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Arts & CultureBooks
Zac Davis
Kristen Arnett’s novel is about intimacy and wanting what is forbidden, about childhood and family, about absent parents and absent lovers, and about the secondhand self-destruction that can be wrought by ignoring cries of the heart.
Composite: iStock/Ciaran Freeman
Arts & CultureIdeas
Tom Deignan
Science fiction writers continue to turn to religious characters, imagery and ideas to sort things out.
Author James Lee Burke stands in Lolo, Mont., July 7, 2005.(AP Photo/The Missoulian, Linda Thompson)
Arts & CultureBooks
Edward W. Schmidt, S.J.
In 37 novels and two short story collections, Burke writes about characters who struggle to do good in a context of pervasive evil.
Arts & CultureBooks
As the multicultural educator Robin DiAngelo points out in her recent book, "White Fragility: Why It’s So Hard for White People to Talk About Racism," many white people fail even to recognize racism for what it really is.
Arts & CultureBooks
Jeffrey Meyers
Dorian Lynskey attempts to explain “what Orwell’s book actually is, how it came to be written, and how it has shaped the world” in "The Ministry of Truth: The Biography of George Orwell’s 1984."
Arts & CultureBooks
In his book, "Religion in the University," a reworking of a series of lectures given at Yale in 2001, Nicholas Wolterstorff examines a range of assumptions held by academics.