1. Reading fiction captures the imagination. 

The second major reason I read fiction and encourage others to do the same is that it captures the imagination. Children are highly skilled at imaginative play. They see things that are not there and act as if they were. They can turn an entire living room into a vacation village, complete with cabins, restaurants, and a town square, and then spend hours interacting with this imagined reality. 

Adults, on the other hand, struggle with imagination. Our thoughts are on the concrete reality around us. We struggle even to see things as they could be and not simply as they are. Fiction takes us out of the world we are in and transports us to other realities we would not otherwise be able to imagine. The words on the page paint an image in our minds of places and people, and plant in our hearts desires and values we can later realize in the “real world.”

This is exactly the kind of thing that James K.A. Smith talks about in his books Desiring the Kingdom and You Are What You Love. Too often, we are more concerned with the cold reality of life, that we miss the fact that our worldview is shaped by forces that skip the rational portion of our being and pull directly at our hearts. Fiction books do that like no other medium. The act of reading seems like an exercise of the mind, but in reality, it is an exercise of the heart. The stories in books capture our imagination in ways that rational arguments never can. 

Many other authors have echoed this sentiment. C.S. Lewis, author of the famed Chronicles of Narnia and less well-known but just as excellent Space Trilogy, wrote “Since it is so likely that children will meet cruel enemies, let them at least have heard of brave knights and heroic courage. Otherwise, you are making their destiny not brighter but darker.”1 G. K. Chesterton similarly remarked “Fairy tales do not tell children the dragons exist. Children already know that dragons exist. Fairy tales tell children the dragons can be killed.” More recently, Andrew Peterson, author of the Wingfeather Saga (a highly recommended trilogy! I’d place it up there with the Chronicles of Narnia and the Lord of the Rings), put this all together by saying “if you want someone to know the truth, tell them the truth. If you want someone to love the truth tell them a story.” 

Stories capture the imagination and direct our hearts toward the noble character traits we should desire to exhibit. They also call us to live into the true story that God is weaving throughout history. In fact, the Bible itself tells one big story made up of smaller, interrelated stories. It begins at creation with God ordaining humanity to rule as his regents over the earth. Our sin broke the perfect fellowship we shared with Him and cursed His good creation. Everything since then has been God’s progressive work of redeeming His fallen creation, accomplished at the cross and ultimately completed in the restoration of the new Heavens and new earth. When we see fictional characters fighting back against evil and eventually seeing good triumph, it is a reflection of the true story of the greatest hero triumphing over evil at the empty tomb. 

So, my recommendation is to allow these fictional tales to draw you in. Notice those themes and celebrate the wonderful works of art that capture your imagination and ultimately lift the eyes of your heart to see the reflections of our Savior, longing for the day of our future restoration. That will be the happiest “happily ever after.”

2020 Book Reviews!

2020 was quite the year!

I think that is the understatement of the year. 

But in the midst of the crazy 2020, there were a lot of good things! (Maybe that will be a post later this week or next… no promises). One of the good things of 2020 for me was that I read more books this calendar year than I ever have in my life… including when I was in college!

I had set a goal to read 5 books a quarter in 2020 (for a total of 20) and I ended with 34 (with a week to spare!) averaging just over 8 books a quarter. I’m pretty pleased with that and am debating whether that pace will be sustainable in 2021 or not. But that’s a discussion for another day.

At the bottom of this post you can see the full list of books. I divided my list (after the fact) into 4 categories and realized I was pretty balanced across those 4. This was unintentional and actually way off from my plan to rotate between fiction and non-fiction (10 fiction to 24 non-fiction). I found that a lot of the non-fiction books referenced other books that I then went out and read which could explain the heavy weight towards non-fiction.

Top 5 Books of 2020

Here I just want to mention books (or sets of books) that I found to be the best or most influential of 2020… I settled with 5 because… why not?

1. Deep Work and Digital Minimalism by Cal Newport

I’m starting here with the best ones. Cal Newport wrote “Deep Work” first and then expanded on a concept he mentioned in it with “Digital Minimalism.” “Deep Work” is all about focusing on your main task of producing (whatever it is that is the core of your job) and really getting into it distraction free. A state he calls “deep work.” I loved that because as a teacher and speaker I really love those times that I can get into my study and preparing lessons. Those were great concepts that I had always felt and vaguely understood, but this book really help clarify and systematize the process. 

One of the greatest sources of distraction, of course, comes from our modern culture and digital environment. He mentioned a philosophy called “digital minimalism” and develops that further in his second book. Basically, instead of using any and every device, app, service, etc that might give SOME benefit, Newport suggests only utilizing those things that add deep value to your life. 

“Digital Minimalism A philosophy of technology use in which you focus your online time on a small number of carefully selected and optimized activities that strongly support things you value, and then happily miss out on everything else.”

Cal Newport in “Digital Minimalism”

Before reading this book I had already cut back on social media and internet time (which I directly tie to my ability to have read so much this year… more on that in another post) but I then removed all social media apps from my phone and cut back even more on digital consumption. I can say I’ve “happily missed out” on so much… especially through the 2020 election cycle. 

“More often than not, the cumulative cost of the noncrucial things we clutter our lives with can far outweigh the small benefits each individual piece of clutter promises.”

Cal Newport in “Digital Minimalism”
2. A Practical Guide to Culture by John Stonestreet

This is the one “Non-Fiction: Spiritual” book to make the top 5 this year. I read a few good Spiritual books (Like “Next Man Up” by Ray Pritchard), but this one was by far the best, I read it early in the year and it came in handy a few times while serving in the youth group at church. This book can be used like a handbook with various topics etc that can be called upon as needed (I did that!) but it is also great to read cover to cover (did that too!). The authors divide the book into the “current” and the “waves” of culture. The current being the underlying beliefs and flow of culture as a whole and the waves being the “issues” that seem to make the headlines but are actually results of the undercurrent in our culture. 

