Jul
9
2010
Good Work

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Folks, I don’t know if you remember Allen Levi’s previous posts here in the Rabbit Room, so I’ll reintroduce you. He’s a southern gentleman from Columbus, Georgia, a singer/songwriter, a lay farmer (if there is such a thing) and is one of my all-time favorite people. In light of Lanier Ivester’s recent post about work and art, I thought it was appropriate to steal this post from Allen’s blog. (Also, since I happen to know Allen’s at least 12 feet tall, that makes the pictured sunflower a freak of nature.)

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I’ve been scolded for returning to my old pattern of website delinquency and hope you’ll forgive my absence from the blog. Simply stated, summer has been perfectly wonderful and I feel like I’ve achieved the desired balance between indoor/outdoor and mental/physical work. I’m still writing and recording for several hours on most days and am on schedule to post some new songs in August. Just this past week, I finished my wood shed and I’m eager to dig in to the chicken coop project soon. And everyday there is something garden-related that keeps me locally fed, mostly tomatoes and okra of late. It’s all good.

I taught Sunday School this morning for the high school class. It was me and one student, a bright and inquisitive 10th grader named Kiana. We talked about heaven, in keeping with our lesson text from 1 Thessalonians.
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Jun
22
2010
Song of the Day: Andy Gullahorn

lawofgravitycoverOnce upon a time I was riding in a car full of working men (funny how that has a totally different connotation with girls) and the subject of what to listen to on the radio was being hotly debated. It quickly became clear that the majority of the car preferred music of the country variety to which I replied, “Oh, I’ve got one for you. Check out this song by Andy Gullahorn. It’s all about country music.”

So I plugged in my iPod, played the song and waited for the laughter. It never came. Each of them sat and listened with suspicious and curious expressions until the song was over. “It’s funny, see? Don’t you get it?” I said. They all looked at each other and shrugged and frowned at me as if I were the one on the outside of the joke. As if to offer me some comfort, the guy sitting beside me said, “I don’t know, man, but I sure like that part about the workin’ man.”

True story. I swear.

“Workin’ Man” by Andy Gullahorn

You can buy Andy’s latest record The Law of Gravity for just $10 today in the Rabbit Room store ($7 for download).

Jun
19
2010
One Minute Review: Toy Story 3D

This is the One Minute Review of Pixar’s Toy Story 3-D. Thanks to my friend Jim who suggested the slight change in venue this week, in honor of this animated film. Remember to “Like” the One Minute Review at www.facebook.com/oneminutereview

One Minute Review: Toy Story 3D from Thomas McKenzie on Vimeo.

Jun
17
2010
One Minute Review: Karate Kid

One Minute Review: Karate Kid from Thomas McKenzie on Vimeo.

The classic Karate Kid of my junior high years has been remade for the global economy generation. Did it deliver a powerful crane kick, or should we give it the body bag? Watch the One Minute Review to find out.

Be sure to subscribe to the One Minute Review in video or audio form on iTunes, or at www.OneMinuteReview.com

Jun
11
2010
“I’m Proud Of You” - My New Hero

hz6161-061616-classic-trolley-mister-rogers-neighborhood-lg2“L’essentiel est invisible pour les yeux.” (What is essential is invisible to the eyes – from Antoine De Saint-Exupery’s The Little Prince)

These are the words on a plaque hanging in the office of my new hero. Who might that be you may wonder? Kierkegard? Billy Graham? Bono?

Would you be surprised if I told you it was…Mister Rogers?

Let me explain:
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Jun
9
2010
One Minute Review: Prince of Persia

The summer movie season has not been kind. So, while I mocked the very idea of the “Prince of Persia” movie, I did go to see it. Here is what I discovered buried in the Sands of Time.

One Minute Review: Prince of Persia from Thomas McKenzie on Vimeo.

May
28
2010
I Was a Cowboy

giantsI want to tell you why I love the new record by Jarred McCauley, but first I need to tell you about my love for a lost movie genre: The Western.

