Books

New & Noteworthy Fiction

Chosen by H. S. Cross, author of “Wilberforce” and “Grievous.”

Charis in the World of Wonders

Marly Youmans (Ignatius Press)

Set in Massachusetts Bay Colony during the 1690s, Charis in the World of Wonders plunges us into the mind, language, and worldview of a young woman struggling to survive yet finding grace in unexpected places. Youmans’s lush prose evokes a preindustrial, perilous, socially connected world in which the Divine has sovereign reign over outcomes both joyous and sorrowful. Reading it feels like traveling through time and space to experience reality laid bare: Life is fragile, humans need each other, and the created world is shot through with beauty, fear, mystery, and God.

Thirst

A. G. Mojtabai (Slant)

If you’ve never read Mojtabai’s sparse, resonant novels, her newest, Thirst, is an outstanding place to start. It sketches the last days of Father Theo, who to the confusion and dismay of those around him, has decided to stop living. His cousin Lena, mostly secular and recently bereaved, comes to be with him, but she cannot get him to eat or drink any more than the nuns who cook for him. This novella maintains a stark quietness that belies spiritual depths. Its meditations on doubt, human life, and what waits beyond bear rereading and testify to Mojtabai’s consummate skill.

Original Prin

Randy Boyagoda (Biblioasis)

Original Prin opens with its hero, Prin, a Roman Catholic professor of English, taking his family to the Toronto Zoo, where he informs the kids that he has prostate cancer. It ends in the Middle East with Prin having entangled himself in a terrorist attack as he was attempting to save his failing university and recover his damaged marriage. Part satire, part farce, with nods in several literary directions, the novel moves with madcap energy as this thoroughly modern protagonist takes his culture, his family, and his Catholicism seriously while wearing them lightly. The book ends in a cliffhanger, and the sequel, Dante’s Indiana, has just been released.

Also in this issue

Evangelical intellectuals have generally disdained Christian fiction as lacking any real literary worth. But as Daniel Silliman notes in this month’s cover story, diverse groups of readers have long found virtue, pleasure, and the hope of Christ even in the most popular and viral Christian novels. Criticism of these books misses the crucial role they have played in shaping evangelicalism today.

Cover Story

What’s True About Christian Fiction

No Hero But Christ

Our September Issue: This Present Fiction

News

Where Billy Graham Is Remembered

Gary Chapman Doesn’t Know He’s Famous

Kara Bettis

Martha: Busy Hostess or Dragon Slayer?

Kristen Padilla

What Comes After the Ex-Gay Movement? The Same Thing That Came Before.

Greg Johnson

We Really Are on the Same Team

Crime Might Be Rising Again, As Evangelicals (Inaccurately) Feared All Along

The Harvest Is Plentiful, But the Workers Are Divided

Daniel Treier

Testimony

I Wasn’t ‘Tough’ Enough for My Street-Fighting Family. God Showed Me I Didn’t Have to Be.

Greg Stier

The Ten Commitments Behind the Ten Commandments

5 Books That Portray the Priesthood of All Believers

Cliff Warner

Editorial

We Are All Baptists Now—So Let’s Not Fight Like It

News

NASA Specialist Finds His Calling in Space Experiments

News

When God Opened a Coliseum, Young Life Ministers Were Ready

Bekah McNeel

News

What’s Lost When Prison Mail Goes Digital?

News

Gleanings: October 2021

Reply All

William Lane Craig Explores the Headwaters of the Human Race

Interview by Melissa Cain Travis

Review

Shame Is Often Toxic and Harmful. Sometimes, It’s Just What We Deserve.

David Baggett

Review

Philip Yancey, as Few Could Have Imagined Him

Leslie Leyland Fields

View issue

Our Latest

Review

They May Forget Your Sermons, but They’ll Remember This

Reuben Bredenhof’s new book encourages pastors to focus on small acts of faithfulness.

Analysis

The Many Factors of America’s Math Problem

Ubiquitous screens, classroom chaos, a dearth of qualified teachers: The reasons our children are struggling in math class are multitude.

News

Four Years into the War, Life Goes on for Ukrainians

Even as Moscow weaponizes winter, locals attend church conferences, go sledding, and plan celebrations.

A Russian Drone Killed My Brother. Is the World Tired of Our Suffering?

Taras Dyatlik

On the fourth anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, a Ukrainian theologian meditates on self-interested calls for a comfortable peace.

Excerpt

Parents of Prodigals Can Trust God is Good

Cameron Shaffer

An excerpt from Cameron Shaffer’s Keeping Kids Christian.

The Bulletin

The Bulletin Goes to Nashville!

Sho Baraka, Mike Cosper, Clarissa Moll, Russell Moore

In Music City, Russell, Mike, Sho, and Clarissa talk about creativity, vocation, and AI.

Worship, Bible Studies, and Restoration in South Korea’s Nonprofit Prison

Jennifer Park in Yeoju, South Korea

Somang Prison, the only private and Christian-run penitentiary in Asia, seeks to treat inmates with dignity—and it sees results.

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