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Summer book reviews

Beauty, Wonder and Belonging

Sheila McKinley, osu, read Beauty, Wonder and Belonging: A Book of Hours for the Monastery of the Cosmos, appreciating the book’s aid in reflecting prayerfully each day. Read more »

Making the Best of It

Rebekah Sears considers who we are for Jesus, today, in her review of Making the Best of It by John G. Stackhouse. Read more »

Hope in an Age of Despair

Joe Gunn suggests that Hope in an Age of Despair is one of those books that you want to keep close by forever. Read more »

The Great Turning

Karri Munn-Venn appreciates David Korten’s inspiring vision of the possible in The Great Turning. Read more »

The Spirit Level

Kathy Vandergrift reviews The Spirit Level, suggesting that greater equality is actually one of the greatest protectors of liberty and the means to a sustainable economy. Read more »

"Mordor" or "emerging energy superpower"?

Joe Gunn takes a stab at three books, all relating to the Alberta oil sands debate, in this review. Looking at Stupid to the Last Drop, Tar Sands Showdown and Tar Sands: Dirty Oil and the Future of a Continent, Joe traces their shared themes and how the books build on each other, making a case for examining our current response to the oil sands. Read more »

A Fair Country

Maylanne Maybee reviews John Ralston Saul's A Fair Country, and also suggests books that share this theme for more summer reading. Read more »

The Gift of Thanks

What does is mean when you say “thank you”? Kathy Vandergrift reviews Margaret Visser’s exploration of this oft-stated social ritual. Read more »

Economics for Everyone

Economics for Everyone is an accessible, humorous, thoughtful guide to explaining economics, argues Chandra Pasma, discussing Jim Stanford’s latest work. Read more »

Managing Without Growth

Mariel Angus reviews Managing Without Growth by Peter Victor, who discusses how our desire for continual economic growth may, in fact, be limiting, calling us to slow down and shift our priorities. Read more »

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