Some of my most vivid childhood memories are of being forced to sit and watch ‘old’ movies despite my repeated groans and protests. My misgivings were rooted in the perceived lameness of anything my parents thought warranted “family time” (often these perceptions were well-founded…Lawrence Welk?). In my mind, the surest sign of a hellish evening of forced entertainment was the appearance of a black and white title card on a snowy UHF-band station. These title cards were often followed by equally onerous names like James Stewart, Gary Cooper, or John Wayne.

Ugh. Ugh, I’d say. Do I have to, Dad? Can’t we watch Manimal instead?
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May
21
2010
One Minute Review: Robin Hood

Robin Hood was one of my Five Most Anticipated Films of the Summer!

Director Ridley Scott teamed up with actor Russel Crowe for the amazing Gladiator, as well as the solid but under-appreciated films American Gangster and Body of Lies. Now he takes on the 12th century, as he did in his visually lovely but otherwise terrible Kingdom of Heaven. Would Robin Hood be the next Gladiator, or Kingdom of Heaven II? Watch the One Minute Review to find out!

One Minute Review: Robin Hood from Thomas McKenzie on Vimeo.

May
17
2010
Hidden Treasure: The Clock Without a Face

d3ec71d7b9a50568e7f4724ddfb96eaeThis is for real. Somewhere around the country, twelve emeralds are hidden, and the clues to their location are in the pages of The Clock Without a Face, by Scott Teplin, Mac Barnett, and Eli Horowitz.

I’ve been an admirer of McSweeney’s writing/reading/tutoring community for a while, and even hope to emulate some of their methods here in the Rabbit Room one of these days. They run several inner-city tutoring centers around the country, with the idea that if you can teach a child to write you greatly increase their chance of succeeding in the world. I think that’s true. We’ve long kicked around the idea of opening up Rabbit Room tutoring programs for the purpose of exposing children to great writers, particularly great writers who were/are Christians, and encouraging those children to hone their craft and to treat it as Kingdom work. I geek out just thinking about it.
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May
4
2010
Song of the Day: Ben Shive

ill-tempered-klavier-coverIt’s tempting to continue our recent trend of science-fiction inspired Songs of the Day, but I’ll spare you by refusing to mention that this song both refers to outer space in the first line and features an astral body as its primary metaphor. Just ignore all that and listen to how awesome the Shive is.

The song’s called “She Is The Rising Sun” and Ben wrote it about a girl. It’s his way of saying she’s hot.

The Ill-Tempered Klavier is available at the “Song ‘o the Day” price in the Rabbit Room store ($10 CD / $7 download).

Apr
23
2010
One Minute Review: Kick A#$

I didn’t realize there would be any controversy about this movie, until I saw it. At the risk of setting off an Inglourious Basterds type firestorm, I have made a One Minute Review of “Kick A#$.” I will share my feelings on the film, and let you draw your own conclusions. How’s that sound?

OH, and parents be warned. The word “A#$” can be typed in print, but the word itself is said in the review. Don’t blame me, I didn’t name the movie.

One Minute Review: Kick A#$ from Thomas McKenzie on Vimeo.

Apr
21
2010
Guest Post: Face Down

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Note: I think I can speak for all of our contributors when I say that we hope our readers are blessed in some way by what we write here, but often our readers are a blessing to us as well. Such is the case with Lanier Ivester. I stumbled onto her blog, Lanier’s Books, after reading a comment she posted and was breathtaken by this piece she’d written. She’s graciously allowed me to post it here where I hope others will be as blessed by it as I was. –Pete Peterson

Face Down by Lanier Ivester

And Ezra blessed the LORD, the great God, and all the people answered, “Amen, Amen,” lifting up their hands. And they bowed their heads and worshiped the LORD with their faces to the ground.  –Nehemiah 8:6

