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The Dude Abides: The Gospel According to the Coen Brothers [Bargain Price] [Paperback]

Cathleen Falsani
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (103 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 4, 2009
Join award-winning author and columnist Cathleen Falsani as she explores the serious existential questions raised in the movies of the wildly popular and always irreverent Coen brothers. Coen fans and film lovers will appreciate Falsani's unique blend of contemporary insight and spiritual discernment that is both entertaining and illuminating.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

It must be true that God can be found even in the quirkiest of places. Chicago Sun-Times religion journalist Falsani mined the 14 films (since 1984) of Joel and Ethan Coen to find God and to articulate their spiritual and religious questions and challenges. The Coen brothers have a reputation for injecting a lot of dark humor into their movies, but as the author illustrates, the comedy is an avenue to deeper issues. Death, betrayal, greed, the seeming absence of God and the dire consequences of one's choices are the complex themes expertly handled by the filmmakers. Falsani does not posit that these films are overtly religious, but she does successfully convey their spiritual insights about the human condition. Each chapter provides a movie plot summary and concludes with an insightful segment dubbed The Moral of the Story. Falsani is an expert at pop culture analysis and her love for the celluloid arts shines forth brightly—her interpretations are nuanced and sophisticated without being pretentious. Film lovers, whether religious or not, will be pleased. (Oct.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

It must be true that God can be found even in the quirkiest of places. Chicago Sun-Times religion journalist Falsani mined the 14 films (since 1984) of Joel and Ethan Coen to find God and to articulate their spiritual and religious questions and challenges. The Coen brothers have a reputation for injecting a lot of dark humor into their movies, but as the author illustrates, the comedy is an avenue to deeper issues. Death, betrayal, greed, the seeming absence of God and the dire consequences of one's choices are the complex themes expertly handled by the filmmakers. Falsani does not posit that these films are overtly religious, but she does successfully convey their spiritual insights about the human condition. Each chapter provides a movie plot summary and concludes with an insightful segment dubbed 'The Moral of the Story.' Falsani is an expert at pop culture analysis and her love for the celluloid arts shines forth brightly---her interpretations are nuanced and sophisticated without being pretentious. Film lovers, whether religious or not, will be pleased. (Oct.) -- Publisher's Weekly <br><br> --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Zondervan; 1 edition (September 4, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0310292468
  • ASIN: B0042P5J3W
  • Product Dimensions: 7.9 x 5.4 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (103 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,011,788 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Cathleen Falsani is an award-winning religion journalist, featured writer for Sojourners in Washington, D.C., and author of four critically acclaimed nonfiction books: The God Factor: Inside the Spiritual Lives of Public People (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2006), Sin Boldly: A Field Guide for Grace (Zondervan, 2008), and The Dude Abides: The Gospel According to the Coen Brothers (Zondervan 2009), and BELIEBER: Fame, Faith & the Heart of Justin Bieber (Worthy 2011).

Cathleen was the religion writer and columnist for the Chicago Sun-Times from 2000 to January 2010. As a writer for Sun-Times and other publications, Cathleen has covered her diverse "God beat" from locations as far afield as Vatican City, Vedic City, Ireland, Germany,the Caribbean, the West Wing, the Playboy Mansion and the dugout at Wrigley Field.

She was honored as the 2005 James O. Supple Religion Writer of the Year by the
Religion Newswriters Association, and twice has been a finalist for the Templeton Religion Reporter of the Year award. She goes by the nickname "God Girl," a moniker given to her by her friend and fellow writer Bill Zehme back in 2002. It started as a greeting Bill yelled to across a crowded bar the day she came off a 10-day stint on the road with Bono of U2, chronicling his humanitarian efforts to raise awareness in U.S.religious communities about the AIDS emergency in sub-Saharan Africa. It was funny -- an affectionate joke -- but it stuck. Hence, www.godgrrl.com.

Cathleen began writing her popular column on spirituality and popular culture for the Sun-Times in 2001, and also writes as a columnist for Religion News Service, Sojourners Magazine and The Huffington Post. Her work has
appeared in many media outlets including Rolling Stone, Harvard Divinity School Bulletin, Christianity Today and Christian Century magazines, as well as the Chicago Tribune, the Washington Post, the Toronto Star and other publications in North America and Europe. She has appeared as a commentator on CNN, Oprah Winfrey's "Soul Series," NPR, FoxNewsChannel, Moody Radio, The Tavis Smiley Show, PBS's "Religion and Ethics Newsweekly", and a host of other radio and television venues.

