The University Bookman
Reviewing Books that Build Culture

Kierkegaard Is for Lovers
Asher Gelzer-Govatos welcomes Philosopher of the Heart, Clare Carlisle’s new introduction to Søren Kierkegaard.

Innovation Through Constraint
Matthew Stewart reviews Scott Newstok’s How to Think Like Shakespeare.

Properly Dangerous Ideas
Chris Butynskyi reviews Chuck Klosterman’s collection Raised in Captivity.

Bradbury in the Afternoon
James E. Person Jr. reviews the final volume of Jonathan Eller’s biography of Ray Bradbury.

Niebuhr on the Crisis of Our Civilization
Francis P. Sempa finds that Reinhold Niebuhr has guidance for our political-spiritual crisis.

A Syrian Islamist Reads Arabic Literature for the First Time
Sam Sweeney reads Kahlil Gibran along with a recently captured Syrian Islamist.

Feudalism Without a Soul
Casey Chalk reviews Joel Kotkin’s The Coming of Neo-Feudalism.

Quasi-Religious Parenting
Melissa Langsam Braunstein reviews Christian Smith’s Religious Parenting.

The Never-Ending Threat of Utopia
Robert Grant Price reviews Kotkin’s The Coming of Neo-Feudalism.
The Book Gallery
A collection of conversations with Bookman editor Luke C. Sheahan and writers and authors of imagination and erudition.