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February 2024

Vol. 230 / No. 2

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Arts & Culture Books
Harold W. AttridgeJanuary 18, 2024

In 'Ancient Echoes,' the highly respected Old Testament scholar Walter Brueggemann provides a provocative set of essays that provides a useful treasury of biblical texts potentially relevant to contemporary political discussion.

Arts & Culture Books
Jerome DonnellyJanuary 18, 2024

In 'War Made Invisible,' Norman Solomon examines the variety of ways we are so often uninformed or misinformed by our mass media’s coverage (and non-coverage) of wars and their legacy of destruction.

Arts & Culture Books

Abdulrazak Gurnah won the 2021 Nobel Prize in Literature for 'Afterlives,' which was not published in the United States until 2022.

Arts & Culture Books
Christine LenahanJanuary 18, 2024

In 'The Deadline,' Jill Lepore uses her deep historical knowledge to ground the reader in truthful analysis, synthesizing complex ideas into their most digestible form.

Arts & Culture Books
Mike MastromatteoJanuary 18, 2024

Like much of Liam Callanan’s fiction, 'When in Rome' hints at the action of divine grace in people’s lives and how the protagonists come to understand and appreciate its beneficence.

Arts & Culture Books
Joseph P. CreamerJanuary 18, 2024

In his 2008 book, Tomáš Halík calls on the church to provide “dressing stations” for the wounded. Halík’s book is now available for the first time in an English translation by Gerald Turner as 'Touch the Wounds: On Suffering, Trust, and Transformation.'

“The Boy and the Heron” is both a soaring adventure and a bittersweet meditation on letting go (Studio Ghibli/GKIDS via AP).
Arts & Culture Film
John DoughertyJanuary 18, 2024

Hayao Miyazaki’s influence is so massive that it’s hard not to understate it.