India News | ‘Germany Day’ to Be Observed in Kolkata Book Fair on Jan 29

Kolkata, Jan 16 (PTI) ‘Germany Day’ will be celebrated at the 48th International Kolkata Book Fair on January 29, Publishers and Booksellers Guild, the organisers of the fair said on Thursday. Germany is the focal theme country in the International Kolkata Book Fair which will be held from January 28 to February 9 at Salt Lake City, Kolkata. Also Read | Saif Ali Khan Stabbing Case: CM Devendra Fadnavis Says One or Two Incidents Don’t Define Mumbai’s Safety. German Ambassador Philipp Ackermann and Director Goethe Institut, Max Mueller Bhavan New Delhi Marla Stukenberg, will be present at the grand inaugural ceremony of the book fair on January 28 as guests of honour, Guild president Tridib Chatterjee said at a press meet in New Delhi. The book fair organisers will celebrate January 29 as ‘Theme Country Germany Day’ on the book fair ground in the presence of a team from Germany consisting of litterateurs, artists and painters from the European nation, he said. Also Read | Infosys Q3 Results: Net Profit Rises by 11.5% to INR 6,806 Crore, IT Firm Delivers Strong and Broad-Based Performance With 6.1% YoY Growth. This year, there will be no hangars (halls) coming up to house English language publishers in a cluster like in past years and a designated ‘Premier Area’ for all English language participants. However, there will be stalls for individual publications and state/central organisations, he said, adding around 1,000 stalls will come up at the fair this year.. “Last year, 2.7 million people visited the book fair and books worth Rs 23 crore were sold. We are amazed at this landmark moment created by the booklovers,” Chatterjee said. On the day of the inauguration, a special ‘Sahitya Samman’ (literary award) worth Rs 2 lakh will be handed over by chief guest West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee to prominent Bengali litterateur Abul Bashar. All major publishing houses like Penguin Random House, Harper Collins, Hachette, Bloomsbury, Rupa, Pan Macmillan, Orient Blackswan, Parragon, Pearson, Westland and others will have their own pavilions in the International Kolkata Book Fair 2025.. US, UK, France, Iran, Russia, Spain, Argentina, Guatemala, Peru, Costa Rica, Iran and other Latin American countries are participating directly. For the first time, there will be a special exhibition titled ‘Engraved Illustrations: Journey of Book Illustrations during the 19th Century in Bengal, curated by Jyotirmoy Bhattacharya. The exhibition will highlight the chronological journey of engraved illustrations in Bengali books from the 1800s to the 1900s. It will also feature original books from the 19th century, woodblocks, and other printmaking exhibits.(This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body)