Connecting this one to “Digital Minimalism” as well as “Growing Up Social” by Gary Chapman, the idea of the digital device and app centric nature of our culture is sometimes quite terrifying. To be completely honest, I have seen this first hand when working with teens at church and in the classroom at school this year. Now, more than ever, teens need a mature, godly adult to take them by the hand and guide them as they develop a Biblical Worldview.

“If you take the path less traveled, you’re going against the grain in this screen driven world. Your child may not have a cellphone when her contemporaries do. Your son may not know how to play the video game everyone’s talking about. Pop culture references may go right over your daughter’s head. But what might your child gain by minimizing the impact of screens on his life?…. So what will you create? A home centered around screens or a home center around people?”

Gary Chapman in “Growing up Social”
3. Me, Myself, and Bob by: Phil Vischer

As a kid who grew up on VeggieTales, it was neat to look behind the scenes and hear Phil’s story of how he created VeggieTale and ultimately what he learned from it’s demise. While there are a few theological issues I might have here and there with some things he said, it’s ultimately a good look at a creator and how He used his gifts for the glory of God. Great read!

4. The Silent Sea by: Clive Cussler

If you look through my “fiction” section you’ll see a lot of Clive Cussler. Thankfully I was able to keep it split 50/50 between Cussler and Non-Cussler fiction (exactly 50/50 actually.) I’ve always known about Cussler’s books since my Dad has read many (most?) of them, but I didn’t get into them until I read the “Raise the Titanic” over Christmas last year and then he loaned me “The Silent Sea” at the beginning of the year. They’re just a fun mix of history, action, and mystery. It also helps that my library has a lot of them in their e-library selection so they are quite easily accessible. 

5. And the Good News Is… by: Dana Perino

Another book that was loaned to me by a family member. I didn’t have anything to read at my Grandpa’s house and this was sitting on his shelf. Picked it up and read about half of it in the 24hours we were there. In a year that was filled with political turmoil, Dana Perino’s story, specifically the “behind the scenes” of the Bush Administration, was fun to read!  

So there you have it. My “Top 5” for the year. Below is the complete list in no particular order. I’ve got 4 books on hold and have started another Clive Cussler book to ring in 2021. What books did you read this year? Which were the best? Let me know in the comments below!

Complete 2020 Reading List

Non-Fiction- Personal Development

  1. The Bullet Journal Method: Track the Past, Order the Present, Design the Future by: Ryder Carroll
  2. The Revenge of Analog: Real Things and Why They Matter by: David Sax
  3. So Good They Can’t Ignore You: Why Skills Trump Passion in the Quest for Work You Love by: Cal Newport
  4. Digital Minimalism: Choosing a Focused Life in a Noisy World by: Cal Newport
  5. Deep Work: Rules for Focused Success in a Distracted World by: Cal Newport
  6. The Road Back to You: An Enneagram Journey to Self-Discovery by: Ian Morgan Cron
  7. Smart Money Smart Kids: Raising the Next Generation to Win with Money by: Dave Ramsey
  8. Start with Why: How Great Leaders Inspire Everyone to Take Action by: Simon Sinek
  9. Raving Fans: A Revolutionary Approach to Customer Service by: Kenneth H. Blanchard

Non-Fiction- Spiritual

  1. Great Joy: Advent from the Gospel of Luke by: Ray Pritchard
  2. Life Together: The Classic Exploration of Christian Community by: Dietrich Bonhoeffer
  3. Fire and Rain: The Wild-Hearted Faith of Elijah by: Ray Pritchard
  4. Habits of Grace: Enjoying Jesus through the Spiritual Disciplines by: David Mathis
  5. Next Man Up: Building the Future God’s Way by: Ray Pritchard
  6. Growing Up Social: Raising Relational Kids in a Screen-Driven World by: Gary Chapman
  7. A Practical Guide to Culture: Helping the Next Generation Navigate Today’s World by: John Stonestreet

Non-Fiction: Biographies/ History

  1. The Way I Heard It by: Mike Rowe
  2. Killing the SS: The Hunt for the Worst War Criminals in History by: Bill O’Reilly
  3. George Washington’s Secret Six: The Spy Ring That Saved the American Revolution by: Brian Kilmeade
  4. And the Good News Is…: Lessons and Advice from the Bright Side by: Dana Perino
  5. Bonhoeffer: Pastor, Martyr, Prophet, Spy by: Eric Metaxas
  6. The Wright Brothers by: David McCullough
  7. Me, Myself & Bob: A True Story about God, Dreams, and Talking Vegetables by: Phil Vischer
  8. Thomas Jefferson and the Tripoli Pirates: The Forgotten War That Changed American History by: Brian Kilmeade

Fiction

  1. Odessa Sea (Dirk Pitt #24) by: Clive Cussler
  2. The Hobbit by: J.R.R. Tolkien
  3. Black Wind (Dirk Pitt, #18) by: Clive Cussler
  4. Crescent Dawn (Dirk Pitt, #21) by: Clive Cussler
  5. Once More the Hawks (RAF Trilogy Book 3) by: Max Hennessy
  6. The Challenging Heights (RAF Trilogy Book 2) by: Max Hennessy
  7. The Bright Blue Sky (RAF Trilogy Book 1) by: Max Hennessy
  8. Patriot Games (Jack Ryan, #1; Jack Ryan Universe, #2) by: Tom Clancy
  9. Golden Buddha (Oregon Files, #1) by: Clive Cussler
  10. The Silent Sea (Oregon Files, #7) by: Clive Cussler

** The links to books here are Amazon Affiliate links. I’m a big fan of Kindle books, but I’m also a big fan of the local library too!