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Beauty on the Backroads

Stories of grace for life's unexpected turns

shawn smucker

Why I’m worried you won’t read this book: Review of Light From Distant Stars by Shawn Smucker

July 17, 2019

I have to be honest: I’m having a hard time figuring out how to tell you about Light From Distant Stars by Shawn Smucker. And that’s not because I didn’t like it. I loved it. It’s unique and captivating and I couldn’t put it down.

I just can’t guarantee you’re going to love it as much as I did, and that makes me uncomfortable. I want you to love this book, but it’s an unusual story, and it leaves some questions unanswered. It’s like life in that way. Not everything is explained or neatly wrapped with a bow on it at the end. This is not a flaw of the story but part of its beauty.

Still, we readers can be fickle when it comes to unanswered questions. So I’m worried you’ll avoid this book.

I’m going to try my best to convince you otherwise, anyway.

From the first line, pictured below, I was hooked.

Light From Distant Stars is a tad bit eerie but not necessarily scary. It’s haunting but not in a ghosty kind of way. I don’t know if any of this is making you want to read it, so let me just say that I started the book thinking one thing and by page 35, the book was headed in another direction completely, and if I wasn’t already interested in the story, I’d have wanted to keep reading to find out where it was headed.

The book jumps back and forth between present day and Cohen’s childhood. In some stories this can be jarring but I found the transitions seamless in this book. I was never unsure which timeline I was reading about and I was never left hanging for too long from one time period to the other.

If you’re looking for something different, this is the book for you. Just remember that it might not answer all of your questions to your satisfaction. It is like life in that way. Maybe I enjoyed this book because I no longer need as much certainty as I used to. Or maybe I just appreciate a book and an author that is willing to be different from the norm.

Shawn Smucker is one of my absolute favorite storytellers. (You can read reviews of his other books I’ve read here, here, and here.) He has a way with words and themes that inspires my own writing, and I’ve been cheering on his writing for years now.

When I read a new author or an author I haven’t read before, I want a guarantee that the story is going to be good. I have too many books to read to spend time with a story that isn’t. So, I’ll understand if this book sounds too risky to take a chance on. But I hope you’ll be brave and give it a chance.

I received a copy of the book from the publisher. Review reflects my honest opinion.

Filed Under: Fiction, The Weekly Read Tagged With: new fiction, revell books, shawn smucker

The everyday power of friendship: Review of Once We Were Strangers by Shawn Smucker

October 17, 2018

Does friendship matter? Can it change the world? What does it mean to be a friend?

This new book about a Lancaster, Pa. native and a Syrian refugee who resettled to the area addresses these questions in an honest story of making time and room for people in our busy lives.

Once We Were Strangers: What Friendship with a Syrian Refugee Taught Me About Loving My Neighbor by Shawn Smucker isn’t overtly dramatic or adventurous and friendship between these two men might not seem like anything significant. But that’s exactly why it’s the perfect book for the times we live in. Shawn doesn’t set out to “save” his friend Mohammed from his circumstances, and the world doesn’t noticeably shift because of their relationship. But these two men are changed, and how their relationship developed is accessible to all of us. We can all befriend someone with whom we have nothing in common simply by showing up and listening. (And repeating that process often.)

Back to those questions I posed at the beginning of this post.

What does it mean to be a friend? Shawn talks honestly about this, how he doesn’t feel like a good friend to Mohammed, how on their first meeting, Mohammed considered them friends. I’ve experienced this firsthand with refugees in our area. They call us “friends” on first meeting, and it’s humbling. It challenges our western notions that friendship is earned. This book reminds us that friendship can be a gift we give each other, no strings attached.

Does friendship matter? Can it change the world? You could read this book and say, “No. It makes no difference in the world. Nothing fundamentally changed in the world.” We’re still divided in this country about whether people from other countries, especially those fleeing violence and persecution, are welcome in our country. We’re still afraid of people whose skin color is different, whose native language is different, whose practice of religion is different.

But I would say that friendship absolutely matters and it might not change the world in ways we can see immediately, but it has a forever impact on the people involved. Shawn’s and Mohammed’s lives will never be the same because they met and continued to meet over strong coffee, sometimes late at night. Their children will be changed by their friendship. Their communities will be better because they were willing to step across a divide that whispered “you can’t be friends with him.”

This is a story of slow change, steady presence, and continual showing up. It’s not necessarily exciting work, but it is the good and necessary work of a society that sees the other as enemy.

If you can’t imagine ever becoming friends with Syrian refugee, I encourage you to read this book. If you don’t understand why people flee their home countries, I encourage you to read this book. The chapters about Mohammed’s family’s exit from Syria are some of the hardest to read. If you fully support the resettlement of refugees in the United States, I encourage you to read this book.

Disclosure: I read an advance copy of the book courtesy of Bake Publishing Group. Review reflects my honest opinion.

Filed Under: books, Non-fiction, Refugees Welcome, The Weekly Read Tagged With: baker publishing group, friendship, memoir, refugee resettlement, shawn smucker, syrian refugees, We Welcome Refugees

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Hi. I’m Lisa, and I’m glad you’re here. If we were meeting in real life, I’d offer you something to eat or drink while we sat on the porch letting the conversation wander as it does. That’s a little bit what this space is like. We talk about books and family and travel and food and running, whatever I might encounter in world. I’m looking for the beauty in the midst of it all, even the tough stuff. (You’ll find a lot of that here, too.) Thanks for stopping by. Stay as long as you like.

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Occasionally, I review books in exchange for a free copy. Opinions are my own and are not guaranteed positive simply due to the receipt of a free copy.

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