I was a Christian, and I was a dancer. A ballerina, as I liked to avow with all the solemnity of seventeen. Studying classical ballet three and four days out of the week, showing up early to stretch before class, wrestling against all the opposing forces of aching muscles and tight tendons to add a fraction of a degree to my arabesque or half an inch of height to my grande jete’. I loved it, and I worked hard, both of which I owe almost exclusively to the much greater fact of a superlatively excellent teacher. She drew me out of the back corner of regional ballet school indifference and she scraped grimly away at an acquired layer of sloppiness and mimicking conformity, down to the very bones of my so-called technique. We spent untold class time spread out on the floor with anatomy books and I was made to perform all manner of ridiculous maneuvers in order to find and feel the muscles we were talking about. I danced for months without any shoes at all, and marched across the floor, en pointe, holding chairs over my head. She would call for sixty-four changement at a time and then call for them again, and drill me on the names of the famed “Eight Positions” as I assumed them in rapid succession.
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Apr
20
2010
Song of the Day: Andrew Osenga

l_ltte_i-ii_cover-1A couple of weeks ago at a Square Peg Alliance house show here in Nashville, Andy Osenga asked the following question:

“Would you guys rather hear an old song about spaceships or a new song about spaceships?” People laughed. Andy added, “No really. That’s a serious question.”

The new song about spaceships won. And it was awesome.

Today’s song of the day is the old one, “Anna And The Aliens” (unless he’s got another that I don’t know about.) The Rabbit Room is proud to be the one stop source for all your Science-Fiction Folk-Rock needs.

Today you can get Andy’s Letters to the Editor Vol. 1 & 2 at a special price in the Rabbit Room store (CD - $10 or Download - $7).

Apr
16
2010
Let There Be Mugs

squat-2Note: We’ve completely sold out of these. Zounds! You guys are mug nuts. I’ll be placing another order next week so look for another set sometime in June.

We’re happy to announce some new arrivals to the Rabbit Room. If you will, say hello to “The Chesterton“, “Old Jack“, “O’Connor“, and “The Professor.”

Alas, we haven’t resurrected four greats of 20th Century literature. But we have named a brand new set of Rabbit Room mugs after them. The good folks at Sunset Hill Stoneware have turned each one individually on a pottery wheel (sans Swayze) and finished them off with an official Rabbit Room logo. We’ve only got a dozen of each style (and six of each variety within that style) so if you want a matching set, you might want to act sooner rather than later.

Without further ado, meet the mugs:
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Apr
8
2010
One Minute Review: Clash of the Titans

I was nine years old when the original Clash of the Titans came out. Given my great love for that film as a kid, how would I feel about the idea of a remake? Stoked! But when the Kraken was actually released last week, how did I respond? Find out in the three and a half minute long One Minute Review.

OMR: Clash of the Titans from Thomas McKenzie on Vimeo.

Apr
2
2010
An Unexpected Breakfast

wine and breadI don’t pay a lot of attention to liturgical observances. I’m one of those folks for whom repetition, ritual, and ceremony are generally detractors from my ability to enter a state of worship or spiritual reflection. I know, I know, I love Lewis’s arguments for liturgy as a trainer of the mind and spirit, and he was a lot smarter than I’ll ever be. But still, for better or worse, it’s just not my thing.

I have two exceptions of note. The first, of course, is Communion. I began observing the second about ten years ago. I know others do it but I don’t know whether there’s any sort of official observance. I simply decided one year that I’d fast from Good Friday after lunch until Communion on Easter morning and I’ve done it every year since. I’ve grown to look forward to it. It provides me with a gnawing reminder of the hours that Christ spent in the grave and I’m always hungry, spiritually and physically, for Communion come Sunday.
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Mar
31
2010
@TheRabbitRoom

twitterWhy, you may ask, should you follow @TheRabbitRoom on Twitter?

Three reasons:

1 - It will make us feel loved.

2 - You may be privy to secret information, clues to the whereabouts of clandestine meetings, or random under-the-table deals on things we aren’t at liberty to disclose.

3 - Because none of the cool kids are doing it.

