Understanding William Faulkner

By |2025-09-24T15:06:12-05:00September 24th, 2025|Categories: Books, Cleanth Brooks, Imagination, John Crowe Ransom, Literature, South, Timeless Essays|

In the forties and fifties, Cleanth Brooks devoted himself to interpreting and popularizing the work of one of America’s greatest but most difficult novelists, his fellow Southerner William Faulkner. When I think of the state of literary criticism in the academy today, I think of a New Yorker cartoon someone has put up in the [...]

Four Forgotten Heroes of True England

By |2025-09-15T05:56:51-05:00September 14th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, England, History, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, Unsung Heroes of Christendom|

Starting just 30 years after the Crucifixion, Catholic England produced remarkable figures, including lesser-known luminaries like Bishop Robert Grosseteste, who pioneered the scientific method. In my book Faith of Our Fathers: A History of True England, I sought to present a panoramic overview of two thousand years of English history, from the first century to the [...]

An Unexpected Personal Climax

By |2025-09-19T10:50:06-05:00September 13th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, David Torkington, Love, Prayer, The Primacy of Loving|

Without returning to the prayer and the spirituality of our forefathers, the Church has seemed to have gradually deteriorated at every level. However, I am now witnessing the many who are beginning to see the truth. They are beginning to see and do what can alone bring personal renewal, and Church renewal, by generating and [...]

Notes From Underground

By |2025-09-13T09:36:20-05:00September 12th, 2025|Categories: Books, Imagination, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, StAR, The Imaginative Conservative|

I urge “imaginative conservatives” to use their imagination in selecting what they choose to read. Instead of wasting time with the toxic triteness of New York Times bestsellers, we need to reward the courage that adventurous publishers are showing by buying and reading the new and adventurous works that they are publishing. For almost a [...]

David Hein’s “Teaching the Virtues”

By |2025-09-03T21:14:17-05:00September 3rd, 2025|Categories: Books, Christianity, Chuck Chalberg, Religion, Senior Contributors, Virtue|

Who would have thought that a teacher might convince a student that living a virtuous life was both a challenge and an adventure? David Hein apparently has done just that in the classroom, and those classroom teachers who read his book might well come to learn from him and agree with him—and do the same [...]

Consecrated to the Holy Fire

By |2025-09-05T11:13:47-05:00September 3rd, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism|

If we too wish to give all or nothing, we must remember that everyone must give according to the different graces they receive from God. Holiness is not so much about “always giving just a little bit more” as it is about opening our hearts more to receive what God is doing in our lives. [...]

Willa Cather: The Most Catholic of Non-Catholic Novelists

By |2025-09-06T20:39:25-05:00September 2nd, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Literature|

Despite her rather profound and intense Catholic artistry, Willa Cather was not a Roman Catholic, though many during her life presumed she was a practicing one. How else could she grasp the essence of the faith—in all its beauties and in all its failings—so majestically? “I am amused that so many of the reviews of [...]

When a Historian Becomes His-story

By |2025-09-13T21:21:35-05:00August 30th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, David Torkington, History, Love, Prayer, The Primacy of Loving|

Why did the introduction of the new liturgy not bring about the long-anticipated renewal for which we were all longing? Without the deep personal relationship with Christ that develops and grows in personal prayer, the liturgy can soon become ineffective, not in itself, but in those who are not prepared to receive it. Many of [...]

We Are Pilgrims!

By |2025-08-29T13:41:39-05:00August 29th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Cluny|

Remember: we are pilgrims; we will not be here forever, but we are just passing through. Therefore, focus on the destination. Listen for God’s voice calling out to you in the silence of your heart. No Abiding City (republished by Cluny Media as part one of Returning to the Lord) by Bede Jarrett, O.P. Why is life [...]

Was Ty Cobb Really a Nice Guy After All?

By |2025-08-28T20:27:57-05:00August 28th, 2025|Categories: Baseball, Books, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays|

It's rare that an author billing his work as a piece of revisionism ends up, seemingly unwittingly, reinforcing the traditional interpretation of his subject. But Charles Leerhsen accomplishes this unusual feat in his biography, "Ty Cobb: A Terrible Beauty." Ty Cobb: A Terrible Beauty by Charles Leerhsen (464 pages, Simon & Schuster, 2015) It's rare [...]

Butler: The Untold Story of the Near Assassination of Donald Trump

By |2025-09-01T18:00:55-05:00August 25th, 2025|Categories: Books, Chuck Chalberg, Donald Trump, Politics, Senior Contributors|

Salena Zito's new book is less the story of the assassination attempt on Donald Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania, than it is the lengthier story of the 2024 campaign for the presidency. As such, it is also the story of the fight for a piece of America’s heartland, and for a key element of Mr. Trump's [...]

The Modern Malaise

By |2025-08-23T16:50:17-05:00August 23rd, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, David Torkington, Love, Prayer, The Primacy of Loving|

By prayer, I do not just mean saying prayers or performing prayers of obligation but practising the deep prayer that leads onward beyond first beginnings into the mystic way. It is only here that we will come to know and experience the love that surpasses the understanding. When the constitution on the liturgy was promulgated [...]

At the Twilight of Civilization

By |2025-08-29T14:19:48-05:00August 23rd, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Philosophy, Political Philosophy, Politics, Western Civilization|

Russell Hittinger’s new book, "On the Dignity of Society," articulates Catholic principles regarding the social order. One of the great themes of the book was the continuity between man’s nature and society. On the Dignity of Society by F. Russell Hittinger Is the history of philosophy full of philosophers rejecting past philosophers? Broadly, this may be [...]

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