My morning daily Bible reading currently consists of: Psalms, II Timothy (NASB)
Free time reading currently includes:
- Populous: Living & Dying in Ancient Rome, by Guy De La Bedoyere
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BOOKS READ IN 2025:
JAN
#1 The Residence: Inside the Private World of the White House, by Kate Anderson Brower
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FEB
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MARCH
#2 Spiritual Lives of the Great Composers, by Patrick Kavanaugh
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APRIL
MAY
JUNE
#3 The Meaning of Everything (the story of the OED), by Simon Winchester
JULY
AUGUST
#4 Reagan: His Life & Legend, by Max Boot
SEPTEMBER
#5 The Big Year, by Mark Obmascik
OCTOBER
#6 History Matters, by David McCullough
#7 Rick Steves on the Hippie Trail, by Rick Steves
#8 Mark Twain, by Ron Chernow
NOVEMBER
DECEMBER
#9 The Guns of August, by Barbara Tuchman
#10 A Christmas Carol, by Charles Dickens
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BOOKS READ IN 2024:
JAN
#1 An Army At Dawn, by Rick Atkinson
#2 P.G. Wodehouse In His Own Words, by Barry Day and Tony Ring
#3 Thanks For The Memories, Mr. President, by Helen Thomas
#4 The Death of Ivan Ilyich, by Leo Tolstoy
#5 These Fevered Days: Ten Pivotal Moments in the Making of Emily Dickinson, by Martha Ackman
#6 Upstairs at the White House, by J.B. West
FEB
#7 The House of Silk, by Anthony Horowitz
#8 Isaac’s Storm, by Erik Larsen
#9 The Island at the Center of the World, by Russell Shorto
#10 The Last Man on the Moon, by Eugene Cernan
MARCH
#11 The Forgotten Man, by Amity Schlaes
#12 The Code of the Woosters, by P.G. Wodehouse
#13 The Five Love Languages, by Gary Chapman
#14 Name-Dropping, by John Kenneth Galbraith
#15 The Red Pony, by John Steinbeck
#16 Edison: A Biography, by Matthew Josephson
#17 Gandhi: A Memoir, by William L. Shirer
#18 Saints For Our Times, by Jerome K. Williams
APRIL
#19 Eleanor, by David Michaelis
MAY
#20 The Power Broker, by Robert A. Caro
JUNE
#21 The Situation Room, by George Stephanopoulos
#22 All Too Human, by George Stephanopoulos
#23 No Excuses, by Bob Stoops
JULY
#24 1776, by David McCullough
#25 A Leopard Tamed, by Eleanor Vandevort
#26 The Johnstown Flood, by David McCullough
AUG
#27 John Quincy Adams, by James Traub
SEPT
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OCT
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NOV
#28 Hillbilly Elegy, by J.D. Vance
#29 Unexpected Journey, by Thom Rainer
DEC
#30 “And then Jack Said to Arnie …” by Don Wade
#31 Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World, by Jack Weatherford
#32 The Good Neighbor: The Life and Work of Fred Rogers, by Maxwell King
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BOOKS READ IN 2023:
JAN
#1 Working, by Robert A. Caro
#2 From Time To Time In North Carolina, by Randell Jones
#3 Before Liberty, by Roy Thompson
FEB
#4 Of A Feather, by Scott Weidensaul
#5 Becoming C.S. Lewis, by Harry Lee Poe
#6 The Making of C.S. Lewis, by Harry Lee Poe
#7 The Completion of C.S. Lewis, by Harry Lee Poe
MARCH
#8 Simply Prayer, by Bill Elliff
#9 His Very Best: Jimmy Carter, A Life, by Jonathan Alter
APRIL
#10 A Voyage Long & Strange, by Tony Horwitz
#11 Rare Encounters With Ordinary Birds, by Lyanda Lynn Haupt
#12 Come, Tell Me How You Live, by Agatha Christie
MAY
#13 Anything Goes: A Biography of the Roaring 20s, by Lucy Moore
#14 The Making of The African Queen, by Katherine Hepburn
#15 Mary Churchill’s War, Emma Soames, ed.
