Blindness
Blindness By D. S. MartinI praise you for my blindness not mydiminishing ability with fine printbut the way you cause me to movesecurely where I'd never move on…
Blindness By D. S. MartinI praise you for my blindness not mydiminishing ability with fine printbut the way you cause me to movesecurely where I'd never move on…
In Bower Lodge, we are dealing with a poet who has traced the words and worlds of others for a long time before putting pen to paper himself.
Was Jane Austen a moral philosopher? Absolutely.
A child of the military reflects on what frequent moves taught her about family relationships. By Karis Ryu
Fans of G.K. Chesterton will enjoy this apologetic masquerading as a biography, but those looking for details of Saint Thomas’s life may come away disappointed.
Christine Emba offers a solution to a culture of bad sex.
Macbeth tells the story not only of one man’s tragic downfall, but of how that resonates through his entire community.
In Sally Rooney’s latest novel, Catholicism is romanticized as a remedy for the anxiety and existentialism of modern life.
Opening remarks for Issue 17: Covenants, by editor Sara Holston
Both Oh Brother Where Art Thou? and No Country for Old Men are concerned with devil figures and, more particularly, the deals we make with these devils.
A poem by Megan Foster
"A Firm Handshake" cocktail recipe from the Editors