Biden warns of ‘oligarchy’ and ‘tech-industrial complex’ in farewell speech

SPEAKING FROM THE OVAL OFFICE ONE LAST TIME AS THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES – PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN DELIVERED HIS FAREWELL ADDRESS LAST NIGHT. TOUCHING ON WHAT HE BELIEVES ARE HIS ACCOMPLISHMENTS OVER THE PAST FOUR YEARS, BIDEN ALSO SPOKE ABOUT REFORMS HE WOULD LIKE TO SEE MADE IN WASHINGTON AND ISSUED A STARK WARNING – DETAILING HIS CONCERNS ON WHAT HE SEES AS A CONCENTRATION OF POWER AMONG THE ULTRA-WEALTHY AS WELL AS THE RISKS OF TECHNOLOGY. 
IN WHAT IS LIKELY HIS FINAL ADDRESS TO THE NATION AFTER A POLITICAL CAREER SPANNING FIVE DECADES – BIDEN OPENED UP HIS SPEECH SPEAKING ABOUT THE CEASEFIRE DEAL IN GAZA,  ANNOUNCED EARLIER IN THE DAY,  SAYING HE KEPT THE INCOMING ADMINISTRATION FULLY INFORMED. HE THEN LISTED SOME JOB GROWTH FOLLOWING THE PANDEMIC, MODERNIZATION OF INFRASTRUCTURE, AND MEDICARE REFORM – TELLING  AMERICANS IT WILL TAKE TIME TO FEEL THE FULL IMPACT OF WHAT HAS BEEN ACHIEVED. 
WITH INAUGURATION OF DONALD TRUMP JUST DAYS AWAY, BIDEN SAID HE WILL ENSURE A PEACEFUL TRANSFER OF POWER, BUT CAUTIONED. 
PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN 
Today, an oligarchy is taking shape in America of extreme wealth, power and influence that literally threatens our entire democracy, our basic rights and freedoms, and a fair shot for everyone to get ahead. We see the consequences all across America. And we’ve seen it before. More than a century ago, the American people stood up to the robber barons back then and busted the trusts. They didn’t punish the wealthy. They just made the wealthy play by the rules everybody else had. Workers want rights to earn their fair share. 
REFERENCING PRESIDENT EISENHOWER’S CONCERNS ABOUT A MILITARY-INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX SIX DECADES AGO, BIDEN SAID HE’S EQUALLY CONCERNED ABOUT THE DANGERS OF A POTENTIAL RISE OF A TECH-INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX. 
PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN 
Americans are being buried under an avalanche of misinformation and disinformation enabling the abuse of power. The free press is crumbling. Editors are disappearing. Social media is giving up on fact-checking. The truth is smothered by lies told for power and for profit. We must hold the social platforms accountable to protect our children, our families and our very democracy from the abuse of power.  
BIDEN NEXT REMARKED ABOUT THE RISE OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE – CALLING IT THE MOST CONSEQUENTIAL TECHNOLOGY OF OUR TIME AND THAT THE US — NOT CHINA — MUST LEAD IN THIS RACE. 
THE PRESIDENT ALSO SPOKE OF HIS HOPES FOR CHANGE IN THE NATION’S CAPITAL – CALLING FOR AN END OF HIDDEN FUNDING CALLED “DARK MONEY” FROM CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTIONS, A BAN ON STOCK TRADING FROM MEMBERS OF CONGRESS AND FOR THE U.S. TO ENACT AN 18-YEAR TERM LIMIT ON SUPREME COURT JUSTICES. HE ALSO CALLED FOR THE U.S. CONSTITUTION TO BE AMENDED. 
PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN 
We need to amend the Constitution to make clear that no president, no president is immune from crimes that he or she commits while in office. The president’s power is not limit — it is not absolute. And it shouldn’t be. 
IN CLOSING, PRESIDENT BIDEN CALLED ON AMERICANS TO STAY ENGAGED IN THE PROCESS OF DEMOCRACY. TELLING THE STORY OF A VETERAN WHO WORKED AT THE STATUE OF LIBERTY — KNOWN AS THE KEEPER OF THE FLAME — HE SAID AMERICA WILL ALWAYS BE DEFINED BY ONE WORD – POSSIBILITIES. 
PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN 
My eternal thanks to you, the American people. After 50 years of public service, I give you my word, I still believe in the idea for which this nation stands — a nation where the strength of our institutions and the character of our people matter and must endure. Now it’s your turn to stand guard. May you all be the keeper of the flame. May you keep the faith. I love America. You love it, too.
HOW THE PRESIDENT’S ADDRESS WAS RECEIVED DEPENDS ON WHOSE SOCIAL MEDIA ACCOUNT YOU CHOSE TO CLICK ON. 
THE SPEECH GARNERED RESPONSES ON BOTH ENDS OF THE SPECTRUM.  
REPUBLICAN CONGRESSWOMAN NANCY MACE WRITING ON X QUOTE “JOE BIDEN DISCUSSING DEMOCRACY, A FREE PRESS, INSTITUTIONS AND THE ABUSE OF POWER IN HIS FINAL FAREWELL SPEECH IS RICH.” 
REPUBLICAN CONGRESSMAN DARRELL ISSA WRITING QUOTE “JOE BIDEN’S GOING OUT OF OFFICE THE SAME WAY HE WENT IN: PETTY, PARTISAN, AND FRANKLY NOT TELLING THE TRUTH.” 
AND REPUBLICAN SENATOR RICK SCOTT WRITING QUOTE “President Biden’s “farewell address” should have been a formal apology for the endless lawfare, inflation-fueling policies and reckless decisions made during his administration.” 
MEANWHILE ON THE DEMOCRATIC SIDE, FORMER SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE NANCY PELOSI WRITING “Tonight, President Biden delivered his farewell address to a nation that is stronger because of his leadership.  In doing so, he honored the vision of founders, the sacrifice of our men and women in uniform and the aspirations of our children.” 
AND FORMER PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA WRITING ABOUT HIS FORMER VICE PRESIDENT – SAYING, “Four years ago, in the middle of a pandemic, we needed a leader with the character to put politics aside and do what was right. That’s what Joe Biden did… I’m grateful to Joe for his leadership, his friendship, and his lifetime of service to this country we love.” 
THIS MORNING, ISRAELI PRIME MINISTER BENJAMIN NETANYAHU’S OFFICE SAYS HIS CABINET WILL **NOT** MEET TO APPROVE THE DEAL FOR A CEASEFIRE IN GAZA… UNTIL HAMAS ENDS A QUOTE A “LAST-MINUTE CRISIS.” 
THE DECISION COMES AFTER NETANYAHU’S OFFICE SAYS HAMAS WENT BACK ON SOME OF THE TERMS OF THE AGREEMENT — BUT DID NOT SPECIFY WHICH TERMS. 
EVEN AS A DEAL SEEMS CLOSE OR EVEN IMMINENT — ISRAELI STRIKES HAVE CONTINUED IN THE GAZA STRIP, WITH THE TERRITORY’S HEALTH MINISTRY REPORTING AT LEAST 48 PEOPLE HAVE BEEN KILLED OVER THE PAST DAY. 
UNDER THE THREE-PHASE CEASEFIRE AGREEMENT — FIGHTING WILL STOP IN GAZA FOR 42 DAYS.  33 ISRAELI HOSTAGES — INCLUDING 2 AMERICANS- AND HUNDREDS OF PALESTINIAN PRISONERS WILL BE FREED IN THE FIRST PHASE, WHICH IS SET TO GO INTO EFFECT SUNDAY.  THE REMAINDER OF THE HOSTAGES, INCLUDING ISRAELI MALE SOLDIERS, ARE TO BE RELEASED IN A SECOND PHASE.  HAMAS HAS SAID IT WILL NOT RELEASE THE REMAINING CAPTIVES WITHOUT A LASTING CEASEFIRE AND A FULL ISRAELI WITHDRAWAL, 
ISRAELI TROOPS **WILL** PULL BACK TO THE EDGES OF GAZA AND MANY PALESTINIANS WILL BE ABLE TO RETURN TO WHAT REMAINS OF THEIR HOMES — SOMETHING MANY PEOPLE TOOK TO THE STREETS TO CELEBRATE. 
ISRAEL IS ALSO SET TO ALLOW A FLOOD OF HUMANITARIAN AID INTO THE REGION. 
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS IS REPORTING MEDIATORS FROM EGYPT, QATAR AND THE U-S ARE TO MEET IN CAIRO TODAY FOR TALKS ON IMPLEMENTING THE DEAL. 
ON TRUTH SOCIAL, PRESIDENT-ELECT DONALD TRUMP SAID HIS ADMINISTRATION WILL CONTINUE TO WORK CLOSELY WITH ISRAEL TO MAKE SURE GAZA NEVER AGAIN BECOMES A TERRORIST SAFE HAVEN.