#16 The Preacher’s Catechism, by Lewis Allen
#17 Stanley, by Tim Jeal
JUNE
#18 The Greater Journey: Americans in Paris, by David McCullough
#19 Benjamin Franklin: An American Life, by Walter Isaacson
JULY
#20 1776, by David McCullough
#21 The Road From the Past, by Ina Caro
#22 The Presidents Club, by Nancy Gibbs and Michael Duffy
#23 This Time Next Year We’ll Be Laughing, by Jacqueline Winspear
#24 An Hour Before Daylight, by Jimmy Carter
#25 The Enigma Spy, by John Cairncross
#26 C. S. Lewis On Writing
AUGUST
#27 Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, by J.K. Rowling
#28 Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, by J.K. Rowling
#29 Animal Farm, by George Orwell
#30 Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, by J.K. Rowling
#31 Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, by J.K. Rowling
#32 The River of Doubt, by Candice Millard
#33 Stolen Focus, by Johann Hari
SEPTEMBER
#34 Pilgrim’s Progress, by John Bunyan
#35 Surprised by Oxford, by Carolyn Weber
OCTOBER
#36 Wilson, by A. Scott Berg
#37 Confessions of A Bookseller, by Shaun Bythell
NOVEMBER
#38 Riding With Reagan, by John R. Barletta
#39 Of Literature And Lattes, by Katherine Reay
#40 The Knowledge of the Holy, by A.W. Tozer
#41 A Life On The Road, by Charles Kuralt
DECEMBER
#42 Challenge To Ministry (History of FBC College Station) by Larry Watson
#43 A Christmas Carol, by Charles Dickens
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BOOKS READ IN 2022:
JAN
#1 Steve Jobs, by Walter Isaacson
#2 Parnassus On Wheels, by Christopher Morley
#3 Destiny of the Republic, by Candice Millard
#4 The Writing of the Gods, by Edward Dolnick
#5 The Possibilities of a Life, by Max Barnett
#6 Warren G. Harding, by John Dean
#7 The Clockwork Universe, by Edward Dolnick
#8 Eisenhower in War and Peace, by Jean Edward Smith
FEB
#9 Paradise Lost, by John Milton
#10 Napoleon: A Life, by Andrew Roberts
MAR
#11 The Byzantine World War, by Nick Holmes
APRIL
#12 George Whitefield, America’s Spiritual Founding Father, by Thomas S. Kidd
MAY
#13 The Annotated Memoirs of Ulysses S. Grant, Elizabeth D. Samet, ed.
#14 The Statesman and the Storyteller, by Mark Zwonitzer
#15 Becoming Orthodox, by Peter Gillquist
JUNE
#16 Through Five Administrations, by Col. William H. Crook
#17 My Autobiography, by Charles Chaplin
#18 The Pickwick Papers, by Charles Dickens
JULY
#19 1776 by David McCullough
#20 The Great Bridge, by David McCullough
#22 Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand, by Helen Simonson
#23 One of Our Submarines, by Edward Young
#24 Within Arm’s Length, by Dan Emmett
AUG
#25 Russia: A 1000-Year Chronicle of the Wild East, by Martin Sixsmith
SEPT
#26 The Mysterious Affair At Styles, by Agatha Christie
#27 Letters to Malcolm, by C.S. Lewis
#28 War and Peace, by Leo Tolstoy
OCT
#29 The Law, The Land, and The Lord: The Life of Pat Neff, by Dorothy Blodgett, Terrell Blodgett, David L. Scott
NOV
#30 Incidents of Travel in Egypt, Arabia Petraea, and the Holy Land, by John Lloyd Stephens
#31 Giant, by Edna Ferber
DEC
#32 The Screwtape Letters, by C.S. Lewis
#33 A Christmas Carol, by Charles Dickens
#34 Five Presidents, by Clint Hill
#35 Over the Edge of the World, by Laurence Bergreen
BOOKS READ IN 2021:
JAN
#1 The Trees, by Conrad Richter
#2 The Fields, by Conrad Richter
#3 The Town, by Conrad Richter
#4 Gentle and Lowly, by Dane Ortlund
#5 One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, by Alexander Solzhenitsyn
#6 All the Great Prizes: The Life of John Hay, from Lincoln to Roosevelt, by John Taliaferro
FEB
#7 Tolkien, by Humphrey Carpenter
#8 The Hobbit, by J.R.R. Tolkien
#9 Rules of Civility, by Amor Towles
MAR
#10 Ride The River, by Louis L’Amour
#11 Katharine Graham’s Washington
#12 The Cross of Christ, by John R.W. Stott
APR
#13 The Faith That Persuades, by J. Edwin Orr
#14 Starling of the White House, by E.W. Starling & Thomas Sugrue
#15 The Pursuit of Man, by A.W. Tozer
#16 Cranford, by Elizabeth Gaskell
MAY
#17 The Secret of Chimneys, by Agatha Christie
#18 Hamlet, by William Shakespeare
#19 The Years of Lyndon Johnson: The Path to Power, by Robert. A Caro
#20 Barnum: An American Life, by Robert Wilson
#21 The Years of Lyndon Johnson: Means of Ascent, by Robert Caro
JUNE
#22 The Innocents Abroad, by Mark Twain
#23 Boomtown: The Fantastical Saga of Oklahoma City, by Sam Anderson
#24 Agent Sonya, by Ben Macintyre
#25 Kipling: A Selection of His Stories & Poems, John Beechcroft, ed.
