Category: christianity

  • All Shook Up
    The Testament of Ann Lee a film by Mona Fastvold.  With Amanda Seyfried, Lewis Pullman.  ** “Why did she make that movie?” my wife asked as we walked out of the theater. Ordinarily I would think that an irrelevant question.  You don’t choose the story, as writers will tell you, the story chooses you.  But in this ...
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  • Unforgettable
    The French Lieutenant’s Woman a novel by John Fowles.  Little, Brown and Company.  467 pp.  ***** The French Lieutenant’s Woman was one of the favorite novels of my friend Levi, who had read it multiple times.  In fact, I believe he gave me the copy I have, for my birthday or for Christmas; like most book ...
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  • WS
    Nothing Like the Sun: A Story of Shakespeare’s Love Life by Anthony Burgess.  Norton.  234pp. ***** I am constantly amazed by Anthony Burgess.  Using the evidence of the surviving poetry, especially the sonnets, and what is known about the chronology of the plays, Burgess has spun an utterly credible narrative of Shakespeare’s early life.  More astounding ...
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  • Science as Religion
    I Am a Part of Infinity: The Spiritual Journey of Albert Einstein by Kieran Fox.  Basic Books.  322 pp. $30.00 **** The basic premise of this book is that Albert Einstein’s life’s work stemmed from an essentially religious feeling of awe and wonder at the workings of the universe.  Kiernan Fox cites an early moment when ...
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  • Don’t Miss This One
    A Gathering of Old Men a novel by Ernest J. Gaines.  From Gaines: Four Novels.  Library of America.  pp. 405-583.  ***** Though I almost didn’t read it—I’d been disappointed by In My Father’s House, which I found oddly inert—A Gathering Of Old Men might be Ernest J. Gaines’ best novel.  It is certainly the most suspenseful; ...
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  • He Hit the Wall and It Disappeared
    Peter S. 1945-2025 I met Peter some years ago, before the pandemic, when we both volunteered at Catholic Charities.  I can’t remember how we struck up a conversation, but we had many things in common, including an interest in writing, and decided to get together.  He lived in Marshall, a small town about thirty minutes from ...
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  • The Man Himself
    Miracles and Wonders: The Historical Mystery of Jesus by Elaine Pagels.  Doubleday.  320 pp.  $30.00.  ***** Mark Twain tells a story about a typesetter from the days of hot type, when things were a lot more difficult than they are now.  The young man was setting a sermon in type, and after the first appearance of ...
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  • Unfinished Lives
    Lincoln in the Bardo a novel by George Saunders.  Random House.  343 pp.  ***** I haven’t been a fan of George Saunders’ short stories.  I read Tenth of December with admiration but without much pleasure.  The stories seemed clever and aesthetically interesting, but I couldn’t get into them as narratives.  I’m more a John O’Hara guy.  ...
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  • Perennial Wisdom
    Open Secrets: The Letters of Reb Yerachmiel ben Yisrael by Rami M. Shapiro.  Monkfish. 128 pp.  $13.36  ***** Rabbi Rami Shapiro is one of the great reconcilers of spiritual traditions in the world today.  In books like Judaism Without Tribalism, Perennial Wisdom for the Spiritually Independent, and Minyan: Ten Principles for Living a Life of Integrity, ...
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  • The Future of American Zen
    Zen in America: Five Teachers and the Search for an American Buddhism by Helen Tworkov.  Kodansha International.  271 pp.  **** Lotus Girl: My Life at the Crossroads of Buddhism and America by Helen Tworkov.  St. Martin’s Essentials.  336 pp. $19.71 **** Helen Tworkov is such a good writer that one can wish she hadn’t spent all those ...
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  • Trump’s Fist
    That Ubiquitous Gesture You would think that a bullet whistling by your head so closely that it nicked your ear might be a wake-up call, the kind of thing that could turn you around permanently, as if to say, Whoa, I dodged a bullet that time (so to speak).   Maybe I might want to reassess.  Ramp ...
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  • Wounded Healer
    James Dykes (1950-2024) Hanging in the waiting room of Jim Dykes’ office—a large homey building that had been a famous hippie house in the Sixties, when I was in college—was a mammoth painting of Jesus.  That seemed characteristic of the man.  He seemed to be saying that Jesus was the ultimate healer—I think he felt that ...
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  • Yes You Can Go Home Again
    The Monsters of Templeton by Lauren Groff.  Penguin Books. 460 pp.  **** The Monsters of Templeton is Lauren Groff’s tribute to her hometown, Cooperstown, New York.  Apparently it was founded by the father of James Fenimore Cooper, it’s most famous citizen (but not, at this point, its finest novelist; Groff has far surpassed him), and includes ...
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  • The Nothing of God
    She was scorned, kicked around, physically abused, sexually abused, told that she doesn’t count, that she barely even exists.  Somehow it is these very things that give her the resources to undertake this adventure. 
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  • Embodied Mystic
    This author deeply understands mystical spirituality, true religion, in a way that few people do.
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  • What Is Sex?
    Lauren Groff seems to be gently suggesting that sex is a human energy that doesn’t necessarily interfere with a religious life.  They can co-exist.  They should co-exist.
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  • Two Gay Men
    Good Grief a film by Dan Levy.  With Dan Levy, Ruth Nessa, Himesh Patel, Luke Evans.  Streaming on Netflix ** Rustin a film by George C. Wolfe.  With Colman Domingo, Ami Ameen, Glynn Turman, Chris Rock.  Streaming on Netflix ***1/2   Good Grief tells the story of a man whose husband dies.  Marc (Dan Levy) is living an ...
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  • No Full Stop
    Septology a novel by Jon Fosse.  Transit Books.  667 pp.  $22.95  ***** Often when I finish a long novel I have a feeling of accomplishment, or relief; “Well now that’s done: and I’m glad it’s over,” as the woman says in The Wasteland (about another subject).  But in the case of Septology, I feel bereft.  It’s ...
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  • Quotations from my Reading (cont.)
    From Septology by Nobel Prize winner Jon Fosse, a Catholic convert. “it’s in the darkness that God lives, yes, God is darkness, and that darkness, God’s darkness, that nothingness, yes, it shines, yes, it’s from God’s darkness that the light comes, the invisible light . . . “I don’t understand why it’s at night, in the darkness, ...
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  • Enough Already
    The Bell a novel by Iris Murdoch.  Penguin Classics.  296 pp.  $16.00.  **** Iris Murdoch.  I can’t live with her and can’t live without her.  Years ago, when my mentor Wallace Fowlie had retired, he wasn’t interested in much modernist fiction, but loved Iris Murdoch, so he always had plenty to read.  My favorite New York ...
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