Mar
25
2010
One Minute Review: Diary of a Wimpy Kid

You and/or your kids loved the Diary of a Wimpy Kid books. Will the movie be any good? Let the OMR be your guide. And now you can subscribe to the OMR video or audio podcast at OneMinuteReview.com.

OMR: Diary of a Wimpy Kid from Thomas McKenzie on Vimeo.

Mar
24
2010
How the Story will End - An Easter Meditation

dead-dove1I want to tell you a story—a true story.

The snow had draped everything in a pillowy blanket of white that looked like something straight out of a Thomas Kincade painting. As a country kid, I preferred being outdoors. So when the snow stopped, I layered up, put on my boots, gloves and hat and went out to stand in the middle of the glory God had put on display.

I remember it like it was yesterday. The roads were all but impassable, so I stood alone and uninterrupted. It was bitterly cold—the dry kind that freezes the lungs when you breathe. Everything was so still that the sound of my boots crunching through the surface of the snow muted as though I were in an acoustically perfect concert hall.

I stood at the end of my driveway looking as far as I could past the stand of blue spruces draped in snow to my right when out of the corner of my eye I saw something out of place. There in a 30 foot spruce I saw something amid the alternating layers of bluish-green and pure white that was the color of ash. Unable to make out what it was, I went over to investigate.
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Mar
23
2010
Song of the Day: Jill Phillips

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Saturday night I had the pleasure of seeing the Resurrection Letters concert here in Nashville.  Jill and her husband Andy Gullahorn sang this song, ”Any Other Way”, and I was reminded of how much I love this record. It’s about the struggle and reward of marriage and it’s especially touching to hear them sing it together and be able to hear the sincerity and history coming through in their voices. Truly a beautiful thing.

Today only, The Good Things is specially priced in the Rabbit Room store: $10 for the CD or $7 for the download.

  • Now Available: Counting Stars
    May/5/2010

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  • In Bid by Rabbit Roomers to Take Over Literary World, Jonathan Rogers Publishes Saint Patrick Biography: Available Now
    Mar/30/2010

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Recent Comments:

  • MONEY, Part 4: Little Things Matter (32)
    • David Axberg: Jeff, You are right on also. I do think it is correct for someone to do their calling. My calling is property management. My heart is...
    • MainlineMom: This may be the most beautiful piece of writing I’ve read…at least this week. What a poetic description of the fall and...
    • Silence: Achingly beautiful - hauntingly true. The constant search to find the place where all the beauty comes from. This was poetry.
    • Amy @ My Friend Amy: Jeff I think I know what you’re saying. It’s the same sort of thing I often wonder about in support raised...
    • Jeff M: I’m probably going to fumble this post, but I want to respond… First of all by thanking our Proprietor for these posts as well...
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  • Andrew Peterson
    singer, songwriter, storyteller
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  • Pete Peterson
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  • Jason Gray
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  • The Fiddler’s Gun, A Review: Making History Come True

    tfgcoverA.S. Peterson has crafted a work of compelling historical fiction which begs the question, “Can this really be a debut novel?” With dogged fidelity, Peterson captures the spirit, manners, and social conditions present during the American Revolutionary War. We meet colorful, credible characters who navigate the high seas of life and love, dependence and independence, war and peace, truth and consequence, and despite forays into dark places, The Fiddler’s Gun is beautiful, lyrical, and redemptive.

  • Shive Arrives: A Song by Song Commentary on The Ill-Tempered Klavier

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    One listen to Ben Shive’s debut The Ill-Tempered Klavier will provide obvious evidence of why this young man has secured the respect of peers and colleagues on the inside of the Nashville music community. With The Ill-Tempered Klavier, Shive’s skills are now planted in the public garden.

