Hitz reminds us of a way out of the dark woods we find ourselves in, a journey that draws us upwards and out of our isolated selves.
Jessica Hooten Wilson
Nick Ripatrazone engages with novelists for whom faith is a pilgrimage, not a place.
The talents that have been formed in you will serve the world’s needs that call loudest to you.
In Joseph Frank's Lectures, we are taught how to read well, think well, and, as for all grand endeavors, to live with eschatological apprehension.
Every age needs prophets—whether or not they heed their cautions—because prophets stand out of and often against the current.
Even a decade after his death, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn remains one of the most misinterpreted writers of the 20th century.
As our poor usage of words attests, we do not know what “virtuous” means, let alone how to live it, but reading can help.
The master storytellers have much to teach us about our natures and about what makes us happy.
If we want to understand how someone who "has it all" could commit suicide, Walker Percy remains our best guide.
Jessica Hooten Wilson is the Louise Cowan Scholar in Residence in the Humanities and Classical Education graduate program at the University of Dallas. She is the author of three books, including Walker Percy, Fyodor Dostoevsky & the Search for Influence and Reading Walker Percy's Novels. Her edited volume, Solzhenitsyn and American Culture: The Russian Soul in the West will be published by University of Notre Dame Press in 2020.