Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Gmail - "To Collect Is to Write a Life" - Books & Culture Corner - jacobthanni@gmail.com

Gmail - "To Collect Is to Write a Life" - Books & Culture Corner - jacobthanni@gmail.com

"To Collect Is to Write a Life" - Books & Culture Corner
booksandculture-html@lists.christianitytoday.com
http://lists.christianitytoday.com/t/12521594/7181730/153830/0/Read the online version here.

ChristianityToday.com
Books & Culture Christianity Today International
A Weekly Bulletin from the Editors of Books & Culture Magazine
Tuesday, July 29, 2008



Afew days ago in Pasadena, reading the Letters section of the Los Angeles Times, I learned (via a letter from four former editors of the Book Review) that Sam Zell and his people—who took over the Tribune Co. a while back—have decided to kill the section. The timing is interesting, since the Books section of the Chicago Tribune has for several weeks featured a little box asking "What are you looking for in a books section?" Under longtime literary editor Elizabeth Taylor, the Tribune has had an excellent Books section, one that is clearly rooted in Chicago and the Midwest more generally while never seeming parochial. Alas, in a cost-cutting move, the Tribune's bosses have already been weakening the section by reprinting reviews from other Tribune Co. properties as well as from assorted miscellaneous sources, so that what's original to the Trib's own section keeps shrinking. Somehow I don't think it's going to get better in September, when the paper unveils its new, slimmed-down look.

Here at Books & Culture we still think books are important (whether you are reading them in traditional form or via Kindle or absorbing them through your skin). And speaking of Chicagoland, our Book of the Week—Collections of Nothing, a memoir by William Davies King—comes from the University of Chicago Press, one of the glories of American publishing, long may they prosper. In this wonderfully odd and lapidary little book, reviewer Linda McCullough Moore finds intimations that our deepest hopes are not in vain.

In articles from the July/August issue of Books & Culture, Alvin Plantinga explains why evolution and naturalism, far from being mutually supportive, are more like oil and water, while Douglas Groothuis reports on the latest skirmishes in the great debate between atheists and believers.

Thanks for reading.
John Wilson


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