Books

New & Noteworthy Fiction

Refugees at the Canadian border, a father’s fervent hope for forgiveness, and school segregation in 21st century America.

The Boat People

Sharon Bala (Doubleday)

This powerful and timely debut is based on an actual 2010 incident. When a cargo ship docks in a Canadian port carrying 500 Sri Lankan refugees, the passengers believe their ordeal is over, trusting in Canada’s reputation for “being a soft touch.” But government officials, fearing the ship harbors members of a terrorist cell, resolve to detain the passengers until investigators can ensure they present no threat. Bala weaves together the stories of a refugee, his lawyer, and an inexperienced adjudicator to explore the difficult decisions at the intersection of compassionate ideals and political reality—and the consequences for all involved.

No One Ever Asked

Katie Ganshert (WaterBrook)

Thunderstruck by an episode of This American Life about segregation in today’s schools, Ganshert set aside the project she was working on to write this story. When a failing school district loses its accreditation, the affluent neighboring district reluctantly admits the bused students as the law requires. “This isn’t about race,” the PTA chair proclaims at the town meeting, but it’s undeniable that the bused students are mostly black and brown, and the students at their new school mostly white. Weaving together fact and fiction, Ganshert portrays three very different women, connected by the same classroom full of eight-year-olds, whose lives are changed by the challenges and revelations of the groundbreaking school year.

A Place for Us

Fatima Farheen Mirza (Hogarth)

Mirza’s story about an Indian-American Muslim family opens with a celebration, but not all is well: The bride scans the crowd for her prodigal brother, hoping he’ll appear despite being estranged from the family for years. Through a series of flashbacks, Mirza examines the series of small betrayals that splintered the family, skillfully imbuing quotidian events—a chance meeting at a party, a dinner conversation about a spelling test—with deep significance. Despite their smallness, they have irrevocably altered the course of the family’s life. A powerful meditation on faith and family, love and loss, and a father’s fervent hope for forgiveness.

Also in this issue

Our cover story this month is an examination of how suffering affects our personal view of God. It's arguably the biggest question humans ask of faith. And data suggest that the problem of evil is increasingly cited as the chief reason for abandoning faith. Given such circumstances, CT adds a voice to the small but growing body of research on tragedy, spiritual resilience, and how the church can better minister in the midst and in the aftermath of tragedy.

Our Latest

Gen Z Is More Than Anxious

What the church gets wrong—and what it can get right—about forming a generation shaped by screens and longing for purpose.

Don’t Pay Attention. Give It.

Attention isn’t a resource to maximize for productivity. It’s a gift that helps us love God and neighbor.

Faith-Based Education Is Having a Moment

I’m excited to see churches—particularly Black congregations—step boldly into teaching.

Being Human

Sex and Porn Addiction, Misconceptions That Prevent Healing with Matt Wenger

Porn addiction: An intimacy issue, not just a sexual one

The Russell Moore Show

 Listener question: How Can I have friendships with atheists?

 Russell answers a listener question about how to have meaningful relationships with atheists.

The National Guard Debate Needs a Dose of Honesty

Criticizing federal overreach while remaining silent about local failures does not serve the cause of justice.

High Time for an Honest Conversation about THC

Legal cannabis may be here to stay, but the Christian conversation is just getting started.

News

Saudi Arabian Prison Frees Kenyan After ‘Blood Money’ Payout

A Christian mother relied on the Muslim practice of “diyat” to bring her son home alive.

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