

Best Book I Have Ever Read

contens of the I want to read

informative and practical

Must have book for Tru64 Admins...


New light on the past

Factual and entertainingHancock was a British institution - a way of life even. A well-loved soul whose private life was little known by the public until his death. This book reveals that life from his grandparents through to his death in April 1968. For those of you who remember and loved Tony Hancock, this book is a must.


Greatest thing I've ever read,loved the people and humor.An entertaining and easy read. Winging from the Mackenzie to the High Arctic via Hancock's fresh, crisp writing is to meet Northerners in person, to share their heritage, to enjoy wildlife and the clean, cool air of pristine landscapes, and to confirm what you knew all along: yes, you can get around red tape, and "no, it can't be done." Just do it. (George Diveky in Up Here)
The greatest thing I have ever read! I loved your descriptions of people and touches of humor. I will be forever in your debt (for writing it). (Ingrid via Ivy Pye, a reader)
Winging it in the North is a collection of anecdotes: some amazing, some funny, some scarcely believable, but all entertaining. It is a difficult thing to hold a reader's interest for over 200 pages with personal anecdotes. Boredom is not a factor here. This is about the unusual, unlikely and lucky things that have happened to her through serendipity. It is about the out-of-the-way places she has ended up through a chance meeting with a trapper or a carver or a hunter who has invited her along.
And she has ended up in some unusual places. She has been on seal hunts, fishing trips, soapstone carving expeditions, and trap lines. She has swum swollen rivers, bumped into bears and wolves, driven roads that hadn't been built yet, and flown to Canada's most northerly point to watch two men set off to walk to the pole. Through it all she has maintained a sense of humour and a sense of wonder at the places she has ended up, all of which has been greatly helped by the delightful people she has met. (John Wilson in Pier Magazine)
Lyn Hancock is a woman with more letters after her name than in her name yet she has never been trained to be a writer or a photographer, she just does it. The 15 books she's had published attest to the fact she does it fairly well. (Sandy Wiseman, Daily News, Kamloops).
Lyn Hancock's voice is light and readable, having been honed on thousands of magazine and newspaper articles and 15 books.


