In his new book, "Why Bad Things Happen to Good Parrots," Arik Bjorn is determined to dig his way to the center of the theological mountain-even if all he has is a trusty garden trowel: "I have always wanted to aim my keyboard directly at the Creator and ask several pointed questions not about how to live, but about why we are alive." In the title essay, "Why Bad Things Happen to Good Parrots," Bjorn presents a heartfelt reflection 20 years in the making on Theodicy, or the Problem of Evil, "under the collective shadow of Aslan, Frodo and Freddy Kreuger." In "Magic Chickens, Lemon Seeds & a...
In his new book, "Why Bad Things Happen to Good Parrots," Arik Bjorn is determined to dig his way to the center of the theological mountain-even if al...