Frank Freeman reviews “The Mountains of Parnassus” by Czeslaw Milosz.
Books
A Russian-American family encounters a hostile homeland
Teresa Donnellan reviews “The Patriots” by Sana Krasikov.
100 years after World War I, is it possible to hope in human progress?
John Matteson reviews two books about World War I: “The World Remade: America in World War I” and “The Vanquished: Why the First World War Failed to End.”
Examining the American peace movement prior to World War I
Mark J. Davis reviews “War Against War: The American Fight for Peace” by Michael Kazin.
Rod Dreher: Common ground is less important than “being faithful” for Christians
An interview with the author of ‘The Benedict Option’
Timely counsel from America’s first commander in chief
William Lanouette reviews “Washington’s Farewell” by Avlon
St. Augustine’s love life is fleshed out in “The Confessions of X.”
Kristin Gilger reviews “The Confessions of X” by Suzanne M. Wolfe.
What Econ 101 gets completely wrong
Charles R. Morris reviews “Economism: Bad Economics and the Rise of Inequality” by James Kwak.
What Rod Dreher gets right in “The Benedict Option” is just as important as what he gets wrong.
Patrick Gilger, S.J., reviews “The Benedict Option: A Strategy for Christians in a Post-Christian Nation” by Rod Dreher.
A Theology that Weeps
John A. Coleman, S.J., reviews “A Church of the Poor: Pope Francis and the Transformation of Orthodoxy” by Clemens Sedmak.
