The Red Triangle: Mexico

By |2025-12-13T11:47:16-06:00December 13th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Cluny, Communism, History|

After the triumph of Marxist Communism in 1917, the style of the persecution of Catholicism in Mexico gradually altered as the country's rulers adopted the methods employed by Moscow. On the other side of the world, in Mexico, the Church suffered an ordeal similar to that of Christianity in Russia. The Land of the Plumed [...]

Edgar Rice Burroughs, Tarzan, & Fantastic Literature

By |2025-12-12T19:26:17-06:00December 9th, 2025|Categories: Books, David Deavel, Imagination, Literature, Nature of Man, Senior Contributors|

Tarzan might not be “real” in a historical sense, but he is an immortal character whose story makes the reader think, wonder, and take delight. That’s reason enough to celebrate his creator in his sesquicentennial year. 2025 marks the 150th anniversary of the birth of the great modern mythmaker Edgar Rice Burroughs—creator of Tarzan, Mars [...]

The New Charlemagne

By |2025-12-06T12:56:14-06:00December 6th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Cluny, Europe, History, Papacy|

Eager for legitimacy and filled with the lessons of history, Napoleon Bonaparte knew that the title of Emperor that he had just assumed would not be irrevocable in the eyes of his subjects until he had become “the Lord’s Anointed,” like the kings of France. Events since the Concordat had unrolled an endless carpet of [...]

Chesterton and Children

By |2025-12-04T13:59:49-06:00December 4th, 2025|Categories: Books, G.K. Chesterton, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors|

Considering Chesterton’s childlike relationship with children, it seems somehow apt that a new biography of him has been written for children. One of the great and almost secret regrets of G.K. Chesterton and his wife Frances was the sad fact that they were never able to have children. Frances had undergone an operation to help [...]

Theories of Thankfulness

By |2025-11-26T20:00:15-06:00November 26th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Christianity, Michael De Sapio, Senior Contributors, Thanksgiving, Timeless Essays|

Gratitude—both gratitude to the human persons around us and the ultimate gratitude toward the personal God—brings to us a sense of order and peace, a grounding in truth that sets us free. Gratitude, by Dietrich von Hildebrand, Balduin V. Schwarz, Joseph Ratzinger, and Romano Guardini (135 pages, Hildebrand Project, 2023) The great spiritual teachers tell [...]

David McCullough’s “History Matters”

By |2025-11-25T16:02:41-06:00November 25th, 2025|Categories: Books, Chuck Chalberg, History, Senior Contributors|

None of the pieces in this collection are excerpts from David McCullough's many books. And none are culled from anything that might have been on its way to becoming an autobiography. They are simply essays, talks, and musings offered by David McCullough the writer, the student, the artist, and the reader. History Matters, by David [...]

C.S. Lewis’s “Aeneid”: A Labor of Love

By |2025-11-18T14:03:29-06:00November 18th, 2025|Categories: Aeneid, Anthony Esolen, Books, C.S. Lewis, Christianity, Classics, Timeless Essays, Virgil|Tags: |

When a lover of poetry as sensitive and intelligent as C.S. Lewis provides us a translation of Virgil’s “Aeneid,” we should pay attention. C.S. Lewis’s Lost Aeneid: Arms and the Exile, edited by A.T. Reyes (184 pages, Yale University Press, 2011) Every poetic translator worth our attention is, as it were, a secondary artist, one [...]

Herman Melville’s Last Story

By |2025-11-13T22:19:28-06:00November 13th, 2025|Categories: Books, Christine Norvell, Great Books, Herman Melville, Literature|

Some would argue that “Moby Dick,” written at the height of his popularity, is Herman Melville’s best work. But his novella “Billy Budd,” written in obscurity and published twenty years after his death, just might surpass his early masterpieces for its concise portrayal of humanity. “The author is generally supposed to be dead,” writes poet [...]

From Silence to Silence: A Benedictine Pilgrimage to God’s Sanctuary

By |2025-11-14T17:03:53-06:00November 8th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Monasticism, Sainthood, St. Benedict|

Subjective silence itself is not emptiness. It is attention and receptivity. It is also a light, for the soul is ordered to objective silence, to great mysteries in which we participate. “And as we talked and panted for [eternal wisdom], we touched just the edge of it by the utmost leap of our hearts; then, [...]

Jean Raspail’s “The Camp of the Saints” Returns

By |2025-10-23T22:00:27-05:00October 23rd, 2025|Categories: Books, Chuck Chalberg, Dystopia, Europe, Immigration, Literature, Senior Contributors, Western Civilization|

"You are holding in your hands one of the most important dystopian novels ever written,” claims the introduction to the new edition of Jean Raspail's controversial 1973 novel, "The Camp of the Saints," an alternately brutal and comedic savaging of guilt-ridden Westerners, who allow their civilization to disappear by welcoming mass migration from the Third [...]

The Christian Humanism of Andrew Willard Jones

By |2025-10-22T20:20:45-05:00October 22nd, 2025|Categories: American Republic, Books, Bradley J. Birzer, Catholicism, Christian Humanism, New Polity, Senior Contributors|

Challenging a number of schools of thought in economics and political philosophy, Andrew Willard Jones in his book, "The Church Against the State," presents an unapologetically Catholic and specifically Thomist view of the world and, in particular, of America. Jones argues that America, in her own unique fashion, blends that which is venerable and ancient [...]

Go to Top