Books

New & Noteworthy Fiction

Chosen by Paul Willis, professor of English at Westmont College and author of ‘The Alpine Tales’ (WordFarm).

Mysterium

Susan Froderberg (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)

Susan Froderberg’s Mysterium is based on an ill-fated Himalayan expedition in 1976, led by the American professor Willi Unsoeld. The climb succeeded, but at the terrible cost of Unsoeld’s daughter, who was named for the mountain (Nanda Devi) itself. Over 40 years later, Froderberg transposes this climb into something eerie, elemental, and coldly transcendent. Don’t expect to warm up to the characters on these icy slopes; they remain at a curious distance as they struggle through rockslides, blizzards, love affairs, rivalries, avalanches, and altitude. And yet the novel ends with an evocation of the sublime that has depended on this distance all along.

The Overstory

Richard Powers (Norton)

The Overstory provides an even greater challenge, for its main character is the forest itself. There is a scattering of human characters who are interlinked, sometimes unconsciously, by their sensitivity to elms, oaks, and redwoods as a sentient, palpable force. But the human stories are curiously discontinuous. What takes center stage is the remarkable presence of the trees themselves and how they literally communicate with one another and the world. The prophet Isaiah was onto something: The trees really do clap their hands (55:12).

Port William Novels & Stories: The Civil War to World War II

Wendell Berry

Library of America

Readers in search of a more traditional connection to human characters will appreciate this handsome compilation of Wendell Berry’s Kentucky fiction. The volume contains four novels—Nathan Coulter, A Place on Earth, A World Lost, and Andy Catlett: Early Travels—and 23 short stories, arranged chronologically by content in their common setting: Berry’s fictionalized town of Port William. (A second volume will soon follow.) Berry’s Christian concerns are everywhere clear in the way his characters strive to do right by one another and by the land they so carefully farm. Who needs a mountain when you have a mule-drawn plow?

Also in this issue

The September 2019 cover story reintroduces readers to the ever-expanding world of classical Christian education, in which one might find young students studying Aristotle and Latin alongside the Bible and Faulkner. The movement has tens of thousands of adherents in private schools, charter schools, homeschool cooperatives, and universities across the country.

Our Latest

Looking Past Bell Bottoms, Beads, Coffeehouses, and Communes

In 1971, CT said the Jesus People were not just another baby boomer fad.

The Bulletin

International Surrogacy, Midterm Forecasts, and Temple Mount Prayer

Mike Cosper, Clarissa Moll, Russell Moore

Foreigners hire US citizens as surrogate mothers, midterm elections approach, and changes to prayer rules at Jerusalem holy site.

Review

Reckoning with Race, Immigration, and Power

Three books to read this month on politics and public life.

I Have Chronic Pain. I Still Love the Olympics.

Aberdeen Livingstone

After a life-changing injury, I can’t compete like I used to. Watching the Olympics—the newest games starting tonight—brings me joy.

From Our Community

Where The Church Gathers, Listens, and Grows Together

How The Big Tent Initiative is fostering unity in the Church.

The Just Life with Benjamin Watson

Jemar Tisby: The History the Church Avoids

Understanding the past is essential for interpreting the present.

We Are Not Workhorses

Xiaoli Yang

In a culture that champions power, Proverbs 21:31 reframes what strength and victory look like for Chinese Christians.

News

Families of Venezuelan Political Prisoners Pray for Their Release

The acting president proposed an amnesty law, yet hundreds remain in prison.

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