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Molokai
07-18-2003, 03:34 PM
i'm hesitant to post a topic about this book on a literature website, but i'm curious to see if anyone has read the "Left Behind" series, by Tim LaHaye and Jerry Jenkins. I've read a few books of the series (there are currently 11 in print). In my opinion, the characters are painfully one-dimensional, the dialogue resembles nothing I have ever heard in a social setting, and the plot drags and jerks at random intervals.

The odd thing is that all of these books are very highly rated on amazon.com. I'd be interested to hear other's opinions of these books.

(R.E.L - You were wanting to know if Hemmingway was anti-semitic? These books most definitely are, along with anti-catholic and a slew of other biases.)

notleftbehind.7
05-21-2008, 04:55 PM
i dont agree. i liked them

PeterL
05-21-2008, 04:58 PM
I have read excerpts, and I found the writing amazingly bad. I did write better when I was twelve years old, but even then I did not buy into the premise. Besides, everyone knows that the rapture happened in 2003. You notied how many people disappeared, didn't you?

notleftbehind.7
05-21-2008, 05:03 PM
I have read excerpts, and I found the writing amazingly bad. I did write better when I was twelve years old, but even then I did not buy into the premise. Besides, everyone knows that the rapture happened in 2003. You notied how many people disappeared, didn't you?


is there something wrong with 12 year olds??? and peterL if i must say so myself, not to offend you, even though i dont really care, much, much, much more people will disappear than in just 03. and they wont die like that they will be gone. in a twinkling of an eye. but not by death.

PeterL
05-21-2008, 05:12 PM
This should be on the religion board. You religion is your business, but it already happened...

andave_ya
05-21-2008, 10:25 PM
A long time ago I read nine of them, got bored, and never finished and have no desire to. Even though I am a Bible-believing Christian, those were just boring books.

Trystan
05-21-2008, 11:04 PM
I've heard of them, and the film adaptations. They sound like a way to deliver very dangerous propaganda.

Orpheus
05-22-2008, 12:04 AM
Unfortunately, oh god I can't say it......aarrgh!!!!!!! OK deep breath. When I was in high school, I actually read them all. Whew. I'm glad I got that off my chest. I guess confession really does put the mind at ease. However, that may be the wine talking. I knew I shouldn't have had communion too...

Looking back, I haven't the faintest idea why I read them other than of course that I was a self-righteous little bible thumper. To call the charactors "one dimensional" is giving them far too much credit. I've known stick drawings to have better form than the so-called "charactors" created by Tim Lahaye. But then again, I have to admit, at the time I did enjoy them. I must have. For what other reason would one read eleven books of such rubish? Thankfully, however, many books have been read since and have taken the place of any damaging memories or thoughts implanted by those books. Thank you Father Time.

mtpspur
05-23-2008, 05:17 AM
These were bought and read by me primarily to please my long suffering wife who thought they would be just wonderful to read and enjoy. Years later she is still stuck in Book 3. I finished the 12 but it was unsatisfying journey. Mind you she has never read a Shadow pulp novel or Dashiell Hammett story in her life and probably never will. A more lackluster suspense series with incredible world shattering disasters that mankind just recovers from with a shrug and a computer terminal. The Gospel of the Lord Christ is presented fairly but everything else is shown with the sophistication of an Acme anvil. I cannot recommend these to anyone looking for edification and in my entire life I have never pointed anyone Chrisitan or otherwise to Second Coming literature. I believe the Bible is clear about the timing being a mystery and time spent trying to get to know the Lord is time much better spent then idle star gazing.

bounty
05-24-2008, 05:33 PM
I've heard of them, and the film adaptations. They sound like a way to deliver very dangerous propaganda.

i suppose, according to the dictionary definition, they can be considered propaganda. but in so much as that word pretty much has a major negative connotation to it trystan, would you care to elaborate?

Trystan
05-24-2008, 06:00 PM
i suppose, according to the dictionary definition, they can be considered propaganda. but in so much as that word pretty much has a major negative connotation to it trystan, would you care to elaborate?

I would, but I'm not sure I could avoid going into a forbidden political discussion. I'll just say that what many rapture believers preach is pretty extreme.

bounty
05-25-2008, 05:40 PM
I would, but I'm not sure I could avoid going into a forbidden political discussion. I'll just say that what many rapture believers preach is pretty extreme.

are you saying we'd get into moderator trouble trying to have that conversation? i got dinged the first couple of days i was here when i shared some websites i thought people would be interested in.

curious that this thread should be moved---the left behind series are not religious texts...

ampoule
05-27-2008, 08:33 AM
I just couldn't get into them.

britneyleanne
02-04-2010, 08:59 PM
I have to say that i enjoy reading the Left behind series. The books are very interesting and keep me wanting more.

DanielBenoit
02-21-2010, 06:28 PM
I cannot stand how the Left Behind series has created some sort of dogma amongst evangelicals that the events described in a FICTIONAL novel are really going to happen, and that is how the world will end.

L.M. The Third
02-21-2010, 11:14 PM
I cannot stand how the Left Behind series has created some sort of dogma amongst evangelicals that the events described in a FICTIONAL novel are really going to happen, and that is how the world will end.

Amen to that!!