Staff Assignments

Not all the new good books showed up on our awards’ list (in this issue). So I asked our staff to come up with a few titles our readers might not otherwise come across:

Wendy Murray Zoba, associate editor: “Barbara Kingsolver’s ‘High Tide in Tucson’ (Harper Collins), while not an outstanding book, comprises a series of personal essays about my favorite author. The surprising strength of her first novel, “The Bean Trees” (HarperCollins, 1989), convinced me that here was a fresh new writer who captured my generation’s ethos, growing up in the world of go-go boots, Barbie, and flower power. I consider Kingsolver a friend: we are the same age, fight the same battles. She documents my domestic life.”

Helen Lee, assistant editor: “My fellow Williams College alum Hedrick Smith has issued ‘Rethinking America’ (Random House), which compares American culture to both Japanese and German cultures, showing where our approaches to such things as education and business differ. The more I see politicking Christians doing all they can for American society and culture, the more I think a book like Smith’s could be of use. There are plenty of paradigms other than American ones to use as we attempt to redeem and reclaim our society.”

Richard A. Kauffman, associate editor: “If you’re concerned about violence in our society, read Fox Butterfield’s ‘All God’s Children: The Bosket Family and the American Tradition of Violence’ (Alfred A. Knopf), which traces an African-American family’s intergenerational sinking into a quagmire of violence. Its story line will grip you, and the sources of their violence will surprise. But be prepared to look elsewhere for the antidotes.”

John Wilson, book review editor (and the one who put this issue together): “One measure of a good book is explanatory power; we read, and suddenly all manner of heretofore unobserved connections are made clear. Barry Sanders’s ‘Sudden Glory: Laughter As Subversive History’ (Beacon) has that sort of power. He doesn’t write about the black teenagers in Oakland who provoked a flurry of op-ed page commentaries when they laughed at a showing of ‘Schindler’s List,’ nor about Don Imus’s now-notorious shock-jock ‘roasting’ of President Clinton, the First Lady, and assembled dignitaries at a Washington dinner, but Sanders provides a context in which these matters and many others, ranging from Nietzschean aphorisms to the explosive mirth of a baby girl, are not mere random happenings but rather part of an intricate network of meaning.”

Carla Sonheim, art director: “The only two books I read in 1995 were ‘What to Expect When You’re Expecting’ (Workman) and ‘Finer Points in the Spacing and Arrangements of Type’ (Hartley & Marks).” Say no more.

Copyright © 1996 Christianity Today, Inc./CHRISTIANITY TODAY Magazine

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

Cover Story

1996 Christianity Today Book Awards

By John Wilson, Book Review Editor

When Crowds Gather, 'No Greater Love' Is There

Cathy Rogers Franklin in New Orleans

CIA Use of Missionaries Revisited

RCA Pastor Refuses to Repent

Prepacked Communion Takes Off

John W. Kennedy

Politics and Pulpit A Real Confession

Deposed Bishop Invents Online Diocese

Graham Son Subs for Dad Down Under

Anglican Province Created

John B. Carpenter in Singapore

Patriarchs Quarrel over Estonia

CHARLES COLSON: Christian v. America

'The Right to Parent': Should It Be Fundamental?

Kim A. Lawton in Washington, D.C.

Graham Reaches Largest Television Audience

Jury Still Out on Homosexual Ordination

Randy Frame

Muslim-Christian Conflicts May Destabilize East Africa

Bruce Brander

Stanley's Wife Halts Divorce Plans

Gayle White in Atlanta

News

News Briefs: April 29, 1996

Where Is the Christian Men's Movement Headed?

Steve Rabey

Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from April 29, 1996

ARTICLE: Politics and Religion Do Mix

Bruce Barron

ARTICLE: Rehearsing Forgiveness

Cornelius Plantinga, Jr.

ARTICLE: The Jesus Seminar Unmasked

Robert J. Hutchinson

ARTICLE: The Case for Christian Kitsch

Richard J. Mouw

ARTICLE: Saint John Wayne and the Dragon

Michael G. Maudlin

ARTICLE: Why Volunteers Won’t Save America

Tim Stafford

Editorial

EDITORIAL: Confessions of an Editor

John Wilson

Editorial

EDITORIAL: Our Extended, Persecuted Family

LETTERS: Jesus is the truth

News

Flash Cards from Heaven

By Steve Rabey in Colorado Springs

View issue

Our Latest

News

Author Philip Yancey Confesses Affair, Withdraws from Ministry

The writer said he will retire from speaking and writing and grieves “the devastation I have caused.”

News

After Maduro’s Capture, Venezuelan Pastors Pray for Peace

Meanwhile, the diaspora celebrates the strongman’s ouster.

Church Scandals Don’t Negate God’s Faithfulness

That fallen pastor or troubled tradition was never responsible for the truthfulness of the gospel. That is God’s work, and God never fails us.

Review

The Insufficient Secular Case Against Porn

A new book from Jo Bartosch and Robert Jessel makes a compelling and rightfully angry case against pornography but fails to articulate a better sexual ethic.

Excerpt

Fighting Addiction Starts with Forgiveness

An excerpt from Freely Sober: Rethinking Alcohol Through the Lens of Faith on God’s grace in setting the captives free.

The Bulletin

US Captures Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro

Mike Cosper, Clarissa Moll

David French and Elizabeth Neumann join to discuss the US’s extraction of Nicolás Maduro from Venezuela.

Death of a Eulogy

Matthew D. Love

Christian funerals are increasingly secular. But how can Christians go quiet on the gospel at these of all moments?

The Vanishing Gifts of Boredom

The Bulletin with Christine Rosen

How technology steals uncomfortable yet formative human experiences.

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