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The Homecoming Seasons: An Irish Catholic Returns to a Changing
Long Island is a deeply moving memoir of a returning natives
re-experience of his childhood community. After many years abroad
as a graduate student at Cambridge, a Peace Corps Volunteer in
Thailand, and as a country program director of health care and
agricultural programs in central Africa, James MacGuire returned to
New York and spent most of the 1980s at Time Inc., Macmillan and
the Manhattan Institute. In 1990 he married and several years
later, with a second child on the way, he and his wife decamped
from Manhattan for a small enclave called the Isle of Wight in the
village of Lawrence on the south shore of Long Island, where
MacGuire had grown up. This book tells the story of MacGuire's
return to this world-how it had evolved from ancient times; been
inhabited by indigenous peoples; colonized by the Dutch and
English; and then grew from a sparsely populated agricultural
corner of western Long Island to an early summer resort, then an
outer, and, finally, an inner suburb of New York City. Jamie
MacGuire skillfully weaves memories of his childhood in this almost
hidden world with sketches of his family and their friends before
updating his account with a lovingly detailed, diary-like depiction
of returning. His parents' friends now much older, the community
more diverse, as he, his wife and children make new friends as they
proceed into this changed world. He captures in cinematic detail
the wonder of the wetlands and surrounding natural world, the
poignant life, death and rebirth of community, the joys and sorrows
of marriage and parenthood, and the profound exultation of safely
shepherding two beloved sons to triumphant adulthood. This is an
uplifting literary memoir that will earn and deserve the widest
possible audience.
What does it mean to be Catholic in America? Catholicism and the
American Experience features essays from Robert George, Peter
Steinfels, George Weigel, E. J. Dionne, and many more, exploring
the unique elements of American Catholicism. The volume highlights
the proceedings of the fifth annual Portsmouth Institute
conference. This collection of essays addresses the topic of
Catholicism and the American Experience from diverse points of
view. They discuss thorny topics such as the relationship between
the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and religious
freedom, what it means to be Catholic in a secular age, and the
current state of Catholic art. Essays also explore subjects ranging
from New Evangelization in the church to Catholic leadership.
What does it mean to be Catholic in America? Catholicism and the
American Experience features essays from Robert George, Peter
Steinfels, George Weigel, E. J. Dionne, and many more, exploring
the unique elements of American Catholicism. The volume highlights
the proceedings of the fifth annual Portsmouth Institute
conference. This collection of essays addresses the topic of
Catholicism and the American Experience from diverse points of
view. They discuss thorny topics such as the relationship between
the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and religious
freedom, what it means to be Catholic in a secular age, and the
current state of Catholic art. Essays also explore subjects ranging
from New Evangelization in the church to Catholic leadership.
William F. Buckley, Jr. was a prominent conservative American
political commentator who was known for his rhetorical brilliance
and frequent wit. In his eighty-two- plus years, he founded
National Review, wrote fifty-five books, thousands of columns,
hosted hundreds of Firing Line television shows, and became
recognized as the founder of the modern conservative movement. The
first major conference on William F. Buckley, Jr. was convened by
the Portsmouth Institute, in 2009, specifically to explore the role
William F. Buckley, Jr.'s Catholic faith played in the formation of
his thought and work. This volume of the Portsmouth Review, edited
by Portsmouth Institute director James MacGuire, contains the
proceedings of that conference with contributions by James L.
Buckley, Peter Flanigan, Father George Rutler, Maggie Gallagher,
Kathryn Jean Lopez, Roger Kimball, Joseph Bottum, E.J. Dionne, Lee
Edwards, Clark Judge and Neal Freeman. There are additional
articles by Christopher Buckley and Doms Damian Kearney and Paschal
Scotti O.S.B. William F. Buckley, Jr., though blessed with an
impervious faith, was not always predictable in his Catholic views.
He resisted reforms of Vatican II, questioned many of the Church's
teachings, and was the first to confess that he was no theologian.
With all this in mind, The Catholic William F. Buckley Jr. is an
essential resource for understanding what animated and inspired one
of the great public intellectuals of the second half of the 20st
century.
This book documents the history of religious persecution,
especially focusing on early Jewish and Christian experiences and
the culmination of horrors in the Nazi era, in which six million
Jews, over a million Catholics, and many others were put to death
for their beliefs. The book then focuses on the many types of
religious intolerance in the world today, particularly the genocide
against Christians in the Middle East and Africa, and resurgent
Anti-Semitism in the Middle East, Europe and even the United
States. The book concludes by discussing how we work together to
preserve the ancient civilizations that provided roots for both
Christians and Jews so that their populace and historical artifacts
are safe from destruction and their cultural and religious heritage
are preserved.
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