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David Randall
Sholem Asch's 1939 novel The Nazarene deserves new readers. Continue Reading »
Today’s college students no longer know what it means to live or die well. Continue Reading »
Man in the High Castle disappoints, as the whiff of leftist self-regard permeates far too much of the second season. Continue Reading »
Reading Great Books in the language of left-wing pedagogy only subordinates them to progressive goals.
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Science fiction’s ambition to evoke the immensely long and strange history of the future gives these three works peculiar power to meditate on the promise that the Church will survive. Continue Reading »
An intellectual doesn’t have to play that particular game. He can think and write about art or anthropology; contemplate Euclid or Euthyphro; or even argue for what he takes to be the truth of politics, rather than seek out political victory. Continue Reading »
He sang like a master fencer with a clubfoot.
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Amazon serializes The Man in the High Castle, the Philip K. Dick novel that asked: What would we be like if we had lost World War II? Continue Reading »
James Stoddard ought to be famous for his Christian-fantasy Evenmere trilogy. He isn’t, unfortunately. Continue Reading »
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