Why am I passionate about this?

From my first exposure to Elisabeth Elliot’s writing when I was a teenager, I was intrigued by her story: a missionary few had ever heard of who became an author with several books published by a Big Five publishing company. Over the years I both wrestled with and was encouraged by her work. I’ve now spent more than a decade conducting original research on Elliot’s life. I believe learning more about her and the influences that shaped her enriches our understanding of our past and, thus, of our present and offers us important tools for approaching the future. 


I wrote...

Elisabeth Elliot

By Lucy S. R. Austen,

Book cover of Elisabeth Elliot

What is my book about?

This is the first full-length single-volume biography of a remarkable woman. In 1956, Elliot was a young American living in…

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The books I picked & why

Book cover of Out of Africa

Lucy S. R. Austen Why did I love this book?

Like old color slides flicking in and out on a projector screen, grainy and yellowed but still evocative, Isak Dinesen’s poignant little book captures scenes from more than a decade of life as an outsider who loved the place she had made home and left it to return to the land of her birth against her will.

Elisabeth Elliot read Out of Africa just months after leaving behind her own expatriate life and work in Ecuador, where she had hoped to spend the rest of her life. In her journal, she called Dinesen’s book striking, beautifully written, and right

By Isak Dinesen,

Why should I read it?

7 authors picked Out of Africa as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

In 1914 Karen Blixen arrived in Kenya with her husband to run a coffee-farm. Drawn to the exquisite beauty of Africa, she spent her happiest years there until the plantation failed. A poignant farewell to her beloved farm, "Out of Africa" describes her friendships with the local people, her dedication for the landscape and wildlife, and great love for the adventurer Denys Finch-Hatton.


Book cover of Letters Between Katherine Mansfield and John Middleton Murray

Lucy S. R. Austen Why did I love this book?

Elisabeth Elliot considered Katherine Mansfield not only a literary role model, but a person with whom she had so much in common that reading Mansfield’s letters helped explain Elliot herself.

Thus, this moving collection of letters between Mansfield and her husband sheds important light on how Elliot saw herself, reflecting her challenges in her relationship with her parents, her deep connection with her brother Tom, her passionate love for her husband, her strong and deeply private emotions, her determination to face her own mortality, and her dedication to excellence in her work.  

By Cherry Hankin (editor),

Why should I read it?

1 author picked Letters Between Katherine Mansfield and John Middleton Murray as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

The correspondence of Katherine Mansfield and John Middleton Murry is a story in its own right, as compelling and poignant as any that Mansfield herself invented. Here, juxtaposed for the first time, are 300 letters exchanged between them during their extraordinary eleven-year relationship. The letters begin in January 1912, a month after their first meeting, when both were relative newcomers to the London literary scene; the last, a letter from Murry, was written four days before Katherine died, in Fontainebleau, in January 1923. The intervening years were ones of both feverish creativity and heartbreaking frustration; of intense closeness and unassailable…


Book cover of Anna Karenina

Lucy S. R. Austen Why did I love this book?

Leo Tolstoy’s follow-up project to the massive War and Peace explores the meaning of human existence and the interplay of socio-political events and individual free will through the medium of infatuation, marriage, and love.

It’s also a real page-turner. When she finished it, Elisabeth Elliot called it the greatest book she had ever read, writing that Anna Karenina’s character had held a mirror up to her soul and showed her what her own heart was capable of. 

By Leo Tolstoy,

Why should I read it?

16 authors picked Anna Karenina as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

In 1872 the mistress of a neighbouring landowner threw herself under a train at a station near Tolstoy's home. This gave Tolstoy the starting point he needed for composing what many believe to be the greatest novel ever written.

In writing Anna Karenina he moved away from the vast historical sweep of War and Peace to tell, with extraordinary understanding, the story of an aristocratic woman who brings ruin on herself. Anna's tragedy is interwoven with not only the courtship and marriage of Kitty and Levin but also the lives of many other characters. Rich in incident, powerful in characterization,…


Book cover of The Habit of Being: Letters of Flannery O'Connor

Lucy S. R. Austen Why did I love this book?

Flannery O’Connor is one of the great writers of the 20th Century. She was also a lifelong Catholic. Among the themes she explored in many of her letters to friends are the relationship between Christian faith and art and how a writer might share her vision of reality with an audience that didn’t necessarily want to see it.

Like O’Connor, Elisabeth Elliot wrote fiction to explore the action of grace in the darkness and chaos of human life, and like O’Connor, Elliot received harsh criticism of her work from many of her coreligionists. Elliot’s marginal notes in her own copy of O’Connor’s collected letters show how much O’Connor’s thoughts and experiences mirrored her own. 

