Cahokia Jazz
Spufford’s latest alternative history creates a richly creative city ruled and peopled by the Native Americans our own history has so often abused and sidelined. Review by T. Wyatt Reynolds
Spufford’s latest alternative history creates a richly creative city ruled and peopled by the Native Americans our own history has so often abused and sidelined. Review by T. Wyatt Reynolds
This collection of short stories focuses on women who aren’t extraordinary—but who, it makes clear, still have stories to tell. Review by Whitney Rio-Ross
Marilynne Robinson’s book on Genesis starts simply, but delves into the thorny questions of the first book of the Bible with her characteristic flair. Review by Hayden Kvamme
Opening Remarks for Issue 29: On Waiting Well by Sarah Cla
Courtney Ellis is an author, speaker, and mother of three. Her books include Looking Up: A Birder's Guide to Hope Through Grief, Present: The Gift of Being All In, Right Where You Are, and several others.
Our helplessness in the face of implacable Nature can teach us the limits of our own control, allowing us to rest in the peace of a mercy beyond our understanding. By Marie Glancy O’Shea
The necessity of waiting in research teaches a synthetic biologist about her field and her faith. By Heidi Klumpe
The epidemic of despair in the university points to the basic human need for something more than the merely physical—something just out of sight and beyond our reach. By Colm O’Shea