The next issue of FORMA (CiRCE's journal) is headed to the printer very soon!⠀
Featuring essays on Marilynne Robinson's legacy, cancel culture and the Great Books, and more. Subscribe now to ensure your copy arrives this November. Only $5/month!
https://t.co/4kvbppp6wm
We created a special bonus digital issue of FORMA that shares eight strategies for attacking your summer with purpose. We hope you enjoy this guide and we would love to hear which strategies you’ll be following over the next few months. Happy reading!
https://t.co/04ein0iW2q
Our next issue of FORMA (#14!) is headed to the printer very soon. There is still time to subscribe and make sure it gets to your mailbox!
Subscribe now and get 20% off for 1 year!
https://t.co/Hvij9n4zGu
They've been out around a week now, and you should absolutely pick up copies for yourself.
@KSPrior "articulates a Christian mode of reading that can approach any work of literature as testament to the nature of man, the world, and their maker."
https://t.co/cg99jSjV8I
@_SeanJohnson on @KSPrior's new editions of HEART OF DARKNESS & SENSE AND SENSIBILITY: "Prior articulates a Christian mode of reading that [approaches] any work of literature on its own terms, as a testament to the nature of man, the world, & their maker." https://t.co/24kPDKFSlc
I received the new issue of @FormaJournal yesterday and it’s beautiful. I have a question for those of you who also received it: do you see the house and/or trees of Andalusia in the peacock’s eye on the cover? If so, that is an amazing artistic detail that makes me happy. 🦚
@iamheidiwhitey talks with Lancia Smith, founder and director of the Cultivating Project, about the redeeming power of nurturing art and beauty in intentional community.
Available now on the FORMA Podcast feed wherever you get podcasts.
"The Slumbering Host is a slim but meaningful ray of hope from an independent publishing house which may not be starting a movement, but may indeed be speaking for one."
@iamheidiwhitey on THE SLUMBERING HOST, a new collection from Little Gidding Press.
https://t.co/qv8uJtBnXt
Don't miss the one-and-only @jwilson1812 on THE WORLD IS ALWAYS COMING TO AN END!
"...what Rotella offers is far richer, deeper, and stranger than any routine lamentation over that 'deepening divide.' "
https://t.co/wKuEpbdcAP
In our winter issue we have a photo-feature on Andalusia, Flannery O'Connor's homeplace and it's available now to subscribers of the FORMA Review. Sign up now to get access to this and much more excellent content from the print magazine.
https://t.co/6O9DRAbdYD
Our winter issue is at the printer now, but there's still time to subscribe. The issue features an essay on why a cosmopolitan AND a classical education is necessary, a look at Andalusia, and an essay on Chesteron's Flambeau.
Subscribe today! https://t.co/LtHSY1keZR
Get ready friends. We've got lots of great content coming, including a photographic peek inside Andalusia (Flannery O'Connor's homeplace) for our subscribers. Subscribe now to get access to that and much more from the print edition of the Journal.
https://t.co/bxa4AHzWEA
"As the book unfolds, it becomes clear that for Lewis and his Inkling companions, myths were not merely invented stories for interested literary hobbyists."
Carla Galdo on THE FAUN'S BOOKSHELF by Charlie W. Starr (out now from Kent State U. Press
https://t.co/XaPBVgq8sM
Conservatives do not need politics to be sublime and hopeful, though. They have art and religion for that. Scruton had a great diversity of interests because he could.
https://t.co/I5ONCJ10JJ
Joshua Gibbs on the enviable life of Roger Scruton.
"Because he never asked more of politics than it could reasonably give, Scruton lived a good life. A cursory glance of Scruton’s bibliography suggests a full life, a rich life, and an enviable one"
https://t.co/9eiqOvveIJ