Theological Notebook: A Review of Thomas Cahill on Pope John XXIII

Dec 06, 2007 23:23

Googling for something else, I found this book review on the Carnegie Council website. of a Thomas Cahill book I'd never heard of on Pope John XXIII that I thought was engaging and worth copying into the notebook.  The anecdotes related about Roncalli in Paris are worth the read alone.   Thomas ( Read more... )

second vatican council, theological notebook, papacy, books, historical, catholicism

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novak December 9 2007, 04:07:29 UTC

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friede December 7 2007, 13:02:12 UTC
How the Irish Saved Civilization: The Untold Story of Ireland's Heroic Role from the Fall of Rome to the Rise of Medieval Europe (1995)

I have a copy of that book. I think I bought it at the EGSA booksale year before last, precisely to send/give to you.

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novak December 9 2007, 04:08:43 UTC
Heh. I've had it for years, I'm afraid. It's quite fun, even if - as with all of these, it looks like - I might argue certain points. Please consider it my gift to you!

:-D

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friede December 9 2007, 07:19:40 UTC
*eyeroll*

It will no doubt find a home -- if nothing else, it goes back into the life cycle of EGSA books.

For now, it makes its home alongside other books destined for other hands: Coelho's The Fifth Mountain, Dirda's Caring for Your Books, an extra copy of Lewis's Experiment in Criticism, Yale: A Short History, and Literature of the Occult. Interestingly, most of these books I have no interest in myself, but know others who do or might, and so a cache forms.

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novak December 9 2007, 07:36:45 UTC
Interesting! The last three all catch my eye, for one reason or another. I don't have the Experiment in my Lewis collection, although I finally found an old copy of The Allegory of Love, which I also have yet to read.

And I love that you got the new dress and immediately iconed yourself in it. It's an interesting cut around the neck.

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word_herder December 8 2007, 01:54:22 UTC
I love Thomas Cahill. I've got all his Hinges of History books, which are beautifully written. They're not history books--more like philosophical sociology. But well-written. I've not read any of his biographical works, though. Maybe I should pick them up with I (impatiently) await the next HH book.

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novak December 9 2007, 04:10:13 UTC
I'm reading through Desire of the Everlasting Hills: The World Before and After Jesus right now, which was given to me by an aunt last year for Christmas. I was curious about how I might use it for a class, or an intro class in particular.

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