Hehe. That looks hilarious.
I've read Left Behind... most of the series. I read up through "The Indwelling" I think... I really liked the series, I was really into it for a while. I liked the thriller aspect to it, and I really liked the character Buck Williams and... Nicholae Carpathia (the Antichrist character). Yes, my second favorite character in the book was evil incarnate. Hey, I tend to like villains.
But, I lost my interest. There was a lot in the books that was poorly written. There was an excitement to the books... and... you can only really enjoy them if you put some of your theology aside and see them as fiction. (which is what they are, though I do think the authors cling to the theology in them). As for me... I'm *hoping* that the Rapture is pretrib, but I'm not really sure. The way I read the Bible, it could be pre-trib or mid-trib... Then, there are some other things that the authors kind of take liberties with, some things they take very literaly that *might* actually be more symbolic. Bottom line: I really don't think we are going to know exactly how the apocalypse will happen until it does. So, the books were something I enjoyed on a level of fiction. I think of it almost as how I was able to enjoy the anime Neon Genesis Evangelion - put personal theology aside and enjoy the fiction.
What I liked about the books: They have a lot of courage. The characters face a lot of bad things but keep on going. Also, the books taught me that I don't have to sugarcoat things and gloss over gore to be a Christian writer -
The books have some nice, scary gorey scenes, and that encouraged me as a writer that I didn't have to worry so much about how much I relish writing gore, myself - that I'm not being "evil" by writing detailed descriptions of death and injury in my own work.
However, in hindsight, there really is more to dislike with Left Behind than to like as far as the writing. First of all, Carpathia has spooky mental powers. That just seems... so cliched. His ability to brainwash large numbers of people and to project what he wants them to think they have seen with his mind just makes things too easy for him as a villain.
The main male characters... Rayford and Buck... and others... do seem to be too much the "sterotypical dashing male leads". Yeah, they emote, they have their problems, but... it just seems like they are too brave sometimes.
Left Behind's female characters SUCK. I understand male-centric stories, books written by men, for men... Tolkien's work is like that, but Tolkien could make up for his lack of numbers of female characters by making the female characters he did have in his books really wonderful. The Left Behind females...
They drive me nuts. Chole started out well enough, but by about the fifth book... it seems like having a kid totally changed her... and in a bad way. She basically turned into a damsel in distress wimp. Don't get me started on Hattie... UGH... The women in these books are, frankly... portrayed as ditzy and stupid. Chole had her smart moments at first, but... gah, the way she turned after about the 4th book.. I kept wanting to smack her upside the head... Hattie...from the start I wanted to smack her over the head repeatedly with a 2 x 4.
The books, overall, are very preachy in places. I understand the authors wanting to witness to people, but the way they write it... the books are primarily marketed to a Christian audience, so in that sense, they are "preaching to the choir" - and to most non-Christians... I think they would be turned off by th style of the preaching in the books. I know I would have had I read them before I got saved. I know my unsaved friends would likely be turned off by the preaching in the books just by the style in which the message is delievered. I won't knock it completely... the style works for some people... just, it's not something that I think would work for most people I know.
Reading the reviews on "Right Behind"... I might read it eventually, it seems hilarious... stuff about a fake Rapture and people throwing Precious Moments figurines and Thomas Kinkade paintings at each other! Hah! Knowing the Left Behind cannon... I'd get all the in jokes - and probably laugh myself sick.