JULY
#26 There Is A God, by Anthony Flew
#27 1776, by David McCullough
#28 The Brothers Karamazov, by Fyodor Dostoevsky
#29 Walking to Samarkand: The Great Silk Road From Persia to Asia, by Bernard Ollivier
AUG
#30 The Years of Lyndon Johnson: The Master of the Senate, by Robert A. Caro
#31 Final Chapters: How Famous Authors Died, by Jim Bernhard
#32 Alexander the Great, by Philip Freeman
#33 The Years of Lyndon Johnson: Passage of Power, by Robert A. Caro
#34 Seedfolks, by Paul Fleischman
SEPT
#35 The Glory and the Dream, Vol. I by William Manchester
#36 Strange and Obscure Stories of World War II, by Don Aines
OCT
#37 The Glory and the Dream, Vol. II by William Manchester
#38 Sailing True North: 10 Admirals and the Voyage of Character by Admiral James Stavridis
#39 Destiny and Power (George H.W. Bush), by Jon Meacham
NOV
#40 Kipling: A Selection of His Stories and Poems, Vol. I, John Beecroft, ed.
#41 Failure Is Not An Option, (NASA: Mercury to Apollo) by Gene Kranz
#42 Under The Greenwood Tree, by Thomas Hardy
#43 Mr. Kipling’s Army, by Byron Falwell
DEC
#44 The Path Between The Seas, by David McCullough
#45 A Christmas Carol, by Charles Dickens
BOOKS READ IN 2020:
JAN
#1 The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, by Agatha Christie
#2 By-Line: Ernest Hemmingway, William White, ed.
#3 Letters of John Newton, Josiah Bull, ed.
FEB
#4 Seeking Allah, Finding Jesus, by Nabeel Qureshi
#5 The Great Divorce, C.S. Lewis
#6 The Unsaved Christian, by Dean Inserra
MAR
#7 Loving The Way Jesus Loves, by Phil Ryken
#8 Truman, by David McCullough
#9 All Quiet On The Western Front, by Erich Maria Remarque
#10 The Problem of Pain, C.S. Lewis
#11 The Green Letters, by Miles Stanford
#12 The Pioneers, by David McCullough
APR
#13 Undaunted Courage, by Stephen E. Ambrose
MAY
#14 The Pleasures of Reading in an Age of Distraction, by Alan Jacobs
#15 The Clicking of Cuthbert, by P.G. Wodehouse
#16 Reflections on the Existence of God, by Richard E. Simmons, III
#17 John Adams, by David McCullough
JUNE
#18 American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House, by Jon Meacham
#19 The Last Explorer: The Adventures of Admiral Byrd, by Edwin P. Hoyt
#20 General Washington’s Christmas Farewell, by Stanley Weintraub
#21 Sea Stories, by William H. McRaven
JULY
#22 1776, by David McCullough
#23 American Sphinx: The Character of Thomas Jefferson, by Joseph J. Ellis
#24 Cleopatra: A Life, by Stacy Schiff
#25 The Church History, by Eusebius
AUGUST
#26 God The Trinity: Biblical Portraits, by Malcolm B. Yarnell III
#27 Middlemarch, by George Eliot
#28 Simply Prayer, by Bill Elliff
SEPTEMBER
#29 Washington: A Life, by Ron Chernow
#30 Coolidge, by Amity Schlaes
#31 London: A Biography, by Peter Ackroyd
#32 The Last Hour, by Amir Tsarfati
#33 Tales of Old-Time Texas, by J. Frank Dobie
OCTOBER
#34 Openness Unhindered, by Rosaria Butterfield
#35 The Zeal of Thy House, by Dorothy L. Sayers
NOVEMBER
#36 Orthodoxy, by G.K. Chesterton
#37 President McKinley, by Robert W. Merry
#38 A Christmas Carol, by Charles Dickens
DECEMBER
#39 The Complete Sherlock Holmes, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
#40 A Reader’s Guide to the Major Writings of Jonathan Edwards, by Nathan A. Finn and Jeremy Kimble
#41 A Gentleman In Moscow, by Amor Towles
Books read in 2019:
JAN
#1 Hadrian’s Wall, by Adrian Goldsworthy
#2 Puck of Pook’s Hill, by Rudyard Kipling
FEB