Since 2004, she has maintained the religion-and-popular-culture blog "The Dude
Abides," (www.godgrrl.com and/or www.cathleenfalsani.com)

Cathleen is perhaps best known for the April 2004 interview she did with U.S. President Barack Obama (then an Illinois State senator running for U.S. Senate) about his faith -- the lengthiest and most exhaustive Obama has granted to date about his personal spiritual and religious beliefs. A profile of the President, based on that interview, appeared in her 2006 book, The God Factor, alongside profiles of other notables including Bono of U2, Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel, Hugh Hefner, Anne Rice, Dusty Baker, Hakim Olajuwon, Tom Robbins, John Patrick Shanley, Melissa Etheridge, Billy Corgan, Harold Ramis, Studs Terkel, Bush administration speech writer Michael Gerson, Annie Lennox, and Russell Simmons.

A Connecticut native and granddaughter of Italian and Irish immigrants, Cathleen is a graduate of Wheaton College, the alma mater of the Rev. Billy Graham, former U.S. Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert and horror film director Wes Craven. (Though she often finds more common ground with Craven and Graham than Hastert.)

She holds a master's degree in journalism from Northwestern University as well
as a master's degree in theological studies from Garrett-Evangelical Theological
Seminary. She is also a 2009 Divinity School Media Fellow at Duke University,
a Gralla Fellow in Jewish Studies at Brandeis University, and was the 1996
Stoody-West Fellow in Religious Journalism.

She is a sought-after public speaker having presented lectures and talks at
colleges, universities, civic organizations, houses of worship and large faith-based conferences nationwide, including the National Pastors Convention, the Buechner Institute, the Catalyst Conference, the Los Angeles Book Festival, the Festival of Faith and Music, and the Festival of Faith and Writing,
numerous houses of worship and colleges including Westmont College, Andrew University, Southern Baptist University, Sacramento State University, Dominican University, and St. James Episcopal Cathedral in Chicago.

Cathleen is also an active social media maven, with more than 7,000 followers
on Twitter and 1,500+ members of her Facebook Fan Page. She blogs regularly
on her own site and for God's Politics (Sojo.net), Huffington Post, and Faith &
Leadership (Duke Divinity School), and elsewhere. She is also working on
the manuscript for a memoir about her real-life, life-changing experiences with
social networks tentatively titled, The Thread: Faith, Friendship and Facebook.

Chicago Magazine media critic Steve Rhodes has said Cathleen writes one of the city's "most compelling columns . . . despite her focus on a subject that often
is handled with a deadly dullness."

Of her longtime column, Cathleen says she likes to try to "find God in the places
some people say God isn't supposed to be," and that she defines both spirituality
and popular culture quite broadly.

In its review of her debut book, The God Factor, the Chicago Tribune said:

"Cathleen Falsani is above all else, an exemplary conversationalist...She is
enthusiastic, well-read, articulate and open-minded. [In The God Factor,] she
sweeps us right along... She has done what only great interviewers have the
wisdom and patience to do. She has set the stage and dimmed the lights just
so. She has invited us in to the conversation and left us with wonder, confusion,
elation and grace."

On a more personal note...

After 20 years in Chicago, Cathleen relocated in the summer of 2009 to Laguna
Beach, California, with her husband, fellow author and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author Maurice Possley. Most recently, Cathleen became a mother (officially, at least) for the first time. The High Court of Malawi approved the adoption of the Falsani-Possley's son, Vasco, in 2010.

The story of how the couple met the boy who would become their son is told, in part, in the chapter "Chisomo" in her 2008 memoir, Sin Boldly: A Field Guide
for Grace. A feature-length documentary film chronicling Vasco and his family's journey currently is in production. Filmmakers Keiko and Rob Feldman of Juris
Productions and Cinependent Films (cinependentfilms.com) plan to release "Vasco's Heart" in 2012.

Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
99 of 117 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars You've got to be kidding me! October 20, 2009
Format:Paperback|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
I LOVE the Coen Brothers. They are the unrivaled champions of American film making. This book does absolutely ZERO as far as giving insight into what makes them tick. We're to believe that this book delves into a deeper meaning than what's on screen by naming it "The Gospel...", but all this book does is give a general overview of the plot to their movies. Sorry, but I can go to imdb for that.
This book dedicates 95% of its pages to generalized descriptions of their movies. That's it. Hardly any analysis whatsoever. Each movie has its own chapter dedicated to it, and the author spends 7-10 pages describing the entire plot with an occasional quote. At the end the author adds a brief paragraph or two telling us what she feels is the "moral" of the film. If you were to add all of her own personal thoughts and insights into the Coen Brothers' film works, you would come away with maybe five pages of fluff. As I started reading the book, I actually said out loud, "you've got to be kidding me with this!". Why would anyone interested in the Coen Brothers read a page synopsis when they can just go watch the movie? And why would anyone who has seen their films bother with this book? They wouldn't. And shouldn't. Just go see the movie if you haven't already. To add insult to injury, she prefaces the book by talking down to the reader by saying, "opinions are important, and they are subjective, colored, and shaped by life experiences". Gee, thanks Einstein. Like I needed someone to tell me that. It's even more insulting to realize that she has no opinions of her own in the book. Where are these colored opinions shaped by life experiences, oh enlightened author?
I also feel this book is a bit deceptive in its advertising. "The Big Lebowski" is, without a doubt, the most popular of all the Coen Brothers' films, and the author chooses to put the dude on the cover and name the book "The Dude Abides" to generate interest. However, she doesn't give any thoughts as to why she gives the book this title, and doesn't offer any extended analysis of "The Big Lebowski". Not that I care that "Lebowski" isn't covered more, but it's clear that she's phishing for customers knowing that Achievers everywhere will be interested in its dudetastic cover. I've already written another review on Amazon about my dislike of "The Big Lebowski" being used to peddle subpar products, and this book does exactly that.
She should have named this book "Coen Brothers' Movie Transcripts In Massively Edited Form". It would have been far more accurate.
Maybe I'm just jealous. If I knew I could get published by writing 10 page summaries of films on the level of an 8th grade writing project I would have done this years ago!
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32 of 39 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
In The Dude Abides--The Gospel According to the Coen Brothers, award-winning religious columnist Cathleen Falsani offers a unique and engaging look at the "spiritual messages" she finds permeating the Coen Brothers' movies.

Now, "spiritual message." Odds are, that's not what most moviegoers expect to find in the darkly comic and brutally violent cinematic vision of Joel and Ethan Coen. Neither is the word "gospel," for that matter. While wisely resisting the temptation to cram their films into what she calls a "God-shaped box," Falsani succeeds in tracing the theological threads she sees holding the "Coeniverse" together.

She writes, "While marked by murder, mayhem, deception, and all manner of chaos, there is an order--a moral order--to the world depicted in Joel and Ethan Coen's films. That's the good news. The bad news is that when the moral order is upset, the consequences can be dire, brutal, and swift."

Published by Zondervan, a Christian book publisher whose mission, according to its website, is to produce "resources that glorify Jesus Christ and promote biblical principles," The Dude Abides will probably challenge (in a good way) the expectations of Zondervan's evangelical readers as well as the more secular-minded among Coen Brother fans.

As a self-described "sometimes churchgoing Catholic-turned-Baptist-turned-freelance Episcopalian" who has interviewed the likes of Bono from U2 and some guy who ran for president named Barack Obama, Falsani is certainly up to the challenge of navigating her text between the two groups. Her down-to-earth writing style glides easily from summarizing convoluted Coen Brother movie plots to drawing from Zen Buddhism, Jewish mysticism, and her own open-hearted Christian faith to interpret them.

The book covers each of the Coen Brothers's movies, from their 1986 debut Blood Simple to A Serious Man (due out this fall), with each chapter focusing on a different film. Falsani uses a "forest and the trees" approach to organizing the chapters, providing a short overview of the movie first, followed by a more in-depth theological discussion of it before concluding with a brief "Moral of the Story." This structure not only provides a great introduction to each movie for those who are unfamiliar with the films, but also appeals to a die-hard Coen Brothers fan like me.

Falsani's movie analyses should also intrigue the uninitiated and fans alike. She sees the Coen oeuvre as consisting broadly of cautionary tales (such as Blood Simple), "Judeo-Christian morality plays" (like Fargo), holy fools (Hi McDunnough in Raising Arizona), foolish hubris (Barton Fink), and unflinching explorations of the nature of evil, Job-like suffering, and the distance or seeming absence of God (No Country for Old Men, A Simple Man).