BACK HERE IN THE U-S — TO QUOTE THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE — THERE’S GOOD NEWS AND BAD NEWS THIS MORNING IN THE FIGHT AGAINST THE WILDFIRES RAGING IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA. 
THE GOOD NEWS IS THE N-W-S RED FLAG WARNING, FOR THE LOS ANGELES AREA, IS LIFTED AND STRONG WINDS THAT HAVE MADE IT MUCH  HARDER FOR FIRE CREWS TO BATTLE THE FLAMES ARE DYING DOWN. 
THE BAD NEWS, HOWEVER, IS DANGEROUS FIRE AND WEATHER CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED TO RETURN NEXT WEEK. 
THIS AS FIREFIGHTERS ARE STILL WORKING TO CONTAIN THE TWO BIGGEST, DEADLIEST, AND MOST DESTRUCTIVE FIRES, STILL  RAGING RIGHT NOW — THE PALISADES AND EATON FIRES. ALSO, A NEW FIRE HAS BROKEN OUT IN THE SAN BERNARDINO AREA. 
THE EATON AND PALISADES FIRES HAVE NOT GROWN MUCH OVER THE PAST FEW DAYS,  BUT THEY ARE BOTH,  STILL LARGELY UNCONTAINED.  
FIRE OFFICIALS REPORT PROGRESS IN THE DESPERATE FIGHT TO PUT OUT THE FLAMES. 
MEANWHILE, THE LITTLE MOUNTAIN FIRE IN SAN BERNARDINO SPANS MORE THAN 30 ACRES AND HAS NOT YET BEEN CONTAINED. 
POLICE ARRESTED A MAN IN CONNECTION WITH THAT FIRE ON TWO FELONY CHARGES — INCLUDING ONE OF RECKLESS BURNING.
TURNING BACK TO POLITICS — SENATE CONFIRMATION HEARINGS CONTINUE TODAY AS PRESIDENT-ELECT DONALD TRUMP’S PICKS FOR INTERIOR SECRETARY, EPA ADMINISTRATOR, HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT SECRETARY AND TREASURY SECRETARY ANSWER QUESTIONS FROM LAWMAKERS.   
ON WEDNESDAY, PAM BONDI, TRUMP’S NOMINEE FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL WAS ON THE HOT SEAT FROM DEMOCRATIC SENATORS — INCLUDING A QUESTION FROM SENATOR DICK DURBIN ASKING BONDI IF SHE BELIEVED TRUMP LOST THE 2020 ELECTION. 
SEN. DICK DURBIN | D-Ill. 
“To my knowledge, Donald Trump has never acknowledged the legal results of the 2020 election. Are you prepared to say today, under oath without reservation, that Donald Trump lost the presidential contest to Joe Biden in 2020?” 
PAM BONDI | ATTORNEY GENERAL NOMINEE 
“Ranking Member Durbin, President Biden is the president of the United States. He was duly sworn in and he is the president of the United States. There was a peaceful transition of power. President Trump left office and was overwhelmingly elected in 2024.” 
SENATOR MARCO RUBIO, TRUMP’S PICK FOR SECRETARY OF STATE, ALSO HAD HIS HEARING WEDNESDAY. HERE NOW IS STRAIGHT ARROW NEWS POLITICAL CORRESPONDENT RAY BOGAN WITH WHAT HAPPENED IN WASHINGTON.  
OUR RAY BOGAN REPORTING FROM WASHINGTON D.C. 
FINALLY THIS MORNING — A BIG WIN FOR BILLIONAIRE JEFF BEZEOS’ SPACE COMPANY BLUE ORIGIN AS ITS NEW GLENN ROCKET WENT BLASTING OFF INTO 
ORBIT. 
THE COMPANY’S FIRST ROCKET, POWERFUL ENOUGH TO LAUNCH SATELLITES TO SPACE, TOOK OFF AFTER JUST AFTER 2 A-M EASTERN TIME FROM CAPE CANAVERAL SPACE FORCE STATION IN FLORIDA.  ALL SEVEN OF ITS ENGINES FIRED SUCCESSFULLY.  
BLUE ORIGIN IS MARKING THE MISSION A SUCCESS AFTER DEMONSTRATION TECHNOLOGY ON BOARD THE ROCKET — CALLED THE BLUE RING PATHFINDER — WAS SAFELY CARRIED TO ORBIT. 
HOWEVER, THE COMPANY DID NOT REACH ITS BONUS GOAL OF GUIDING PART OF THE NEW GLENN ROCKET BACK TO A SAFE LANDING ON A PLATFORM IN THE MIDDLE OF THE OCEAN AFTER TAKEOFF.   
IT TOOK BLUE ORIGIN RIVAL SPACE-X TOOK FOUR TRIES TO GET A SIMILAR MANEUVER RIGHT. 
HOWEVER — BLUE ORIGIN STRESSED ITS MOST IMPORTANT GOAL WAS FOR THE TEST SATELLITE TO REACH ORBIT 
NASA INTENDS TO USE THE NEW GLENN ROCKET TO LAUNCH TWO ORBITERS TO MARS IN THE FUTURE.