#3 Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years & The War Years, by Carl Sandburg
MAR
#4 Winston Churchill, By His Personal Secretary, by Elizabeth Nel
#5 It’s My Turn, by Ruth Bell Graham
APRIL
#6 Mornings On Horseback, by David McCullough
MAY
#7 Theodore Rex, by Edmund Morris
#8 Messiah: The Composition and Afterlife of Handel’s Masterpiece, by Jonathan Keates
#9 Evenings With Cary Grant, by Nancy Nelson
JUNE
#10 American Caesar: Douglas MacArthur 1880-1964, by William Manchester
#11 Stories From Texas (Some of them are true!) by W.F. Strong
#12 Will Rogers, by Betty Rogers
JULY
#13 The Mayflower and the Pilgrims’ New World, by Nathaniel Philbrick
#14 Marie, by H. Rider Haggard
#15 The Discipline of Grace, by Jerry Bridges
AUGUST
#16 Phantastes, by George MacDonald
#17 Lone Star, by T.R. Fehrenbach
SEPTEMBER
#18 Handel, by Christopher Hogwood
OCTOBER
#19 The Last Lion: Winston Spencer Churchill, Visions of Glory 1874-1932, by William Manchester
#20 The Presence-Centered Church, by Bill Elliff
NOVEMBER
#21 Tales From The Brazos, by Marie Beth Jones
#22 Assist Me To Proclaim: The Life & Times of Charles Wesley, by John R. Tyson
#23 The Screwtape Letters, by C.S. Lewis
#24 The Last Lion: Winston Spencer Churchill, Alone 1932-1940 by William Manchester
DECEMBER
#25 A Christmas Carol, by Charles Dickens
#26 Martin Luther, by Eric Metaxas
I know the Lord led me to your site today! A fresh touch of revival has been taking place within my life, and the Holy Spirit reminded me of Philippians 2:17 and 2 Timothy 4:6. The Holy Spirit, deep with my spirit and soul, is working. Wonderfully saved 51 years ago at age 25 — delivered from being raised in New Age, Rosecurcion doctrine, etc. was a “bad mix.” However, God’s faifhfulness has adorned my entire life. For years I’ve suffered with multimple health issues, but He has kept me alive! I have remained in ministry since being born again, by His faithfulness and grace —- need prayer at this time as I am taking on something new. I’m beginning a Bible study for women at a local restaurant — wanting to bring in the lost and Christians that need strength. My flesh would rather remain home in my chair- lift, and the use of my walker, in the comfort of my small apartment, but His love compels me not to spend so much time being comfortable! I’m not a professional writer, but write quite a bit anyway, for a local church page, small booklets, one self published book, and use facebook for an opportunity to prise the Lord. My most recent healing is a tumor on my sciatic — it simply disappeared prior to pending surgery —– also healed of uterine cancer — and more. Thank you so much for your article about not wasting our life —– it encouraged me more than you will ever know. May God bless you and your lovely family! Again, thank you for your prayers. I know this is written poorly, but I don’t have time to rewrite it today. Blessings, Patricia Martin
Thanks for sharing all the books you’ve read! I just found a blog and was blessed by it. If I may, I would like to recommend a powerful book that I just read (and am telling everyone I know about it!) that has positively changed my Christian walk forever. I’ve included the link below. Thank you!
Erica Part One Seven Years In Hell https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07P91WN62/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_38VTEbCYZS3FP
God bless you all the time