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Arts & CultureCatholic Book Club
James T. Keane
Paul Horgan was a favorite of critics for his fiction and non-fiction alike during his long life—but his work deserves greater appreciation today.
Arts & CultureVantage Point
Paul Horgan
When novelist/historian Paul Horgan was honored with America Media's Campion Award in 1957, he reflected on the process of creative writing—something the two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize knew a thing or two about.
Arts & CultureCatholic Movie Club
John Dougherty
We often don’t recognize our influences until much later. It’s the things we’re closest to that we have the most trouble seeing clearly.
Arts & CultureBooks
John J. Strynkowski
The Vatican Curia is a mystery, but it need not be a shadowy mystery. Anthony Ekpo's 'The Roman Curia: History, Theology and Organization' contributes greatly to our understanding of the structures and organization of the Curia.
Arts & CultureCatholic Book Club
James T. Keane
Edward Schillebeeckx, O.P., wasn't officially a 'peritus' at the Second Vatican Council, but that didn't stop him from having a powerful influence on the council and on church theology for decades afterward.
Arts & CultureBooks
William T. Cavanaugh
Jason Blakely’s new book, “Lost in Ideology,” is “quite simply the best guide to today’s dominant ideologies,” writes William Cavanaugh. “Blakely is concise, sympathetic, insightful, critical and fair.”