This is my archive
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Molière’s Medicine for Wayward Youth
The seventeenth century playwright had suggestions for what to do with young people who get lost in pretentious ideas and pursuits.
Michael Oakeshott’s Life of Reflection
Timothy Fuller’s new volume of essays on Michael Oakeshott can help us humbly understand the vast complexity of life.
J. K. Rowling and the Hate Monster
The children’s author turned gender commentator has been tweeting the UK through a moment of national madness.
A European in Full
Joseph Ratzinger thought deeply about the mission and identity of Europe, always striving to call it back to itself.
SCOTUS Did Not “Dodge” the Abortion Pill Case
It would be a mistake for those who appreciate and value our constitutional experiment to object to the Court’s enforcement of the standing rule.
The Genesis of Law and Liberty
As Marilynne Robinson shows, the Bible's first book explores some of the most profound mysteries relating to human freedom.
The Essential Emerson
The latest biography of the great transcendentalist captures the paradoxes of his Yankee mind.
Rebooting Market Liberalism in a Populist Age
Advocates of the free market must build their themes into wider messages about the need for political and social renewal.
A New Deal Perspective on the Founding Presidencies
William Leuchtenburg’s new book on the early presidencies offers little new to readers, except the centralizing standards of the New Deal.