In Perfect Eloquence, journalist Tom Hoffarth has assembled an entertaining, detailed and assuming history of Vin Scully's long, charmed life in the form of 67 essays by people who knew him.
The new graphic novel on the life of Dorothy Day is the perfect medium to convey the nuance, power and multi-dimensionality of Day's legacy, writes Jeromiah Taylor.
Reading this book by veteran journalist Ray Suarez from a Catholic perspective raises fundamental questions. What are we as a church failing to see in the waves of migration?
Historical fiction or eyewitness account? The Mole of Vatican Council II details desperate efforts by Curial traditionalists to sabotage the Second Vatican Council to "save the faith" — and how close they came to achieving that objective.
In her latest book, Not So Sorry, popular Catholic author Kaya Oakes takes on abusers, forced apologies and the power dynamic within our theology of forgiveness.
In While I Breathe, I Hope, theologian Richard Gaillardetz chronicles his own process of dying of pancreatic cancer in reflections that address hard questions about the meaning of death, healing and the afterlife.
In The Dreadful History and Judgement of God on Thomas Müntzer, Andrew Drummond paints a picture of a complicated society struggling with economic inequality just as much as, if not more than, issues of doctrine.
In City as Playground, Leadership Foundations has curated a compelling collection of insights by pastors, practitioners, theologians, organizers and activists across a spectrum of religious traditions.
Sociologist Allison Pugh explores this "connective labor" — work that "involves 'seeing' the other and reflecting that understanding back" — in her new book, The Last Human Job: The Work of Connecting in a Disconnected World.