A review by lmbartelt
Speak: How Your Story Can Change the World by Nish Weiseth

5.0

For those who doubt their life or story matters, this is a collection of stories to convince you otherwise.

Speak: How Your Story Can Change the World is a sometimes-gentle, sometimes not, kick in the pants for everyone, not just writers or storytellers or speakers, to tell our stories. And it is equal parts inspiring and convicting. (Disclaimer: I received a free copy of the book from Zondervan through the Booklook Bloggers program.)

The author, Nish Weiseth, is the founder of one of my favorite blog spaces, A Deeper Story, and though I haven't read a lot of her work, in particular, I love the mission of the site and the stories shared there. So, I'm pleased to discover I love Weiseth's writing as well.

And her message--that stories are more powerful than all the labeling and stereotyping and arguing policy that goes on--is timely. Over the two days that I read the book, I watched online arguments erupt and devolve into hatred among strangers over stories about a group of Muslims using a community room at a local rec center for a religious observation and about whether a 37-weeks-gestation body found in a garbage can should be called a "fetus" or a "baby." (I digress a little but only to show the relevance of Weiseth's work.)

It is situations like those--and so many more--that call for stories. That urge us to know people for who they are not what we think they are or should be. Weiseth calls us to ask questions, to listen, and to tell our stories in an exchange of humanity. She writes,

This book is a call to do just that-- to change the game by telling the stories of our lives with courage, honesty, and integrity. It's a call to acknowledge that each of our stories is a small piece of the greatest story--God's continual work and transforming power in our lives. (24)


One of my favorite features of the book is the reprinted blog posts at the end of each chapter illustrating how a specific story changes the way we see a particular issue or stereotype. I love that Weiseth shared her book space with other writers to add another layer to the work.

And though she has written a book and lives in Salt Lake City as part of a church plant, Weiseth is also a mother to two young children and immersed in the daily routines of life and family. She insists that our lives don't have to look like a Hollywood movie to matter.

Most people are living life by daily fulfilling the obligations set before them. ... And though you may be living what seems like an ordinary life, faithfully doing what God has placed in front of you to do means you are actually living an extraordinary story. (183)


Not a book just for those who communicate for a living but one for anyone striving to live a life that brings more of the Kingdom of God to earth. Our stories, our journeys, our trials and triumphs, matter. And, as Weiseth says, they can be the catalyst for change in someone else's life.