From Publishers Weekly
This year's spiritual writing anthology is varied and stimulating, showcasing reflections on the faith of children, Bible reading, Kierkegaard and Martin Luther King Jr. Some contributions are journalistic, others autobiographical, others analytical. Sources are wide-ranging and largely "secular," including literary reviews and such standard-bearing magazines as The New Yorker. With provocative and creative compression, the poetry in particular rewards with the fresh views that thoughtful writing stirs. Franz Wright's "Prescience" captures paradox ("Your unwitnessed and destitute coronation"). Among essays, Bill McKibben's "High Fidelity" impresses with its understated excellence. In "Dr. King's Refrigerator," Charles Johnson's fly-on-the-wall conjuring of an imagined scene in the civil rights hero's life is as fresh as the midnight snack it describes. Unfortunately, in this anthology, "best writing" doesn't necessarily mean "best written." Some passages convey only spiritual ozone ("Everything seemed poised on the cusp between familiar and unfamiliar"), which ought to be a sin in the religious genre. Some work is pedantic ("Both were radically opposed to Kulturprotestantismus"). Although some of the material requires more contortion than effort, other writings, using varied paths, reach the goal of inspiring what Barry Lopez in his introduction aptly calls reverence.
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From Booklist
Forget about spiritual, this is some of the best recent American writing, period. Culling from everything from the
Sun and
American Soldier to the
New Yorker and
Christianity Today, Zaleski amasses a treasure trove demonstrating one of the most extraordinary things about American thought--that some of the best of it happens to be spiritual. Whether it's Brooks Haxton reflecting upon his maternal grandfather's morocco Bible, whose pages are "translucent with the oil and dark still with the dirt of his right hand," or Jean Bethke Elshtain recalling her thrifty childhood in "You Kill It, You Eat It," the act of honoring one's parents appears here as both profound and deeply spiritual. When entomologist Margaret Erhart anguishes over the dilemma of having to kill insects to study them, and self-admittedly nonreligious Todd Gitlin reports on cremations in the Indian city of Varanasi on the river Ganges, each spurs reflection on how powerfully spiritual thought can emerge in everything from the most mundane to the most uncommon of human experiences.
Donna ChavezCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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