I have read about 60 books this year.
Some of the books I read are Leadership and Business related.
A few are humorous or antedotal.
However, the majority are theological.
Here is a sample list of some authors I have read this past year that are by those I believe are not Reformed.
Gregory Allison (I am not certain of his perspective on Reformed Theology)
Lee Strobel
Roger Olson
John Marshall (Greek scholar)
William Hull
Danny Akin
C.S. Lewis
Ken Blanchard
Two books were directly in opposition to Reformed Theology.
Others, were not but were written by those who did not have a reformed perspective.
Danny Akin is one I may draw an exception to because he is not reformed, but the book I read by him has a section that most non-Calvinists hate because of his exposition.
However, he is not reformed.
I have read Robert Reymond and Bruce Ware's defense of their position on Election in a compilation book.
I should at least get partial credit for that. :)
I am not sure and his Historic Theology was great, but he tries to keep a neutral view of this during the book.
He is not anti-reformed, but I am not certain if he is reformed or not.
His "Historic Theology" is great.
The scholarship is superb, though it is a basic overview.
I think most "real theologians" say little more than what is expressed here BB land.
However, they often do say it with a much more eloquent language couched in terms only the most theological studious might be accustomed to.
Brotherly love isn't about sickening sweetness. There is no noncalvinists who calls himself a Christian that I would begrudge acts of charity in his time of need (requests via the internet excepted). In the arena of competing gospels, however, there is no virtue in civility.