Wrongfully convicted as teens, now bestselling authors share story of justice and resilience at NU book launch for ‘The Hazel Boyz’

Wrongfully convicted, now bestselling authors share their story Skip to Content Alexia Sextou/The Daily Northwestern “The Hazel Boyz” is available now on Amazon and Barnes & Noble stores. January 16, 2025 After being wrongfully imprisoned for crimes they did not commit, four men returned to Northwestern’s campus to present their new book “The Hazel Boyz:…

The Village People, 8,000 troops, Elon Musk and a snub to Keir Starmer: America braces for Trump’s ‘peaceful’ second inauguration

By NATASHA ANDERSON Published: 07:19 EST, 16 January 2025 | Updated: 07:20 EST, 16 January 2025 Donald Trump will be sworn in as president for the second time on Monday, capping one of the most astounding political comebacks in American history. Inauguration Day, by tradition, is largely dedicated to pomp and circumstance – and Trump’s ‘peaceful’ return…

Australian tourist jailed for threatening to crash flight at Changi airport

Your support helps us to tell the storyFrom reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it’s investigating the financials of Elon Musk’s pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, ‘The A Word’, which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.Your support makes all the difference.Read moreAn Australian tourist was sentenced to eight weeks in prison for threatening to crash his flight while waiting to board it at the Changi airport in Singapore.Moncrieff Marli Curtis Philip, 36, on Wednesday pleaded guilty to one charge of using threatening words to cause alarm last November.He reportedly had to abort his holiday plans in Phuket, Thailand, after being denied entry by Thai immigration authorities because a visa page in his passport was torn out.The court was told the tourist had been planning the trip for a while and it had cost him a lot of money. He was put on a flight to Singapore, where he was also denied entry for the same visa issue.At Changi, immigration officials helped Mr Curtis Philip retrieve prescription medication for anxiety and depression from his check-in luggage. He was then taken to a holding room to wait for a flight back to Perth, the Malay Mail reported.On 20 November, while being escorted to board a Jetstar flight to Australia, he remarked: “I want the aircraft to crash and kill everyone.”He was reported to authorities after a flight attendant overheard his remark. The tourist was removed from the flight and airport authorities searched his luggage. They did not find anything suspicious, however, and informed the tourist that he would have to wait for another flight back to Australia.While talking to his girlfriend, Mr Curtis Philip reportedly again threatened to crash the plane if he were put on another flight. His conversation was overheard by an immigration and checkpoints authority officer who reported the incident.This agitated Mr Curtis Philip, who allegedly asked to be sent to prison. He was arrested later that day.The tourist later wrote an apology letter expressing regret for his actions and his remarks.

The Best Faith and Justice Books of the Century (So Far)

