
Postliberal reviews of mostly contemporary books. Interested in a kind of ecumenical Christian futurism as a functional synthesis of major global/historical principles: Western pragmatism and Eastern traditionalism.
| Platform | Pricing | Only free issues | Publishes | Monthly | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Issues | 10 | Founded | 2 years ago | Last Issue | a year ago |
| Active | |||||

In my review of Rachel Haywire’s National Futurist Gallery Launch party, I talked about “materialism” as a point of agreement between liberals and communists. This is a general point, obviously, and is useful in as far as it roughly indicat...
In July of 2017, my wife (then-girlfriend) and I were in the process of moving from Greenpoint to Palo Alto. We were in Austin, TX at my mother-in-law’s house, looking through her library of cookbooks.
“Oh, this one is really twist-o-flex,...
Whether or not we are in a revolutionary period of history is open to interpretation. I’m sure that there are plenty of compelling arguments against this theory; further, I’m not a historian: I primarily read fiction, and when I read–or mor...
Among /newwave/ authors, there’s been some discussion of fiction becoming a “conservatory form.” What this means is that fiction will become like classical music: readers will be outside of the mainstream, in a kind of harmless and educated...
The Neighbor is a provocative title for a story set in a trailer park.
The victim is Ace, a drug dealing pimp, possibly in his 60s; the perpetrator is Clemons, a dishwasher and drug abuser.
They live in adjacent trailers.
The story be...
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Postliberal reviews of mostly contemporary books. Interested in a kind of ecumenical Christian futurism as a functional synthesis of major global/historical principles: Western pragmatism and Eastern traditionalism.
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