By Flannery O'Connor, Sally Fitzgerald (editor),

Why should I read it?

1 author picked The Habit of Being as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

Winner of the National Book Critics Circle Special Award

"I have come to think that the true likeness of Flannery O'Connor will be painted by herself, a self-portrait in words, to be found in her letters . . . There she stands, a phoenix risen from her own words: calm, slow, funny, courteous, both modest and very sure of herself, intense, sharply penetrating, devout but never pietistic, downright, occasionally fierce, and honest in a way that restores honor to the word."―Sally Fitzgerald, from the Introduction


Book cover of A Chance to Die: The Life and Legacy of Amy Carmichael

Lucy S. R. Austen Why did I love this book?

Elisabeth Elliot’s approach to faith and to missiology was heavily influenced by 19th-century Irish missionary Amy Wilson Carmichael. Carmichael moved to India in her twenties and spent the rest of her life there, working to rescue children from exploitation and abuse. She also wrote poetry, biography, meditations on missiology, and books about her experiences.

Elliot was introduced to Carmichael’s writing by the headmistress of her high school, and over the next several years, she devoured everything of Carmichael’s that she could get her hands on, even writing to Carmichael to thank her for her work. Carmichael died at age 83, when Elliot was 25. More than three decades later, Elliot traveled to India to research and write this book, the story of the woman she called her spiritual mother. 

By Elisabeth Elliot,

Why should I read it?

1 author picked A Chance to Die as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

A Chance to Die is a vibrant portrayal of Amy Carmichael, an Irish missionary and writer who spent fifty-three years in south India without furlough. There she became known as "Amma," or "mother," as she founded the Dohnavur Fellowship, a refuge for underprivileged children.

Amy's life of obedience and courage stands as a model for all who claim the name of Christ. She was a woman with desires and dreams, faults and fears, who gave her life unconditionally to serve her Master.

Bringing Amma to life through inspiring photos and compelling biographical narrative, Elisabeth Elliot urges readers to examine the…


Explore my book 😀

Elisabeth Elliot

By Lucy S. R. Austen,

Book cover of Elisabeth Elliot

What is my book about?

This is the first full-length single-volume biography of a remarkable woman. In 1956, Elliot was a young American living in Ecuador as a missionary when her husband and four friends were killed by people they had hoped to tell about Jesus. Two years later, Elliot was living with those people and working to translate the Bible into their language. 

Elliot’s books about these experiences made her an internationally known Christian thinker. But she lived for thirty years before becoming a household name and another five decades after her missionary life came to an end. This biography explores the entirety of Elliot’s eventful life, the environment that shaped her, and the way she influenced Christianity as we know it.

Book cover of Out of Africa
Book cover of Letters Between Katherine Mansfield and John Middleton Murray
Book cover of Anna Karenina

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Rip Current

By Sharon Ward,

Book cover of Rip Current

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Why am I passionate about this?

Even as a kid, I was intrigued by the underwater world, so as an adult, I learned to scuba dive. I took to it like a fish to water, and my husband and I spent the next several years traveling to tropical islands to experience the local dive conditions whenever possible. I loved learning how every island had a different culture and a different undersea environment. Since I love tropical islands, scuba diving, mysteries, and adventure stories, these books really hit my sweet spot.

Sharon's book list on mysteries set on a tropical island

What is my book about?

Unsettled weather has caused life-threatening rip currents to sprout up seemingly at random in the usually tranquil sea around Grand Cayman. Despite posted warnings to stay out of the surf, several women lose their life when caught in the turbulent waters. Fin attempts some dangerous rescues, and nearly loses her own life in the process.

Meanwhile, Fin and the team at RIO are struggling to find more sources of funding for the Institute’s important research, and danger arises from an unexpected source while Fin and hot movie star Rafe Cummings are filming an upcoming documentary. When a young internet influencer…

Rip Current

By Sharon Ward,

What is this book about?

Unsettled weather has caused life-threatening rip currents to sprout up seemingly at random in the usually tranquil sea around Grand Cayman. Despite posted warnings to stay out of the surf, several women lose their life when caught in the turbulent waters. Fin attempts some dangerous rescues, and nearly loses her own life in the process.
Meanwhile, Fin and the team at RIO are struggling to find more sources of funding for the Institute’s important research, and danger arises from an unexpected source while Fin and hot movie star Rafe Cummings are filming an upcoming documentary.
Soon after a young internet…


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Interested in Africa, Russia, and missionary?

Africa 265 books
Russia 390 books
Missionary 35 books