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Reading Evangelicals

How Christian Fiction Shaped a Culture and a Faith

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The story of five best-selling novels beloved by evangelicals, the book industry they built, and the collective imagination they shaped 

Who are evangelicals? And what is evangelicalism? Those attempting to answer these questions usually speak in terms of political and theological stances. But those stances emerge from an evangelical world with its own institutions—institutions that shape imagination as much as they shape ideology. 

In this unique exploration of evangelical subculture, Daniel Silliman shows readers how Christian fiction, and the empire of Christian publishing and bookselling it helped build, is key to understanding the formation of evangelical identity. With a close look at five best-selling novels—Love Comes SoftlyThis Present DarknessLeft BehindThe Shunning, and The Shack—Silliman considers what it was in these books that held such appeal and what effect their widespread popularity had on the evangelical imagination. 

Reading Evangelicals ultimately makes the case that the worlds created in these novels reflected and shaped the world evangelicals saw themselves living in—one in which romantic love intertwines with divine love, humans play an active role in the cosmic contest between angels and demons, and the material world is infused with the literal workings of God and Satan. Silliman tells the story of how the Christian publishing industry marketed these ideas as much as they marketed books, and how, during the era of the Christian bookstore, this—every bit as much as politics or theology—became a locus of evangelical identity.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 26, 2021
      Journalist Silliman selects five novels that ushered evangelical Christian fiction into mainstream book markets in this thoughtful examination of contemporary evangelicalism’s position within American culture. The five well-chosen and bestselling works—Janette Oke’s Love Comes Softly, Frank Peretti’s This Present Darkness, Tim LaHaye and Jerry Jenkins’s Left Behind, Beverly Lewis’s The Shunning, and William Paul Young’s The Shack—allow Silliman to examine the growth and development of Christian fiction over nearly four decades. Silliman illuminates evangelical preoccupations with authenticity (“Evangelical belief... wasn’t about packaged conformity but about discovering your true self”); cultural engagement rather than withdrawal (“This Present Darkness made the connection between evangelical belief and political advocacy”); the comfort of belief in the midst of everyday suffering; and learning to live with ambiguity. Silliman is a close reader of both books and culture, but underestimates the mechanisms publishers use to get books into the hands of readers through promotion, advertising, and distribution. Moreover, his account, based on his dissertation, feels dated—the most recent work it focuses on, The Shack, was published in 2008. Still, Silliman’s thorough analysis calls attention to the understudied cultural phenomenon of evangelical Christianity’s influence on American popular culture.

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  • English

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