    Heretofore, there have been unsubtle hints: Andrew Osenga pronouncing Shive as his favorite songwriter, Andrew Peterson naming him as producer of The Far Country, his ubiquitous presence as a studio piano ace on a wide range of mainstream CCM records, Sara Groves choosing him to produce her next record, and the majestic arranging of the strings for Andrew Peterson’s Behold the Lamb of God, The True Tall Tale of the Coming of Christ. Like a fast growing wildflower, Shive seems to pop up everywhere, though always in the background. Now, the secret is out. Raise the curtain on Ben Shive.

  • Flannery O’Connor: The Complete Stories

    flannery-oconnor.jpg

    I just stumbled on a copy of O’Connor’s complete short stories at a used bookstore here in Nashville and listed it in the Rabbit Room store. Years ago a friend bought me this same edition and I read it with a sense of creepy amazement; it was like nothing I’d ever read. I knew Chris Slaten was a big fan of her work so I asked him to write a recommendation for the book. We only have one copy, so if you click here and can’t find it, someone beat you to the punch.

    ———————-

    This collection is essential to both long time fans and first time readers interested in the work of Flannery O’Connor. My first time to read a handful of her short stories I was helpless to interpret them. One would expect that reading the 1950’s work of a female “Christ-centered” southern fiction writer would be a simple, modest or at least predictable experience.

  • Saint Julian: A Novel

    12330194.jpgWalt Wangerin, Jr. strikes again.

    Several people in the last few weeks have commented to me about how glad they are that they discovered Wangerin’s The Book of the Dun Cow here in the Rabbit Room. It really is a remarkable book, and I still can’t recommend it highly enough. It won the prestigious National Book Award when it was first published in 1978, and was only the beginning of Wangerin’s career.

    I just stumbled on his most recent novel, Saint Julian, and was so captured by it that it bumped aside the other four books I’m reading. Last Sunday afternoon–a perfect Spring day–I sat on my front porch swing and read the last half of the book, savoring the careful prose, the pastoral tone, and even the look and feel of the book itself. The cover illustration fits the epic, vivid quality of the story perfectly, and the fonts (I’m a sucker for a great font) added just the right atmosphere.

  • RELEASE DAY REVIEW: On the Edge of the Dark Sea of Darkness

    on-the-edge-cover.jpgJanner Igiby lives in Glipwood, a nothing little village in the land of Skree, on the edge of the Dark Sea of Darkness. Manhood is on the horizon, but Janner finds it hard to feel much hope for the future. Skree is ruled by foreign oppressors, snake men called the Fangs of Dang, servants of a shadowy emperor named Gnag the Nameless. The Skreeans are weak and weaponless. They’re even tool-less. Any Skreean who needs to use a hoe has to borrow one from the Fangs (and fill out the requisite paperwork). And from time to time, the Black Carriage arrives in Glipwood to carry young Skreeans toward an unknown fate across the Dark Sea.

    But once a year the Sea Dragons sing just off the coast of Glipwood. With their song, life reasserts itself in the hearts of Skreeans who have long since learned to numb themselves:

  • The Killer Angels

    The Killer AngelsI am not a fan of Civil War literature; in fact, I have always thought of it as one of those weird sub-genres for obsessive types. They’re almost like Trekkies with their re-enactments and maniacal devotion to detail. It’s just not my thing (although I’m secretly jealous that they get to dress up and shoot cannons).

  • Arkadelphia from Randall Goodgame: Music in Motion

    arkadelphia.jpgA Randall Goodgame song is like a great independent movie. Characters deliver lines like they were lifted from a break room, a truck stop, or a downtown diner. Seemingly incongruent scenes are juxtaposed and plot isn’t obvious; in fact, narrative–a good story–is often more evident than linear plot lines. An indie movie, like a Randall Goodgame song, seems to tell itself. Rather than being rudely yanked by a chain through a sequence of contrived events, with a Randall Goodgame song, I have the sense that I’m being allowed a willing, but vicarious sneak peak into the real lives of his real characters.

  • The Book of the Dun Cow, Walt Wangerin

    The Book of the Dun Cow

    Walt Wangerin is a name I’ve seen in print many times. My dad had Ragman and Other Cries of Faith lying about at home for years and I remember thumbing through it at Christmas or Thanksgiving, reading bits here and there, and being intrigued by the style of writing; the words on the page had a canter to them, and a sparseness that gave them strength.

