The Work of Art is a visionary compendium of ephemera that makes visible the bridge between idea and artwork.
The Work of Art is a visionary compendium of ephemera that makes visible the bridge between idea and artwork.
Richard Munson’s splendid biography of Benjamin Franklin provides an insightful view of the statesman’s lesser known accomplishments in science.
Richard Munson’s splendid biography of Benjamin Franklin provides an insightful view of the statesman’s lesser known accomplishments in science.
Lili Anolik’s Didion and Babitz is a freewheeling and engaging narrative about two iconic literary rivals and their world in 1970s Los Angeles.
Lili Anolik’s Didion and Babitz is a freewheeling and engaging narrative about two iconic literary rivals and their world in 1970s Los Angeles.
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For anyone facing a difficult situation or living through a crisis, a few words of sympathy and encouragement can work wonders lifting the gloom and offering hope that better days lie ahead. In his latest release, The Book of Courage, inspirational writer and speaker Hans Wilhelm has compiled hundreds of verbal pats-on-the-back into one attractive volume (small enough to stuff inside a stocking). Adorned with Wilhelm’s own bright and uplifting illustrations, these encouraging words offer advice on dealing with fear and worry and finding a sense of inner peace that can make coping with any situation more bearable. Quotations from such sources as the Psalms and Shakespeare are sprinkled throughout the text, reinforcing Wilhelm’s message that there’s always a way to endure when your world turns upside down.

For anyone facing a difficult situation or living through a crisis, a few words of sympathy and encouragement can work wonders lifting the gloom and offering hope that better days lie ahead. In his latest release, The Book of Courage, inspirational writer and speaker…
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Challenges for the mind, soul and heart are well and good, but as Eldredge observes in his own book, there are times when rest is needed. No better spiritual rest can be found than in the new collection Firstlight: The Early Inspirational Writings of Sue Monk Kidd. Gleaned from a lifetime of writing, this volume offers beauty, inspiration and comfort in elegant prose. The author of the best-selling novel The Secret Life of Bees, Kidd has selected devotional essays she wrote for Guideposts magazine to create observations on faith, compassion, grace, love and more. As Kidd says in her introduction, At the core of personal spiritual writing is a hunger for the wholeness, for self, for meaning. The question Who am I?’ reverberates quietly in these pages, as does a willingness to be known. . . . Such vulnerability creates what we might call a soulful being together’ between the reader and the author. A kind of communion born through the meeting of vulnerability and identification. Kidd’s offer of communion results in a work that is both peaceful and inspiring, that calms the spirit while offering its own gentle challenges challenges to love more deeply and more fully, and to accept the presence God offers in every moment of every day. Howard Shirley is the author of Acts for God: 38 Dramatic Sketches for Contemporary Services. He writes from Franklin, Tennessee.

Challenges for the mind, soul and heart are well and good, but as Eldredge observes in his own book, there are times when rest is needed. No better spiritual rest can be found than in the new collection Firstlight: The Early Inspirational Writings of Sue…
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Jim Palmer and John Eldredge both write about getting back to the heart of Christianity. In What Paul Meant, Garry Wills writes about getting back to its theological core. Wills is no apologist for the modern Christian church, nor are the members of that church his intended audience. Wills instead is writing for the postmodern skeptic, the soul who looks at the trappings of many traditional churches and dismisses the entire Christian faith as a result. But Wills, the author of the earlier book What Jesus Meant, is not so easy to dismiss. This time he defends the apostle Paul against the cynics who accuse him of misogyny and anti-Semitism. Wills is Professor Emeritus of History at Northwestern University, and his experienced scholarship shows throughout the book. By focusing primarily on seven of Paul’s letters (the only ones which modern scholarship can definitively attribute to Paul), Wills presents a picture of a man far more egalitarian in his views on women, faith and the nature of religion than his critics (and even centuries of followers) have assumed. In the end, Wills suggests, Paul never envisioned Christianity as a new religion, but rather saw Jesus as a fully Jewish Messiah who brings all people Jews and Gentiles alike into a single family of God, a family where, in Wills’ words, the only law is love. What Paul Meant is a fascinating read, worth examining by anyone with an open mind and an interest in Christianity and its most prolific early voice.

Howard Shirley is the author of Acts for God: 38 Dramatic Sketches for Contemporary Services. He writes from Franklin, Tennessee.

