Good Reads

We asked our authors to recommend a book they had read over the past couple of years. Here is what they said:

A Framework for Character Education in Schools

Jubilee Centre for Character and Virtues

The necessity of forming civic citizens has been a long-standing concern of the Jubilee Centre for Character and Virtues. As the Centre’s A Framework for Character Education in Schools states, “character education teaches the acquisition and strengthening of virtues: the traits that sustain a well-rounded life and a thriving society.” The Framework also makes clear that “schools should aim to develop confident and compassionate students, who are effective contributors to society, successful learners, and responsible citizens,” and that students “need to develop a commitment to serving others, which is an essential manifestation of good character in action. —James Arthur

The Kristin Lavransdatter trilogy

by Sigrid Undset

Set in 14th century Norway, these novels trace the life of a fictional woman, Kristin Lavransdatter. They raise profound questions about the relationship between the individual and community, hope and despair, betrayal and forgiveness, and the past and future. —Jed W. Atkins

The Book of Delights

by Ross Gay

A daily meditation on finding wonder in the most commonplace things. Succor for the soul in these troubled times. —Dayna L. Cunningham

The Pursuit of Happiness

How Classical Writers on Virtue Inspired the Lives of the Founders and Defined America

by Jeffrey Rosen

The Pursuit of Happiness is an incredible meditation on ancient wisdom and indispensable for anyone who wishes to lead a happy and fulfilled life. —Greg Lukianoff

Bewilderment

by Richard Powers

Bewilderment, by Pulitzer Prize winning novelist Richard Powers, is the remarkable story of the love between a father and a son grieving for their wife and mother and trying to understand our wonderful, terrifying, imperiled planet. —Suzanne Shanahan

Habits of the Heart

Individualism and Commitment in American Life (with a new preface)

by Robert N. Bellah and others

While this book was written quite a while back, it does resonate today as we think about the present and future of American democracy. What binds us together as a nation, and where do we go from here? —Najeeba Syeed