Issue 48
$0.00
Gregory Wolfe’s editorial about why C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien don’t constitute a full Christian literary diet; Scott Russell Sanders explores desire; and Charles Pickstone pays close attention to the detailed sculpture of Victoria Rance. With poems by Martha Serpas, Allison Funk, and Pattiann Rogers; an interview with Randall Kenan, author of Let the Dead Bury Their Dead and researcher for Walking on Water: Black American Lives at the Turn of the Twenty-first Century; fiction by new novelist Ryan Blacketter; and more.
Out of stock
Description
Editorial Statement
Gregory Wolfe, Why the Inklings Aren’t Enough
Fiction
Ellen Morris Prewitt, Held at Gunpoint
Ryan Blacketter, Starlings
Hadley Hury, Till It Hurts
Poetry
Pattiann Rogers, Two Poems
Alfred Corn, Living Sacrifices
Martha Serpas, Three Poems
Anya Krugovoy, Three Poems
Theodore Deppe, Night Shift, Cooley Dickinson Hospital
Richard Chess, Language Lesson
Robert Cording, Two Poems
Allison Funk, Two Poems
Interview
A Conversation with Randall Kenan
Visual Arts
Charles Pickstone, Paying Attention: The Sculpture of Victoria Rance
Scott Driscoll, Eleanor Dickinson’s Portraits of the Soul
Essays
Amy Newman, Wondering Thomas
Scott Russell Sanders, The Sound of My Desire
Confessions
Virginia Stem Owens, The Message in the Body
Book Review
John B. Breslin, S.J., on Paul Mariani’s Deaths and Transfigurations
Additional information
Weight | .75 lbs |
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Dimensions | 10 × 7 × .5 in |