Jim Palmer and John Eldredge both write about getting back to the heart of Christianity. In What Paul Meant, Garry Wills writes about getting back to its theological core. Wills is no apologist for the modern Christian church, nor are the members of that church…
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In matters of faith and the heart, Jim Palmer’s Divine Nobodies: Shedding Religion to Find God (and the Unlikely People Who Help You) offers a welcome breath of fresh air. A former pastor who saw his own life turn upside down, Palmer took a roller coaster ride from driven evangelical pastor to discount store clerk (among other jobs), a process that might seem disastrous in our success-driven culture. But for Palmer it became an opportunity to wake up to a real and personal relationship with God. Palmer draws the reader toward a simpler faith, a life lived with Christ that sees the worth in every person and presents the possibility that a garage owner, a waitress or a checkout clerk can teach us as much about Christ as a preacher with a string of seminary degrees. For those who feel trapped by a culture that measures faith by outside appearances, Divine Nobodies will read like a blowtorch to the bars of a cage. Palmer’s call to a faith that is deep, personal and based purely on the love of Christ should resonate with readers.

Howard Shirley is the author of Acts for God: 38 Dramatic Sketches for Contemporary Services. He writes from Franklin, Tennessee.

In matters of faith and the heart, Jim Palmer's Divine Nobodies: Shedding Religion to Find God (and the Unlikely People Who Help You) offers a welcome breath of fresh air. A former pastor who saw his own life turn upside down, Palmer took a roller…
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John Eldredge’s bestseller Wild at Heart challenged men in particular to pursue an epic, active life with God that involved mind, soul and heart. He picks up this theme in The Way of the Wild Heart: A Map for the Masculine Journey. Eldredge suggests that God has created six stages in the life of a man the Beloved Son, the Cowboy, the Warrior, the Lover, the King and the Sage and that the passage through these stages is both natural and crucial for the male spiritual life. The Way of the Wild Heart is a guide for honoring these stages, even reclaiming those missed through calamity, carelessness or abuse, and leading other men (and boys) through this process as well. Once again Eldredge skillfully explores his theme using examples from Scripture, world cultures and modern storytelling, as well as instances in his own life and the lives of his growing sons. This book is not simply a repeat of earlier material; rather it is about application, and as such it is both compelling and challenging, stirring the soul and the heart toward change. Eldredge’s insights will benefit any man and the women who wish to understand and love them whether he be fatherless or sonless, 18 or 89.

Howard Shirley is the author of Acts for God: 38 Dramatic Sketches for Contemporary Services. He writes from Franklin, Tennessee.

John Eldredge's bestseller Wild at Heart challenged men in particular to pursue an epic, active life with God that involved mind, soul and heart. He picks up this theme in The Way of the Wild Heart: A Map for the Masculine Journey. Eldredge suggests that…
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Do cats have ESP? One man wondered why the family cat went to the door to greet his wife exactly five minutes before she got home every day. The couple lived several floors up in an apartment building, and the wife got home at different times of day. An animal behaviorist finally worked out that the small feline could hear its mistress greet the elevator operator all the way down on the ground floor as she stepped onto the elevator. This and other fascinating insights appear in Temple Grandin’s Animals in Translation, co-authored with Catherine Johnson. Grandin’s theory is that animals have a unique intelligence that is hard for ordinary humans to appreciate. But not so hard for Grandin. She is autistic, and she believes the autistic human mind with its simpler emotions and more diffuse observations of the world is closer to the animal brain. As a teenager, Grandin was already taking cues from animals on how to deal with her problems. Observing livestock go through a squeeze chute which calmed them during inoculations, Grandin built a squeeze chute for her own use, and it helped quiet her nerves during severe anxiety attacks. Later, Grandin used her empathy with animals to design more humane slaughter facilities for meat-packing plants. She sees these plants from the cattle’s point of view the terrifying chain, the troubling reflection and too-dark corridor and points out the problems, with amazing results.

Grandin says the normal human mind screens out a lot of its landscape. We see what we’re looking for, while animals and autistics process reality more indiscriminately, fixating on something the ordinary human doesn’t even notice. Grandin writes, for instance, about being riveted by computer screen savers. Grandin’s book, written for the non-scientist, will appeal to anyone with an interest in animals from pet owners to ranchers to animal rights activists. Her book has enormous implications. Not since Jane Goodall’s research on the chimpanzee’s use of tools has there been a book that so successfully challenges our definitions of what is human and what is animal.

Do cats have ESP? One man wondered why the family cat went to the door to greet his wife exactly five minutes before she got home every day. The couple lived several floors up in an apartment building, and the wife got home at…

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