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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: David DickinsonPublisher: James Clarke & Co Ltd Imprint: Lutterworth Press Weight: 0.284kg ISBN: 9780718895471ISBN 10: 0718895479 Pages: 179 Publication Date: 30 January 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsAcknowledgements 1. Making Believe 2. Writing of God and Reading Religiously 3. Science Fiction: 'Anything believed gains a measure of reality' 4. Dystopia and Fantasy: 'Books with magic and books without' 5. Historical Novels 'The present ... throwing its shadow backwards?' 6. Historical Detective Fiction 7. Atheist Novels: 'The quarrel over God' 8. Bible-inspired Fiction 9. Re-enchanting a Disenchanted World Bibliography IndexReviews"""Written from personal conviction and with a clarity that will appeal to the general reader, David Dickinson argues that the modern novel in its multiple forms can stimulate us to imagine God afresh, and as such provides ideal material to provoke serious thought and discussion both within and without Christian reading communities. Make-Believe will certainly perk up the theological level of the average church bookstall and be of interest to a broader, religiously unaffiliated readership."" Elisabeth Jay, Professor Emerita, Oxford Brookes University ""This is a timely, intelligent and audacious book which, growing out of the author's own wide-ranging engagement with theology and contemporary novels, challenges and expands the reader's horizons. I hope it will receive the serious attention it so richly deserves."" The Rt Revd Dr Christopher Herbert, Visiting Professor of Christian Ethics, University of Surrey ""Dickinson shows how religion is key to the context of the novels he chooses to discuss (at least two from each genre), from the novels' historical setting to how we understand the seen and unseen elements of fantasy worlds. He provides the reader with material that opens their mind to how literature can deepen understandings of God. This book will be of interest to past and present literature students, those who love the philosophy of literature, and perhaps church book groups looking for material to stimulate discussion."" Alina Burns, Reform Magazine, March 2020 If, as a preacher, you are interested in developing fresh ways to talk about God, and enjoy reading a wide range of fiction, then this book will give you much to think about. It would also serve for inspiration and encouragement to anyone considering starting a church book group. Kristy Anderson, Transforming Ministry, Vol 120 No4, Winter 2020 David Dickinson carries his considerable learning lightly and graciously. Clear, concise and sure-footed, this is a book for which many people, clerical and lay, in and beyond congregations, should be grateful. David Jasper, Theology Vol 124, pp.62-63" """Written from personal conviction and with a clarity that will appeal to the general reader, David Dickinson argues that the modern novel in its multiple forms can stimulate us to imagine God afresh, and as such provides ideal material to provoke serious thought and discussion both within and without Christian reading communities. Make-Believe will certainly perk up the theological level of the average church bookstall and be of interest to a broader, religiously unaffiliated readership."" Elisabeth Jay, Professor Emerita, Oxford Brookes University ""This is a timely, intelligent and audacious book which, growing out of the author's own wide-ranging engagement with theology and contemporary novels, challenges and expands the reader's horizons. I hope it will receive the serious attention it so richly deserves."" The Rt Revd Dr Christopher Herbert, Visiting Professor of Christian Ethics, University of Surrey ""Dickinson shows how religion is key to the context of the novels he chooses to discuss (at least two from each genre), from the novels' historical setting to how we understand the seen and unseen elements of fantasy worlds. He provides the reader with material that opens their mind to how literature can deepen understandings of God. This book will be of interest to past and present literature students, those who love the philosophy of literature, and perhaps church book groups looking for material to stimulate discussion."" Alina Burns, Reform Magazine, March 2020 ""If, as a preacher, you are interested in developing fresh ways to talk about God, and enjoy reading a wide range of fiction, then this book will give you much to think about. It would also serve for inspiration and encouragement to anyone considering starting a church book group."" Kristy Anderson, Transforming Ministry, Vol 120 No4, Winter 2020" Written from personal conviction and with a clarity that will appeal to the general reader, David Dickinson argues that the modern novel in its multiple forms can stimulate us to imagine God afresh, and as such provides ideal material to provoke serious thought and discussion both within and without Christian reading communities. Make-Believe will certainly perk up the theological level of the average church bookstall and be of interest to a broader, religiously unaffiliated readership. Elisabeth Jay, Professor Emerita, Oxford Brookes University This is a timely, intelligent and audacious book which, growing out of the author's own wide-ranging engagement with theology and contemporary novels, challenges and expands the reader's horizons. I hope it will receive the serious attention it so richly deserves. The Rt Revd Dr Christopher Herbert, Visiting Professor of Christian Ethics, University of Surrey Author InformationDavid Dickinson taught secondary school English in Newcastle upon Tyne before training for the Methodist ministry. He has researched and written in the field of theology and literature since the early 1990s and ministered in churches since the late 1980s. He was Director of the St Albans Centre for Christian Studies from 2005 to 2013 and now serves as minister of Trinity Church Sutton, Surrey. His publications include The Novel as Church (2013) and Yet Alive? Methodists in British Fiction since 1890 (2016). 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