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A scene from “Soft & Quiet” (Momentum Pictures)
Arts & CultureFilm
Erik VanBezooijen
‘The Exorcist’ has popularized a trivial, superficial picture of the Christian understanding of evil.
Greta Gerwig stars in a scene from the movie "Frances Ha." (CNS photo/IFC Films)
Arts & CultureCatholic Movie Club
John Dougherty
“Frances Ha” allows us to see Frances the way God might see her. We see her flaws, but we also see how hard she’s trying.
Arts & CultureBooks
Sarah Vincent
in 'Fireworks Every Night,' the debut novel by Beth Raymer, is an ode to Florida—to the rattlesnakes, the humid heat and the Palm Beach pretensions of those who out of necessity live a life apart from that glitz and glamor.
Arts & CultureBooks
Richard Lischer
Jonathan Eig’s new biography, 'King: A Life,' is the first major biography of Martin Luther King Jr. in decades and will take its place among the foremost of the many treatments of King.
Arts & CultureBooks
Siobhan Heekin-Canedy
Henri Nouwen’s observations in 'Ukraine Diary' are even more relevant today than they were at the time of his writing, offering valuable insight into the ongoing tragedy of the war in Ukraine.
Arts & CultureBooks
Timothy Michael Dolan
Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan reviews Msgr. Thomas Shelley's 'John Tracy Ellis: An American Catholic Reformer,' calling it "a well-documented yet very readable biography of the 'dean' of American Catholic history."