The Book of Form and Emptiness
Ruth Ozeki's new book can help us think about the relationship between theology and the material world.
Ruth Ozeki's new book can help us think about the relationship between theology and the material world.
Meghan O'Gieblyn’s new book takes seriously the ethical precarity of an AI-inundated world.
Stuck on what to read as the new year begins? The Fare Forward editors recommend the best books they read in 2021.
Benjamin J.B. Lipscomb’s new joint biography of four female philosophers is an engaging read, but more so, it offers guidance on how to engage with those with whom we disagree.
"Begin with a Question" by Marjorie Maddox
Eliot Weinberger weaves fact, fiction, and faith into his curated collection of angels and saints.
If there is one message in The Remarkable Ordinary, it is the same chord that tolls throughout all Buechner’s writings: pay attention.
John Cottingham’s latest makes a compelling case for the self beyond the material.
Husband-and-wife team the Storeys set out to explain how our discontent stems from 16th-century philosophy—and what we should do about it.