  • Sara Groves: Tell Me What You Know

     
    saragroves_b.jpgSara Groves irritates me just a little bit. With each album she makes, she moves from strength to strength and is always raising the bar with the quality, depth, and lyrical ambition of her work. And as a fellow artist, that’s just a little irritating since it means the rest of us are going to have to work harder if we hope to keep up.

  • Andrew Peterson: Love and Thunder

    loveandthundercover.jpgI am outside on my front porch. The yellowed leaves are methodically falling from the black walnut in the yard, my breath is chalky visible in the recent cold snap, and lately I have been exploring the unpleasant nuances of the dark night of a soul - my own, to be exact. It is a strange passion we live out on this over-glorified orb of rock hurtling through space at some rate that I’m sure would astound me were I to know what it was. It is an odd series of days, I am realizing, when you question your own faith more than you question your own doubt. And, indeed, it is these nagging questions which have prompted me to share my thoughts on Andrew Peterson’s 2003 album, Love and Thunder.

  • Peace Like a River, Leif Enger

    Peace Like a River Cover11-year old Reuben Land, a character in the 2001 book Peace Like a River, provides narration that is clear-eyed and insightful, yet retains the magic, wonder, and innocence of youth. I found it easy to entrust my imagination to the author’s clever method of telling the story through the sensibilities of a pre-teen boy. An author with lesser skill would have either made the boy too smart-alecky for his own good or impossibly cute.

  • A Balm in Gilead

    gilead_sm.jpgI just finished a book that upon closing it, I felt like it finished me in a sense. A quiet meditative book that reached down and stirred the deep waters in me. It’s Marilynne Robinson’s 2005 Pulitzer prize winner Gilead, given to me by my friend Andrew Peterson.

  • Photographs, Andrew Osenga

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    Do you have any CD’s in your collection that will be forever associated with some event or season of life—like the soundtrack to your last high school summer or what you listened to over and over again on that one road trip to wherever it was?

  • Eric Peters: A Hope that is Not of This World

    scarce.jpgEric Peters’s body of work addresses a diverse range of topics, but hope is a recurring theme that gently percolates in the midst of it all. And yet, somewhere between the 2001 masterpiece Land of the Living, and Scarce, the flavor of hope that Peters’s work emits has evolved closer to a tone that is more resolute than what came before. And though the complexion of hope has a broad range, the lyrics from Scarce–while intermittently contrite and timorous as in previous efforts, are now strengthened and bolstered by roots that have grown deeper, radiating an underlying grit and security.

  • The Great Divorce, C.S. Lewis

    thegreatdivorce.jpgHaving read The Great Divorce many times over the years, I’ve found this classic from the great C.S. Lewis to be full of startling clarity and depth on the differences between Heaven and Hell. The only thing both have in common is that both begin in the human will; we can either let Heaven enter us and rule in us to blossom into love and goodness, or allow Hell to infect and reign in our hearts by the daily refusal to submit to Heaven.

  • Room to Breathe, Andy Gullahorn

    gullahorn-room-to-breathe.jpgEven if you haven’t heard Room to Breathe, its still likely you’ve heard Andy Gullahorn. He’s what I’d call a heavy lifter by trade. He writes lyrics, plays guitar, arranges vocals and adds production help to the work of artists like Jill Phillips and Andrew Peterson.

  • Godric, Frederick Buechner

    Godric CoverAllow me to preface this by telling you that I am a great despiser of gushing reviews. I’d much rather write (or read) a scathing dismemberment of the latest Brett Ratner film or Terry Goodkind book than suffer through four hundred words of overblown hyperbole about even the best of things. But when asked to write some thoughts on Frederick Buechner’s Godric, no amount of distaste for high praise was able to intervene. I hope you’ll take what I say with the understanding that I do not say it readily or lightly.

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