Solzhenitsyn and American Culture
Deavel and Wilson’s new collection of essays on Solzhenitsyn highlights the writer’s differences not only with the country that expelled him, but also the one that took him in.
Deavel and Wilson’s new collection of essays on Solzhenitsyn highlights the writer’s differences not only with the country that expelled him, but also the one that took him in.
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.
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.
Robinson's newest novel allows her readers neither to flinch from Jack Boughton's real fall from grace nor to condemn him to suffer what he deserves.
Gracy Olmstead follows Marie Mutsuki Mockett on her journey toward understanding farmers and fundamentalists.
Alan Jacobs's new book advocates for engaging dead authors in a friendly contest, and treating them as we'd like to be treated.
Esau McCaulley’s brief book introduces readers to the Black ecclesial tradition, as well as arguing ably for the biblical basis for the present pursuit of justice in our society.
Anthony Barr takes a look at the spiritual implications of a society that worships intelligence--and at his complicity in the cult of smart.