Wowee! My old friends published a mention of my book, along with a mini-interview, in this week’s Happytown column!
Here’s the relevant portion:
Not a day goes by in which someone doesn’t ask, “Hey, Happytown™, whatever happened to that Ask Ian the I.T. Guy? He sure had a nice ponytail.” In an effort to satiate Orlando’s thirst for information on our former I.T. guru and columnist, Ian Monroe, we tracked down the man himself and found him with a newly minted degree from the Medill School of Journalism in Chicago and, more exciting still, a new book! It’s called The ____ of _____ by Means of Natural _____, which probably needs a tiny bit of explanation.
See, Monroe, ever the intellectual prankster, “cleaned up” Charles Darwin’s masterwork, The Origin of the Species by Means of Natural Selection, for evangelical Christians by redacting every word in Darwin’s book not also found in the Bible. Now even Baptists can read about evolution without risking their immortal soul! Thanks Ian!
Here’s our tiny little interview with Monroe. For more information on the book check his website at www.ianmonroe.com.
Happytown™: Aren’t you making fun of Jesus and thus risking eternal damnation?
Monroe: On the contrary, Jesus is never mentioned in the Origin of Species. If he were, I assure you, he would retain his rightful place as lord of lords within my King James Version as well.
Happytown™: Is it possible to still glean important concepts from Darwin’s work after running it through your Jesus sieve?
Monroe: Not really, no. It’s pretty unreadable. However, I did learn some interesting things about the Bible while I was working on it. For instance, did you know that unicorns are mentioned in the Bible twice? That makes them more real than the entire continent of South America, which didn’t even appear once.
Happytown™: Are you planning to do the same for other great works of science?
Monroe: Darwin was particularly well-suited to analysis through a biblically correct lens; I imagine that most modern science would yield even more redactions. However, I invite readers to “correct” their own texts with the interactive Bible masher on my website, ianmonroe.com/bibleizer/.
So, the Bibleizer doesn’t work at the moment … terribly sorry about that. I’ll have it working tonight, though, so stay tuned. (I’ll update this post when it works.)