Technically Sound, with A Major Conceptual FlawMy review is in part a response to the assertions of reviewer Robert Ryan Langer, who wrote: "The primary objective in telling a story is to entertain. Everything else is secondary, even teaching a lesson. When an author forgets this, a novel becomes at best a parable, and at worst a piece of propaganda."
If Karen Hancock--and other Christian writers--set out to convey a spiritual message to their readers, I see no problem with this. When Langer asserts that the "primary objective in telling a story is to entertain," I simply ask: Who says? Who made up that rule? And if it's just a man-made rule, then why can't others disagree with it? An important teaching tool of Jesus' was parables: obviously his overriding concern was not to entertain, but to teach--yet undoubtedly his stories were *also* entertaining.
In ARENA, one is left with no doubt that Hancock's objective was to make a point about how to live the Christian life. Her message is laudable: live by faith in God and His word, not by human wisdom. I appreciated the reminders she gave me on that theme--*and* I was entertained. Hancock has performed admirably in the technical areas of storytelling: plotting, wording, and (for the most part) characterizations; certainly for a first novel there's a lot here that is praiseworthy, and the book is worth buying.
Langer writes, "One harrowing escape where Pierce and others lay mortally wounded ground to a halt while Callie took ten pages to find the entrance to a safe haven. Uneven pacing prevented the story from being wholly captivating." I had no problem with the pacing; but I had somewhat of a problem with what seemed to me to be repetitiveness: cross-country trek / refreshment and instruction in a "Safehaven" / cross-country trek / refreshment and instruction in a "Safehaven" / cross-country trek / refreshment and instruction in a "Safehaven" . . . .
I have to take some exception with Pierce's (and also Callie's) sexuality. I'm not saying Hancock should necessarily have included sex scenes or even hinted at them, but she explicitly addresses the subject by portraying Pierce and Callie--in a literary context that never actually mentions God or a Higher Moral Standard--as people who won't have sex outside of marriage. Unless the characters are explicitly motivated by a Christian desire for purity, or by an unusual fear of unwanted pregnancies or STDs, or even just intimacy, I find it unrealistic that they would be virginal. It would have been better, in my opinion, to simply leave the subject unmentioned.
(An additional note re. characters' sexuality: I didn't need to be reminded half a dozen times how busty Rowena is. I kept thinking, "Okay, I get the point(s) already!" :-) )
The lack of an explicitly theological context for both the plot and the characterizations leads to my response to another of Langer's comments: "Knowing that a god will save the hero in every emergency greatly reduces the dramatic tension; the hero is no longer truly in any mortal danger. In Arena, the question was not whether Callie would survive, but merely when she would ask Elhanu for help."
He's half-right. It was made clear in ARENA that as long as characters didn't try to suicide their way out, if they died while traversing the Arena they would be returned to their lives on Earth. This lessened the tension of those scenes in which they were supposedly in physical danger; such danger was only superficial. That leaves spiritual development--which can itself make for an interesting story, and so that objective was legitimate on Hancock's part, but in my opinion her set-up lessened the forcefulness of this element as well.
Langer is mistaken when he speaks of a "god" saving the heroes. It's true that the characters are instructed to trust in Elhanu. But the thing is, Elhanu isn't a god--he's an alien. The only real differences between him and the Earthlings are that he's not human, and his technology is highly advanced.
There was no mistaking Hancock's attempt to fashion numerous analogues--Elhanu/God, manual/Bible, Aggillon/angels, Watchers/demons. The problem is that unless Elhanu is *literally* God--which in the story's own context, he is not--then he has absolutely *no moral right* to abduct people from Earth and force them to fight their way through his Arena for what amounts to merely his entertainment. He acted as if he was sovereign over their lives, but that is the province of God alone. This lack of justification in the story's set-up rendered likewise unjustified the portrayal of the Watchers as demons and the mutants as unspiritual or rebellious humans. They had every right to be upset with Elhanu, an arrogant alien acting *as if* he were the sovereign God.
I always knew what Hancock was trying to get across, and I completely agreed with her message, but I was constantly distracted by the fact that it just didn't work in her plot set-up. Hancock would have done better to take one of two alternative paths: (i) create an entirely allegorical world in which Elhanu literally *is* the God of that world who has the right to control characters' lives, because He created them (Kathy Tyers has done something along these lines, and done it well, in her FIREBIRD trilogy); or, (ii) have aliens interact with humans in the universe *we know*, with a mention of God as sovereign, and perhaps Elhanu as an alien who *represents* God. That way, the characters could be in *actual* physical danger, and would also need to learn to trust God, and Elhanu could serve as an instructor rather than a Saviour.
Amazing Allegorical Adventure, Alleluia!The story quickly progresses as Callie struggles to survive and somehow get back home. In the course of her struggles she faces the limits of her own intellect, learns how much of her own effort is futile, and begins to understand faith in a much deeper way. And learns how to maintain contact with, well, God. And meets Pierce who is at first arrogant and obnoxious, but... well, you'll just have to read it. It's quite exciting and it will keep you turning pages.
Yes, it's an allegorical story about a Christian's spiritual journey; you can also read it as a plain old whiz-bang adventure story. It works either way.
Author Karen Hancock makes it clear from the beginning that this is a Christian book dedicated to Jesus Christ. For the most part she handles her material deftly and without preaching, but there are times when the theology becomes just a bit heavy-handed. And there are times when she offers too much explanation for all the strange happenings, rather than just showing the reader. Sometimes there is too much blood and gore, too much danger, too many impossible situations, but--hey! I still kept on reading, and so will you. This is not a perfect book, but a good one and an uplifting one as well. I recommend it. Reviewed by Louis N. Gruber
Amazing!I am a Christian, and quite a strong one, but it has been awhile since I have been unsatisfied with the level of intimacy I have with God.
I also thought the love story between Callie and Pierce was captivating. It was so well-written, and I love the fact that Callie only started to become attracted to Pierce after she got to know him. So many novels start with love at first sight. Their romance actually caught me by surprise (okay not entirely, but it was not obvious at the beginning that they would fall in love). I also thought Hancock did a great job of showing that Callie and Pierce struggled with passion and attraction to each other. People aren't perfect, even born-again spirit-filled Christians. I thought it made them seem human, and I was able to relate to them!
All I have to say is, this book has changed me and the way I see God. I highly recommend it!


Fantastic! A must for everyone who love mysterious Egypt!
The missing Link in Ancient History
A FASCINATING NEW ANGLE ON EGYPTOLOGY

One of the very best fantasy series ever written
The Best Book In The Whole Series
A Very Nice Book