Seeing Things
Maddox’s latest poetry collection tackles suffering straight on—which means mingling the real darkness with real light. Review by Gloria Heffernan
Maddox’s latest poetry collection tackles suffering straight on—which means mingling the real darkness with real light. Review by Gloria Heffernan
A tour of a liturgical year in the life of a gardener invites readers to dwell in two sets of seasons as a way of drawing nearer to eternity.
A theologian re-envisions the highest ideal of family as Christlike devotion to those who share our space.
O’Donnell’s poetic missives to Dante on his way through the afterlife offer her readers, in turn, a companion for the journey of the Divine Comedy.
A guide to poetry as a spiritual practice offers new poetry readers and skeptics alike a pathway into the literary form.
A lay person’s memoir of the Book of Common Prayer offers a warm welcome into a tradition that reminds us of our part in the story of creation.
Jonathan Geltner’s debut novel explores the dangers of wandering too far off the true way in the search for transcendence.
A spiritual successor to Lost refocuses our attention not on solving life’s mysteries, but living with them.
Courtney Ellis’s parallel story of birdwatching and processing grief shows how birding can teach us to slow down and rediscover truths about God that are all around us.
Opening Remarks for Issue 29: On Waiting Well by Sarah Cla