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It’s Not All About You offers essays by young adults from many different backgrounds who are leading the charge in order to make the world a better place. Read, learn, and be inspired to create change.
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| Description | Details | Comments |
Today’s 20- and 30-somethings aren’t just watching a world around them crying
out in great need—they’re mobilizing to answer that cry. With lattes in hand,
laptops at the ready, updating their Facebook status, and announcing to the
Twitterverse “this is important,” they are looking into the face of
soaring injustice,
raising awareness, seeking opportunity, and being hope in a struggling world.
It’s Not All About You is written by a diverse team of writers: Some grew
up in church, others have never set foot in a sanctuary. Some have a decade
of international professional experience while others are just starting their
undergrad degree. They have voluntarily served in the military, in a
food co-op, in
an inner city clinic.
Motivated by deep faith or just simple concern, and living and breathing against
the stereotypes of their generation, the young adults who are part of this book—
this conversation—are well aware that it’s not all about them. It’s about all of
us, and what we do—already do, can do, should do, must do—to make it a better
world. Be inspired to create change.
Great for a solo read or with a small reading group, with discussion
questions at
the end of each essay.
Chapters and Contributors:
Part 1: Send/Receive
Call (Marc Istook)
Reflections from East Africa (Shelvis & Nancy Smith-Mather)
A War on Two Fronts (Joshua Dobbs)
Legacy, Responsibility, and Faith (Kendra Dunbar)
Part 2: Let Me Get Back to You
Difference Makes a Difference (Erika Roman Saint-Pierre)
Camp Bani (Joe Geoghegan and Chloe Grammer)
Current City: ____________ (Michael Wagner)
And Let’s Be Honest... (Joshua E. Perry)
The Day We Didn’t Go to Church (Amy Jonason)
Part 3: Static Disconnect
Frontera (Dan Millis)
Coffee Can Change (Jennifer Fischer)
Stealing Back the Future (Kristen Walling)
The Slow Examples of Lifetimes (Katherine Bell and Jill Delaney)
Conclusion (or, “Now What?”) (Courtney Richards)
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