Rethinking Hell: Readings in Evangelical Conditionalism edited by Christopher M. Date, Gregory G. Stump & Joshua W. Anderson (Cascade Books / Wipf & Stock, 2014)
Was just published this week. The book's website says the Kindle version will be available in 30 to 60 days. Can Logos beat or match that?
Note this post as well.
Rosie? Do you have the book, Rethinking Hell:?
The problem with publishing a Logos edition is that some of the copyright holders of the authors whose contributions we're reproducing gave us permission only to publish a Kindle e-book, not a Logos edition. To publish in Logos--which I'd really like to do!--we'll have to renegotiate with the copyright holders, and probably pay them more.
Rethinking Hell: Readings in Evangelical Conditionalism edited by Christopher M. Date, Gregory G. Stump & Joshua W. Anderson (Cascade Books / Wipf & Stock, 2014) Was just published this week. The book's website says the Kindle version will be available in 30 to 60 days. Can Logos beat or match that?
For yet another view, you might want to read F. W. Farrar's Eternal Hope which is on prepub in the Late Victorian Eschatology collection.
https://www.logos.com/product/33101/late-victorian-eschatology
No I don't. I rarely buy print books anymore. I would prefer to buy it in Logos than Kindle if it's ever going to be possible, but from what Chris says below perhaps that's not very likely.
I do own the DVD of the film "Hell and Mr. Fudge" which is also advertised on that page I linked to. It's pretty good, though not stellar.
Bummer. Thanks for chiming in on this thread anyway. I hope it works out for you someday.
Thanks, Rosie! Logos is going to come and present at our upcoming conference: http://www.rethinkinghellconference.com/2014/. I'll see if Logos would be willing to help persuade our copyright holders to let us publish a Logos edition
I got hooked on Stackhouse just a few weeks back. Interesting guy.
Stackhouse is great. He's a professor at Regent College, where I got my masters and and where I still hang around for public lectures and to audit great courses now and then, and to have coffee with my friends on the faculty and staff. I never had a course with him, but I've gotten to know him personally over the years and have heard him lecture a few times. Glad to see he's participating in that conference. I'm sure he will have intriguing things to say. Here are some clips of him speaking on topics of interest regarding the church and culture, which is his main area of expertise. [EDIT: Oh, and I just found this podcast of Chris interviewing him on his views on hell. Hope I'm not giving too much of a spoiler for his talk at the conference! From 13:59 to 14:55, he gives a very good description of the theological atmosphere at Regent, very enticing if I do say so myself. [:)] ]
I wish Logos would get all his books! They have only a few of them so far, but he's very prolific. I'll make a separate post requesting them all.