Barbie is at the same time funny, creative, and thought-provoking. It asks significant questions about being human, who we are and why.
Here is a list of five of my favorite memoirs! I am contributing to an exciting new website featuring one of my books and favorite reads from other authors.
A new book argues for determinism, and a film reveals what such a worldview would produce if lived out faithfully.
An account of the Atlantic slave trade, from 1518-1865 reveals the callous disregard for the life and humanity of blacks created in the image of God.
A novel set in the COVD lockdown, where two strangers and a parrot are forced to consider life, meaning, connections, and how to put up with one another.
Three books telling the history and stories of Native Americans touch deep chords of humanness and help fill out my understanding of the true story of America.
Tara Isabella Burton identifies a myth that shapes our world. That our true humanity is in creating ourselves as we wish and finding ways to have everyone see us that way.
In her latest novel, Ann Patchett has a mother tell her grown daughters of the summer when she dated a Hollywood star. The story wasn’t what they expected.
A review of Cormac McCarthy’s two final novels, The Passenger and Stella Maris. Brilliant stories, brilliantly told about the deeply human quest for meaning.
In the novel Trust, Hernan Diaz demonstrates that hearing a story that seems believable and plausible is not sufficient to know it is true. We need to hear the other side.