
A Secret Vice – JRR Tolkien (ed. Dimtra Fimi and Andrew Wiggins)
Before he was a fantasy author, JRR Tolkien was a philologist. And I mean, before in the sense of prior to and in the sense of preceding in importance. In a very real way, it […]
Before he was a fantasy author, JRR Tolkien was a philologist. And I mean, before in the sense of prior to and in the sense of preceding in importance. In a very real way, it […]
The Story of Kullervo is the second of three non-Middle-Earth JRR Tolkien tales to receive a literary overview from noted Tolkien scholar Verlyn Flieger. Flieger had written several books about Tolkien and Tolkien’s legendarium, including […]
Before Tolkien was the Master of Middle-Earth, he was a humble academic specializing in medieval English literature and philology. The Lay of Aotrou and Itroun comes from this non-Middle-Earth academic side of Tolkien merging with […]
Valentine’s Day! It’s all hearts and cupids and 30 tiny cards your kid gets at school and heart-shaped pizzas from chain stores and fancy dinners and even more…but what is it? Where did it come […]
Good friendships are hard to find. They’re even harder to keep. In this short volume, using the book of Philemon, Bryan Loritts walks readers through the value of Enduring Friendship. Loritts begins with his own […]
Growing up in conservative evangelicalism, I had always been taught that a transgender gender identity could not be part of a Christian worldview. However, when I began to actually critically think about the theological arguments […]
It is no exaggeration to say this book will save lives. Using practical wisdom from her own journey of parenting and advocacy, Jamie Bruesehoff offers readers a personal, practical, and holy perspective on raising and […]
Mike Cosper first came to my attention a while back when he hosted the podcast The Rise and Fall of Mars Hill, a podcast documentary chronicling what the title suggests, offering specific condemnations of founding […]
Racism is one of those forms of injustice that–rightfully–has been at the forefront of national (and international) conversation. But a form of injustice that often gets overlooked is injustice against a marginalized people group […]
Brian Zahnd begins The Wood Between the Worlds: A Poetic Theology of the Cross with the words “I dare to write about God, which is, admittedly, an audacious undertaking.” This sentence, I think, encapsules the […]
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