Good Reads

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

On Sex and Gender

A Commonsense Approach

by Doriane Lambelet

Two of the organizations on whose boards I have served are spearheading a misleading effort to establish as a principle that “a girl/woman is a girl/woman,” whether she is trans or cis. Such a principle would destroy the category of female competition in many sports because of the biological differences between girls who are female at birth and those who are born as males and transition to being girls/women. This book will be a major contribution to our understanding that sometimes (biological) sex really matters. —James Coleman

Papyrus

The Invention of Books in the Ancient World

by Irene Vallejo (Translation by Charlotte Whitle)

I would never have thought that a book of over 400 pages, ostensibly about writing on a plant (!), would hold my interest. But like other great syntheses, it intertwines the invention of writing and books with broader historical trends and with the niche of various media in our own time. —Howard Gardner

Demon Copperhead

by Barbara Kingsolver

Barbara Kingsolver creates characters with human frailty and dignity who are caught in tragic life circumstances. She tells their stories with profound compassion and hope. —James Plews-Ogan

The Soul of Rumi

by Coleman Barks

Rumi is my favorite poet. He speaks so deeply about the co-existence of grief and joy, and the stance of welcoming all of life’s experience, even the most painful. —Margaret Plews–Ogan

Go, Went, Gone

by Jenny Erpenbeck

Erpenbeck is one of the leading contemporary writers in Germany today. The story is set in Berlin in 2015, at the time when African refugees were pouring in and setting up camp in one of the main squares of the city. The protagonist is a recently retired professor from Humbolt University (formerly in East Berlin), and the story concerns his quiet struggle to construct a life of purpose and connection after retirement. Erpenbeck’s writing is spare and elegant, and she conveys the interiority of her main character with subtlety and nuance. One of the best books I have read in the past several years. —Clayton Spencer

Living Gospel

Reading God’s Story in Holy Lives

by Robert Ellsberg

Robert Ellsberg, with wit and expert strokes, illustrates how holiness is our calling through the lives of the saints and spiritual masters as they attended to God as their first and abiding love. —Carolyn Woo

Spring 2024

From the Editor

Welcome

Suzanne Shanahan

Part I: Pursuing Virtue

Sabrina B. Little

Kelli Reagan Hickey

Blest Be the Ties that Bind: Remembering a Purpose of Religio in Higher Education

Luke A. Powery

Interlude: Purposeful Pursuits

Part II: Pursuing Vocation

James Coleman, Jr.

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