<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[Irresistibly Fish]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[https://brettfish.wordpress.com]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[brettfish]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://brettfish.wordpress.com/author/brettfish/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[Deadfall by Robert Liparulo [and bad christian&nbsp;movies]]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<p>so we wait with bated breath til some Christ-followers can actually write, direct, film and act in a movie that is worth watching&#8230; there have been some that come close but at the moment it&#8217;s still &#8216;secular&#8217; movies like The Blind Side and Dead Man Walking that seem to portray Christian love, grace, acceptance and forgiveness better than any &#8216;Christian&#8217; film i am yet to see, and i sadly still believe that most &#8216;Christian&#8217; movies are pretty rubbish [you disagree? post your &#8216;Christian&#8217; movie of choice and let&#8217;s see if i&#8217;ve seen it] </p>
<p>in the meantime though it is exciting to see that the Christ-following authors have strongly gotten their act together, altho to be fair if we look back to Pilgrim&#8217;s progress and C.S.Lewis&#8217; Narnia books i spose we can say that&#8217;s been happening for a while. But when i discovered my first Ted Dekker book titled &#8216;Thr3e&#8217; something in me jumped and said &#8216;it is time.&#8217; As much as i think Francine Rivers catches the heart in some of her stories [to be fair, only read Redeeming Love and The Atonement Child] and i really did enjoy both the ones that read, i think that her writing is still painfully cheesy at times and she doesn&#8217;t quite do it for me [and millions disagree and that&#8217;s okay &#8211; nice stories, not great writing imo] but Ted Dekker arrived and boom!</p>
<p>again there were authors like Frank Peretti whose &#8216;This Present Darkness&#8217; series blew me away at the time altho most of his subsequent books failed to produce the same kind of response in me [&#8216;House&#8217; by Peretti and Dekker on the other hand&#8230;] and the Left Behind series guys who also provoked a &#8216;wo&#8217; in me(at the time, altho stopped halfway through cos they couldn&#8217;t keep up with me, but then once they started writing prequels and left behind for kids i think i got a lot more suspicious about their motivationals and lost interest) </p>
<p>i had seen Ted Dekker books in christian bookshops for years and was always wondering if they were any good cos seemed to be a bunch of them and if they were good then a bunch of cool stuff to read, but never got round to making the move of trying one out. then i think someone recommended &#8216;Thr3e&#8217; and i read it and was hooked and have now almost pretty much run out of Ted Dekkers and wait patiently (like for Terry Pratchett) for the next one &#8211; i describe him as Stephen King if he was a Christian and yeah &#8216;Thr3e&#8217;, &#8216;Blink&#8217;, &#8216;Circle Series,&#8217; &#8216;House&#8217; and others are well worth the read &#8211; very, very dark some of them, hectic thriller with supernatural elements but never going too far into the message-preaching realm but giving enough to make you think &#8211; very real characters, honest, raw, rough writing and page-turning stuff &#8211; difficult to put down</p>
<p>which brings me to Robert Liparulo &#8211; happened to venture into gospel direct last week and saw these two hardcover books which looked intriguing called &#8216;Comes a Horseman&#8217; and &#8216;Deadfall&#8217; for R55 and R40 which is nothing for a hardcover &#8211; never heard of him altho there was a Ted Dekker endorsement in the one book so thort let&#8217;s give it a try and yeah, he&#8217;s no Ted Dekker but he is not too far off&#8230; </p>
<p>equally dark and supernatural in terms of &#8216;C a H&#8217; being about secret societies and anticipation of the antichrist and ritual serial killings but again some good characters, some hardcore action and some pretty decent writing&#8230; and now reading Deadfall which i am enjoying even more &#8211; occasional semicheesy trying-that-little-bit-too-hard line of dialogue, but generally riveting stuff</p>
<p>sadly, i think he only has one other book out &#8211; &#8216;Germ&#8217; &#8211; so i might have to add him to my pile of authors-who-need-to-write-quicker-so-i-can-read-their-stuff but for the time being (with half of Deadfall to go) i am happy&#8230;</p>
<p>anyone else read him? thoughts? feedback? other good reads?</p>
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