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Athol Dickson

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Athol Dickson

Goodreads Author


Born
in The United States
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Influences

Member Since
August 2012

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Athol Dickson's parents were living on the road when he was born. His first bed was a drawer lined with towels in a travel trailer. He has loved road trips ever since. Boating is a passion, too. Athol owns three boats, and once lived aboard a yacht full-time while cruising the Gulf of Mexico and the USA's Atlantic coast. But Athol's nine novels are proof he can sit still and write if he's with his wife of nearly 30 years, The Lovely Sue. They live in Southern California, where Athol is at work on novel number ten, the second in a series call "The Malcolm Cutter Memoirs" about a multi-millionaire chauffeur who would rather solve mysteries for his clients than hang out on his yacht. What bliss: a novel that combines boats and road trips! ...more

The Top Ten Murder Mystery Rules

SOME RULES ARE MADE TO BE BROKEN. Others are broken at our peril. And still others are made to create peril, delicious, lovely peril for the victim in a good old fashioned murder mystery. With that goal in mind, for ...
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Published on March 10, 2013 10:12
Average rating: 3.88 · 2,775 ratings · 481 reviews · 14 distinct worksSimilar authors
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Athol’s Recent Updates

Quotes by Athol Dickson  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“Come on people! Somebody disagree with me! How can we learn anything if no one will disagree?" Rabbi Stern”
Athol Dickson, The Gospel according to Moses: What My Jewish Friends Taught Me about Jesus

“Rashi was trained to wrestle with God like Jacob at Bethel, to bargain with him like Moses at Mt. Sinai. Rashi's people have an ancient tradition of questioning God "face-toface, as a man speaks with his friend." [Exodus 33:11] Conversely, I abandoned my faith because it seemed I had no right to question the difficulties, much less expect answers. I had been taught to accept ready-made dogma rather than to personally take my doubts to God.

Make no mistake; I do not blame the church for my lost time. I might well have fallen away no matter what. But it is just possible that several years of painful isolation from the Lord might have been avoided had I learned at an early age this simple truth that most Reform Jews know:

God loves an honest question.”
Athol Dickson, The Gospel according to Moses: What My Jewish Friends Taught Me about Jesus

“Rabbi Zimmerman is away this Shabbat morning, so Rabbi David Stern leads Chever Torah in his place. Rabbi Stern is young, handsome, and possessed of a lightning quick wit. He wears his hair in the style made famous by J.F.K. His energy is contagious. The morning's discussion accelerates as he asks a question worthy of Rashi, then paces back and forth in front of the hall grinning with delight as we answer and respond with questions of our own. But a few minutes later the rhythm flags inexplicably and we sit silently, staring at our Torahs. Rabbi Stern fires off another question. No one answers. He offers a provocative observation - something controversial to stir the pot. Still, we are silent. Finally, in frustration, he exclaims, "Come on people! Somebody disagree with me! How can we learn anything if no one will disagree?"

We laugh. But it occurs to me that Rabbi Stern has offered the most profound observation of the day, and it is a very Jewish idea.

Unfortunately, most theological conversations I have had in church have been the self-reinforcing kind: a group of people sitting around telling each other what everyone already believes. If some brave soul interjects a radical new idea or questions one of the group's firmly held views, it is usually an unpleasant experience. We shift in our seats uncomfortably until someone rises to the bait. The discussion remains civil, but it seems that any challenge to the groups' theology must be corrected, so all comments are solidly aimed at that one goal: arriving at a preconceived answer.

Chever Torah has no such agenda. Or perhaps I should say all discussions have the same agenda: to explore the possibilities - all the possibilities.”
Athol Dickson, The Gospel according to Moses: What My Jewish Friends Taught Me about Jesus

Topics Mentioning This Author

“Because never in my entire childhood did I feel like a child. I felt like a person all along―the same person that I am today.”
Orson Scott Card, Ender’s Game

“Sometimes lies were more dependable than the truth.”
Orson Scott Card, Ender's Game

“Human beings are free except when humanity needs them. Maybe humanity needs you. To do something. Maybe humanity needs me—to find out what you're good for. We might both do despicable things, Ender, but if humankind survives, then we were good tools.”
Orson Scott Card, Ender’s Game

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For the readers who are looking for the casual read. Lot's of action, good characters, and simple plot. This group isn't for you if you like book plot ...more
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Comments (showing 1-4)    post a comment »
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message 4: by Rai

Rai Very glad to have you as a friend, Athol!

-Rai


Deborah Ledford Thank you for adding me to your list of friends here on Goodreads, Athol. Looking forward to following your reads and reviews--especially the suspense thrillers.

Deborah J. Ledford
Crescendo
Snare


message 2: by Phil

Phil Reed It's Nice of you to notice me and my book It's my first,and I always got room for friendship.
Phil Reed


message 1: by Jill

Jill It's great to meet another mystery writer, Athol, and thank you for your friendship here on Goodreads.


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