by George Santayana ‧ RELEASE DATE: Aug. 4, 1995
This is "news" — a Santayana that classifies as "fiction" — and fiction with a good chance for a sale almost, not quite, in the popular class. With the record of the Thomas Wolfe success last Spring, the bookseller has something to shoot at, as it is distinctly of that genre. Try for the intellectual snob appeal market — it's right down that lane. A philosophical, psychological, biographical novel (yes, those rhythms are intentional) — the story of a last leaf on the tree of Puritanism, of a youth who died in the war, but who lived long enough to prove once more that the mold of Puritanism has not been broken. The tie-up with The Education of Henry Adams, though fairly obvious, is completely justified. An important book, in the American tradition.
Pub Date: Aug. 4, 1995
ISBN: 0262691787
Page Count: 672
Publisher: Scribner
Review Posted Online: May 22, 2012
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 1935
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by Desmond Tutu ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 1, 1994
This chronologically arranged collection of speeches, writings, and letters by Nobelist Desmond Tutu, Anglican archbishop of Cape Town, offers some gripping primary source material from the battle against apartheid. In the first selection of the volume, a letter dated May 6, 1976, Tutu, then dean of St. Mary's Cathedral in Johannesburg, asks Prime Minister John Vorster, ``How long can a people, do you think, bear such blatant injustice and suffering?'' The book ends with a prayer given by Tutu at Nelson Mandela's inauguration as the South African president on May 10, 1994. What emerges is a documentary history (albeit in only one voice) of the protracted death of apartheid and an affirmation of nonracial democracy by a man whose political acts are emphatically motivated by his Christian faith.
Pub Date: Oct. 1, 1994
ISBN: 0-385-47546-2
Page Count: 304
Publisher: Doubleday
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 1994
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by Dalai Lama & Desmond Tutu ; illustrated by Rafael López
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by Desmond Tutu and Mpho Tutu
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by Desmond Tutu ; illustrated by Nancy Tillman
by David Blackbourn ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 15, 1994
An absorbing, challenging work of ``bottom-up'' history that gives a voice to the unlettered and the disempowered. Blackbourn (History/Harvard) transforms an apparently minor historical curiosity, an instance at best of religious pathology, into a fascinating, surprising, and moving picture of cultural turmoil in the new German nation-state. The event in question is the alleged visitation of the Virgin Mary to three schoolchildren in the remote Rhineland village of Marpingen in 1876, and the response thereto. With sure control of his material and an archaeologist's reconstructive gift, Blackbourn deftly reveals the Marpingen events as a tangled but telling intersection of multiple cultural currents: religious strife, both interdenominational and between competing tendencies in the Catholic hierarchy itself; local communal rivalry; class tensions; grassroots populist activism; Bismarck's ongoing Kulturkampf (``cultural war'') against the Catholic Church; and the upheavals in work and family life provoked by the confrontation of a traditional rural culture with the very different rhythms of a 19th-century industrial state. Blackbourn brushes against the grain of readers' expectations: He encourages us to regard the widespread popular support of the visionaries not as superstitious medieval credulity but as a sophisticated mobilization of deep-rooted cultural resources by a community beset by social dislocation. Conversely, the ``progressive'' modernizing forces of state authority, whose response to the apparitions varied from patrician condescension to outright contempt or suspicion, stand revealed as at least as self- righteous and blinkered (by a faith in secular rationality often as unyielding as religious dogma) as the peasants they undertook to control. The Church itself is riven and ambivalent, its sponsorship of the cult of the Madonna at odds with the increasingly authoritarian bent of the 19th-century Vatican. This dense, authoritative book demands and deserves an attentive reading and offers rewards few recent historical narratives can match.
Pub Date: Sept. 15, 1994
ISBN: 0-679-41843-1
Page Count: 448
Publisher: Knopf
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 1994
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