This is the novel you get when you cross the demonical complexities of Poe with the malignant banalities of Kafka, but De Maria has added a menacing ingredient.
The tightly controlled and highly centralized approach to the translation of liturgical texts that has reigned over the past fifteen years may be coming to an end.
'Manchester' captures the drift and flow of daily life and conveys its pungent poetry. Denzel Washington brings August Wilson’s 'Fences' to the screen with skill.
Building a Catholic university is simple, argues John Garvey: a majority of its faculty must be Catholic. But executing that plan is harder, says Mark W. Roche.
Luke Timothy Johnson reviews important theological books from 2016, including works by Robert Giroux, Thomas Merton, Raïssa Maritain, Miroslav Volf & Rodney Stark.
On John R. Bowlin’s account, the tolerant know when the act of toleration is the virtuous response to difference and when it is a mere semblance of the virtue.
In his new book, Kenneth Woodward opines on his journalistic career covering the ideas and personalities that drove not only religion, but the culture at large.
At a time when many Catholic parishes in North America are faltering, William Simon has set out to analyze ones that are thriving. How does a parish thrive?
Trump's administration appears to believe that health care, education, and housing are nothing more than commodities to be delivered by the market, or not at all.
Was Fr. Spadaro’s metaphor such a big mistake—or a mistake at all? I don’t think it was, but even if he did fall off the theological high wire, these things happen.