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C.S Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien were the two most famous members of the Inklings, an informal literary club that met at Oxford in the mid-20th century (photo: Alamy).
Arts & CultureBooks
Rachel Lu
As modern-day evangelists, C. S. Lewis and J. R. R. Tolkien are simply unrivaled.
Arts & CultureBooks
Ron Marasco
Must art always promote a particular idea or ideology? Jed Perl argues that “the artist in the act of creation must stand firm in the knowledge that art has its own laws and logic.”
Arts & CultureBooks
Mary Grace Mangano
Katy Carl's debut novel traces the slow growth of love between two people thirsting for something more out of life.
Arts & CultureBooks
Lara Bazelon's 'Ambitious Like a Mother' raises (perhaps unintentionally) some interesting questions about gender, work, family and ambition—and how individual women (and men) who are blessed with options might want that four-way intersection to look.
Arts & CultureBooks
Kevin M. Doyle
A new book by David I. Kertzer argues that Pope Pius XII has more responsibility for the Holocaust than previously reported. But is the charge merited?
Arts & CultureBooks
Joshua Hren
David Foster Wallace's novella 'Something to Do With Paying Attention' features two conversion narratives, a "fearful Jesuit" and "the death of childhood's limitless possibility."