Her interpretations also provide nuanced ways of understanding the quirky characters populating Coen Brother films. For example, she places The Dude (the burnout main character of The Big Lebowski) within kabbalistic lore as a lamed-vavnik, "a righteous soul with whom the eventual healing of the world abides". Other theological takes may seem a little strained, though. The pregnant sheriff in Fargo, Marge Gunderson, is certainly an endearingly good-hearted character, but is she really a redeeming Christ figure as Falsani posits?

There are other interpretative quibbles I have and I do think Falsani relies too heavily on recapping plot than interpreting it, but, as The Dude would say, that's just, like, my opinion and her opinion, man. Besides, that may just be the point. Falsani doesn't intend for her book to be a definitive study of all things Coen. With its section of group study questions at the end, the book's intention may be to help elicit conversations (albeit from a more or less Christian frame of reference) about these complex movies (sample: "After exploring the Coens' fourteen films, what do you think the two brothers make of God?").

For Falsani, the Coen Brothers' cinematic gospel is more concerned with posing life's deepest questions than it is with providing us with ultimate answers to them. In The Dude Abides, she makes a good-faith effort to offer her responses to the existential questions the unorthodox filmmakers raise and invites her readers to do the same.

Maybe by sharing our responses with one another in a similar spirit, regardless of our religious faith or lack thereof, we'll find a way to abide together a little better. And I don't know about you, but as the Stranger says at the end of The Big Lebowski, I take comfort in that.
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Shallow, Repetitive and Shallow (and Repetitive) December 30, 2009
Format:Paperback
Essentially a collection of plot summaries and questionable assumptions that are never really tied to the films in a believable fashion. While there's nothing to say that the Falsani's interpretations are wrong, there's also nothing to say they are right, as what's presented are a bunch of "maybe's" and "you might think's" that seem to reflect the author's personal lens more than any meaning contained within the films themselves. Seems like a lazy attempt to cash in on the Coen brother's popularity, without offering any real insight. Of course all this might be forgiven if the book had a spark of personality or humor, which it does not. Blew through it in a few hours, and want them back, though it would be interesting to see the topic covered in a more comprehensive fashion by another author. As it stands, Coen fans and neophytes alike will be bored.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars Wonderfully fun
Falsani is an insightful commentator on contemporary culture- and any book that can draw spiritual insights out of one of the greatest movies ever deserves a careful read. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Bob Hyatt
4.0 out of 5 stars A Guide to the Coeniverse
For any fan of the Coen Brothers or their films, Cathleen Falsani has written the definitive guide to the Coeniverse, which is a place filled with a surprising amount of faith. Read more
Published 13 months ago by Tim Drake
3.0 out of 5 stars Bought for a gift that fell flat.
My husband is a huge Big Lebowski fan. We aren't doing trivia contests about it or going to conventions, but he sure does enjoy the Coen Brothers' movies. Read more
Published 14 months ago by M. Hertzler
5.0 out of 5 stars Great.
I haven't read the book yet but I imagine it's good. The book was in great quality for being used. I am very happy to add it to my collection.
Published 17 months ago by chris o
1.0 out of 5 stars Reads like a first draft in bad need of editing
I almost gave up after the first page because of the poor writing. It reads like a first draft. I'm a big fan of the movies made by the Coens and was hoping for some good analysis. Read more
Published 19 months ago by James Ethridge
1.0 out of 5 stars Don't Waste Your Time
I was so excited to read this book. I'm actually working on an essay regarding the same topic, religious themes in the work of the Coen Bros. Read more
Published 22 months ago by Jonathan Busch
2.0 out of 5 stars Look Elsewhere
This book is just not all that exciting -- quickly thrown together to try and capitalize on fans of pop-philosophy and _The Big Lebowski_. Read more
Published on March 17, 2011 by Daniel R. Sanderman
3.0 out of 5 stars I gave up on this book
This book wasn't for me. The author tries not to be preachy, but it just doesn't work. As an atheist/agnostic, I'm not sure what I was expecting, but I found it to be very... Read more
Published on February 24, 2011 by Eric S. Olstad
4.0 out of 5 stars Great for fans of the Coens
Books like this seem to be very prevalent these days, taking people's favorite films or television series and analyzing them further. Read more
Published on January 26, 2011 by Adam Craig
1.0 out of 5 stars Don't bother
I had high hopes for this book, which was a gift from my wife. However, sadly this text comes across as if it were a series of book reports written by a high school freshman. Read more
Published on December 30, 2010 by Paul
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