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Book Review

Object and Apparition

by Matt Sutherland

In 1532, when Christianity first came to the Andes, Spanish colonizers translated Christian texts and music into the native languages and did their damnedest to open the hearts of Andeans to the message of Christ, virgin birth, and the... Read More

Book Review

Salmon, People, and Place

by Matt Sutherland

Jim Lichatowich’s "Salmon, People, and Place" is written with such a steady, knowledgeable hand that readers may get the false impression that salmon prospects in the Pacific Northwest must be improving if someone as qualified as... Read More

Book Review

The Splendor Falls

by Matt Sutherland

Sitting down and enjoying a good, tight essay, we can confidently say, is an acquired taste. Moreover, essays are terribly difficult to write, and publishers will tell you essay collections are second only to poetry in sales ineptitude.... Read More

Book Review

Shake Terribly the Earth

by Matt Sutherland

Little did we know that Ohio University Press has a series of books on race, ethnicity, and gender in Appalachia. The latest, "Shake Terribly the Earth", is a tightly connected collection of essays from Sarah Beth Childers’s rural,... Read More

Book Review

The Small Heart of Things

by Matt Sutherland

To understand Julian Hoffman’s goals in "The Small Heart of Things", you must consider two ideas from his preface: 1) “Awareness is becoming acquainted with environment, no matter where one happens to be,” in the words of Sigurd... Read More

Book Review

Unclenching Our Fists

by Matt Sutherland

Sara Elinoff Acker has been studying relationships, albeit the violent type. In "Unclenching Our Fists", she explores a litany of depressing questions, beginning with why some men become abusive and leading to the eyes-wide-open... Read More

Book Review

The Glass Slipper

by Matt Sutherland

Knowing what we now know about our imitative impulses, we can venture forward to the realm of culture, comfortable with the idea that to live in a place is unavoidably to live out the hopes and dreams of that place. Consider "The Glass... Read More

Book Review

Phantom of the Ego

by Matt Sutherland

Picture yourself in the early twentieth century, fully alive and engaged with the modernist movement’s flowering in the arts, literature, and psychology. Here’s the catch: imagine that the Father of Modernism, Sigmund Freud, didn’t... Read More

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