Reviews

King: A Life

King: A Life Jonathan Eig (Picador, $31, 669 pages) Martin Luther King Jr. is probably the most famous civil rights leader in American history and as such biographies tend toward hagiography. Jonthan Eig’s King: A Life, released in hardcover in 2023 and paperback earlier this year, avoids that mistake, offering a rich and deep exploration of the slain civil rights leader. Eig, [...]

2025-05-06T06:50:37-04:00May 6, 2025|Religion, Reviews|

Catholic Heroes of Civil and Human Rights: 1800-Present

Catholic Heroes of Civil and Human Rights: 1800-Present Matthew Daniels and Roxanne King (Ignatius, $18.95, 205 pages) In Catholic Heroes of Civil and Human Rights Matthew Daniels and Roxanne King profile 16 Catholics who championed civil and human rights in different parts of the world (although mostly the United States) and in different eras. What all 16 men and women have in [...]

2025-05-06T06:39:00-04:00May 6, 2025|Religion, Reviews|

Why Marriage Matters

Paul Tuns, Review I … Do? Why Marriage Still Matters by Andrea Mrozek and Peter Jon Mitchell (Cascade Books, 115 pages, $30 paperback) Andrea Mrozek and Peter Jon Mitchell are with the Canadian Christian think tank Cardus and their recent book I … Do?  is an important and timely little tract on the why marriage matters – or more accurately, why it is [...]

2025-05-06T06:32:32-04:00May 6, 2025|Marriage and Family, Reviews, Society & Culture|

Woodrow Wilson: The Light Withdrawn

Woodrow Wilson: The Light Withdrawn Christoher Cox (Simon & Schuster, $46.00, 615 pages) Former Congressman Christopher Cox has written a critical biography of Woodrow Wilson, who served as president from 1913-1921 and remains, as Cox says in his introduction, “enormously consequential.” Cox outlines Wilson’s energetic presidency which sought to have government’s tentacles reach every corner of the nation but he does not [...]

2025-05-05T18:14:39-04:00May 5, 2025|Politics, Reviews|

The calamity of depopulation

Paul Tuns, Review:  No One Left: Why the World Needs Children by Paul Morland (Forum, $32, 264 pages) Despite a growing number of countries experiencing rapidly declining fertility rates and falling natural population growth (that is, growth without immigration), there are still policymakers and thought leaders that insist that population growth is a problem. Paul Morland has been banging the drum on depopulation [...]

2025-05-05T18:04:36-04:00May 5, 2025|Demography, Reviews|

What’s true about Sugarcane

Rick McGinnis: Interim writer, Rick McGinnis, Amusements First Nations issues are evergreen in Canadian politics, rising to prominence regularly, like during the battle over the Meech Lake Accord in the late ‘80s, when Manitoba MLA Elijah Harper and his eagle feather helped scuttle any attempted constitutional amendment (and got Harper elected as an MP shortly after). It was a major [...]

2025-04-14T18:51:10-04:00April 14, 2025|Religion, Reviews, Rick McGinnis|

American Leviathan

American Leviathan: The Birth of the Administrative State and Progressive Authoritarianism Ned Ryun (Encounter, $25.99, 159 pages) Ned Ryun, founder of American Majority and Voter Gravity, has written a stinging overview of the origins and growth of the so-called Deep State, the class of bureaucrats that have come to rule American society. Ryun shows how bureaucratic rule quickly becomes authoritarian rule. The [...]

2025-04-07T12:35:05-04:00April 7, 2025|Politics, Reviews|

The importance of Montesquieu and his four cardinal goods

Sarah Stilton, Review:  Montesquieu’s The Spirit of the Laws: A Critical Edition Edited by W. B. Allen (Anthem Press, $215, 954 pages) There are Marxists and Lockeans, Nietzscheans and Aristotelians but there are no Montesquieuans. The knock against Charles Louis de Secondat, baron de La Brède et de Montesquieu is that he created no system, that he was not a theorizer. Montesquieu is considered a [...]

2025-04-02T13:08:19-04:00April 2, 2025|Politics, Reviews|

The Chicago Canon on Free Inquiry and Expression

The Chicago Canon on Free Inquiry and Expression Edited by Tony Banout and Tom Ginsburg (University of Chicago Press, $26, 228 pages) The University of Chicago is justly famous for its defense of freedom of expression and free inquiry against the censorious barbarians at the gates of academia, and within it. Over the past decade, as many universities set out to provide [...]

2025-04-01T12:09:16-04:00April 1, 2025|Reviews|

A History of the Muslim World

A History of the Muslim World: From its Origins to the Dawn of Modernity Michael Cook (Princeton, $54, 895 pages) Michael Cook, a professor of Near-Eastern Studies in Princeton and author of numerous books on Islam, has written a massive, wide-ranging history of the Muslim world, from Muhammad’s birth in the sixth century through is spread over most of the Old World, [...]

2025-03-12T12:44:20-04:00March 12, 2025|Religion, Reviews|

The Revelation of Ireland

The Revelation of Ireland: 1995-2020 Diarmaid Perriter (Profile, $47, 552 pages) Diarmaid Perriter is a professor of Irish history at University College in Dublin and a columnist for the Irish Times and at times his latest history of Ireland – he has written 14 books on Ireland – seems more journalism than history. That is certainly due to fact that this “history” [...]

2025-03-12T12:37:27-04:00March 12, 2025|Abortion, Religion, Reviews|

Is humanity the sum of its information networks?

Sarah Stilton Review: Nexus: A Brief History of Information Networks from the Stone Age to AI by Yuval Noah Harari (Signal, $45, 492 pages) Yuval Noah Harari is something of a rock star public intellectual who burst onto the scene with his 2014 book Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind, originally published in Hebrew in 2011. Previously a military historian, the Oxford-trained [...]

2025-03-12T12:17:32-04:00March 12, 2025|Bioethics, Reviews, Society & Culture|

The Price of Power: How Mitch McConnell Mastered the Senate, Changed America, and Lost His Party

The Price of Power: How Mitch McConnell  Mastered the Senate, Changed America, and Lost His Party Michael Tackett (Simon & Schuster, $44, 397 pages) Michael Tackett’s The Price of Power is a mainstream journalist’s fair-minded account of one of the most important elected figures in U.S. history, a man whose mastering of Senate procedures led him to command and control his party [...]

2025-03-08T08:54:30-05:00March 8, 2025|Politics, Reviews|

Does Jordan Peterson believe in God?

Paul Tuns Review: We Who Wrestle with God: Perceptions of the Divine by Jordan Peterson (Portfolio, $48, 544 pages) Former University of Toronto psychology professor and international darling of the Right Jordan Peterson’s fourth book, We Who Wrestle with God seems to have landed with a thud after two bestselling self-help books. The massive tome is an exegesis on Genesis, Exodus, and [...]

2025-03-07T12:33:21-05:00March 7, 2025|Paul Tuns, Religion, Reviews|

Why We Love Football: A History in 100 Moments

Why We Love Football: A History in 100 Moments Joe Posnanski (Dutton, $39.99, 392) Joe Posnanski is one of the best sportswriters in the biz because he is fundamentally human and humane when writing about his subject. In Why We Love Football he explores 90 important moments and ten of the best players in NFL history to show why sports can be [...]

2025-03-06T10:57:09-05:00March 6, 2025|Reviews|
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