What It Means to Be Human
Though more concerned with political persuasion and the present state of affairs than it is with philosophical proofs, Snead’s book nonetheless offers a valuable contribution to the discussion of American bioethics today.
Though more concerned with political persuasion and the present state of affairs than it is with philosophical proofs, Snead’s book nonetheless offers a valuable contribution to the discussion of American bioethics today.
Marilynne Robinson is a novelist and essayist. She is the recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction (2005), the National Humanities Medal (2012), and the Library of Congress Prize for American Fiction (2016). She taught at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop from 1991 until 2016. She has published collections of essays on topics ranging from nuclear pollution to American democracy to the human mind. Jack, her fifth novel and the fourth concerning the people of Gilead, Iowa, was published in September of this year. Robinson spoke to Fare Forward about evil, heroes, and the future of the American project.
Claire Denis's 1999 film, recently re-released in the Criterion Collection, builds and maintains its tension perfectly until the final shot.
Rightly understood, nostalgia is more than a delusion about the past--it is the hope for a home we have not yet know.
Tana French's new mystery explores a disappearance--and, along the way, takes a look at finding our way through our shifting moral landscape.