Fair Game offers a striking account of the hostile political climate fueled by scapegoating and misinformation, and counters it with the substantial body of evidence showing that transgender inclusion strengthens athletic communities for everyone who participates.
Scott Seligman's The Great Christmas Boycott of 1906 is a reality check, both for Republicans who believe past immigrants easily assimilated and Democrats who believe anti-immigrant hate has never been "who we are."
In The Books That Made Us, Rebecca Bratten Weiss argues that the texts we regard as Christian classics should be studied with a watchful, critical eye.
Book review: In Martyrs to the Unspeakable, James Douglass tells of four Americans who challenged the established violence of the U.S. government — and were killed for it.
Writer and actor Marianne Leone's St. Christina the Astonishing presents a figure of liberation, inspired in part by the author's experiences in an immigrant family in 1960s Boston.
We are living in an authoritarian epoch; not only in the United States, but globally. What books and films can offer context, instruction and even hope during this trying moment?
Julia Cameron's The Artist's Way: A Spiritual Path to Higher Creativity, first published in 1992, has sold over 5 million copies. Catholic creatives say the book and its spirituality have been transformative.
In The Lost Mary: Rediscovering the Mother of Jesus, James D. Tabor demythologizes the "passive, nonsexual, nonpolitical" Mary, inviting us to consider her through a historical, critical lens.