Mackenzie Allen Philips’ youngest daughter, Missy, has been abducted during a family vacation and evidence that she may have been brutally murdered is found in an abandoned shack deep in the Oregon Wilderness. Four years later in the midst of his Great Sadness, Mack receives a suspicious note, apparently from God, inviting him back to that shack for a weekend.
Against his better judgment he arrives at the shack on a wintry afternoon and walks back into his darkest nightmare. What he finds there will change Mack’s world forever.
(From the publisher’s synopsis)
The internet is chock full of both positive and negative reviews of William P. Yong’s The Shack. I don’t want to add to the noise, but I want to share some of my thoughts and concerns after having read the book just a couple of weeks ago.
My overall opinion of the book is that it was alright. It is not one of the most literarily beautiful works that I have ever read, and I don’t know that I would go so far as to compare it to The Pilgrim’s Progress, but it was not all that bad either. What makes or breaks the book is it’s honest dealing with the issue of where God is when tragedy strikes. Humankind has struggled with the problem of evil for centuries, and The Shack amounts to another attempt to reconcile God’s sovereignty, human responsibility, and human tragedy. Read more »