Since our earliest issues, Sojourners has maintained that culture coverage is just as much a part of our mission to articulate the biblical call to social justice as news stories and commentaries. And after reviewing the list below, we suspect you’ll see why. The books on this list span many genres, but they all circle the same core question: What does our faith call us to do in the face of injustice? Women Talking, the 2018 novel by Miriam Toews that kicks off this list, captures the urgency of that inquiry. “We are wasting time … by passing this burden, this sack of stones, from one to the next, by pushing our pain away,” says Greta, a character eager to name and face a great evil happening within her own Mennonite colony in Bolivia. “We mustn’t do this. We mustn’t play Hot Potato with our pain. Let’s absorb it ourselves, each of us, she says. Let’s inhale it, let’s digest it, let’s process it into fuel.” 
 The first 25 years of this century have given us plenty of pain — the so-called war on terror, racialized police violence, the surge of white Christian nationalism, greed-accelerated climate change, to name a few. These books, selected by Sojourners’ staff members, are just a few of the many titles from the past quarter century that have helped us process that pain into fuel for change.— Jenna Barnett, senior associate culture editor Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer, a Man Who Would Cure the World (2003) by Tracy Kidder Written in gripping prose by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Tracy Kidder, this book follows Paul Farmer’s passionate pursuit, as co-founder of Partners in Health, to provide quality healthcare to the poorest people in the world. Farmer was a Harvard-educated Catholic who embraced liberation theology and embodied what he called a hermeneutic of generosity: seeing the best in others and their intentions. Kidder traces Farmer’s peregrinations around the world — from Haiti to Peru to Boston — illustrating his unflappable commitment to what Farmer called “fighting the long defeat,” aligning himself with those whose lives are often deemed less valuable than those with more money. Farmer pulls no punches in his critique of white liberals, whom he affectionately called “WL’s.” Yet, despite his critique, he felt it was his Robin Hood-like duty to help people with too much give sacrificially to those with too little. In Mountains Beyond Mountains we are reminded of our shared humanity and the imperative to always place people above profit. Kidder does not make a saint out of Farmer, who passed away in 2022 at the age of 62, but Mountains Beyond Mountains offers a window into the complexity of Farmer’s bright light and inspiration to shine our own.— Josina Guess, associate editor Gilead (2004) and Lila (2014) by Marilynne Robinson Any novel from the Pulitzer-Prize winning author could’ve made this list, but Gilead and Lila are the standouts. The novels, both journeys out of loneliness toward faith and romance, both set in mid-1900s Iowa, essentially tell the same story from different perspectives. Rev. Ames (centered in Gilead) is an old pastor trying his best to love God, his family, and his friends with loyalty and attention. And Lila (centered in Lila) is an impoverished, nomadic day laborer with equal amounts of skepticism and love for both Ames (who she eventually marries) and the divine. In Lila, Robinson writes one of the most tender baptism scenes in all of literature. After Lila shares that she is too ashamed of her past to get baptized in a church, Ames offers to do the baptism in the middle of a field with a bucket, river water, and only a catfish flopping helplessly in the grass as a witness. Later, snuggled up together on the couch, they talk theology. Ames, who always has a sermon on his tongue, says, “Baptism is what I’d call a fact.” Lila replies, “Because you can’t just wash it off.” The Gilead series is full of grace and wonder. — Jenna Barnett, senior associate culture editor
The Politics of Jesus: Rediscovering the True Revolutionary Nature of Jesus’ Teachings and How They Have Been Corrupted (2006) by Obery Hendricks Jr. In a similar vein to the seminal books Jesus and the Disinherited and God of the Oppressed, The Politics of Jesus places Jesus back into his proper social, political, and economic context so we can better and more accurately understand his message, ministry, and yes, his politics. Hendricks, a professor of religion and African American studies and an elder in the African Methodist Episcopal Church, offers a book that is essential for understanding the roots of Jesus’ political consciousness as well as the political strategies Jesus employed throughout his short public ministry. The book debunks the false notions that following Christ means being apolitical or that Jesus only cared about spiritual matters. Jesus of Nazareth was truly a political revolutionary, and Hendricks unpacks the profound social and political implications of following him. “To say that Jesus was a political revolutionary is to say that the message he proclaimed not only called for change in individual hearts but also demanded sweeping and comprehensive change in the political, social, and economic structures in his setting in life: colonized Israel,” writes Hendricks, who then applies Jesus’ revolutionary politics to our contemporary society.— Adam Taylor, president God’s Politics: Why the Right Gets It Wrong and the Left Doesn’t Get It (2006) by Jim Wallis So, we are possibly a little biased here, but this New York Times bestseller by Sojourners founder Jim Wallis remains a defining book for Christians who didn’t (and still don’t) see their own faith values represented in contemporary U.S. politics. This book is most famous for Wallis’ explanation of how Republicans and Democrats have both failed to live up to the teachings of Jesus, an idea summarized in the ever-popular Sojourners bumper sticker: “God is not a Republican … or a Democrat.” But the point isn’t just to bash both parties and throw our hands up in despair; as Wallis writes: “Protest is not enough; it is necessary to show a better way.” Wallis spends the majority of the book articulating alternatives that “go beyond the polarized ideological agendas of partisan politics.” Though plenty has changed about U.S. politics in the years since Wallis wrote this book, the longing for policies that more fully live up to Jesus’ teachings — policies that tell the truth about racism, reclaim family values, reject war, uplift the poor, and replace single-issue voting with a consistent ethic of human life and flourishing — remain as important as ever. — Betsy Shirley, editor in chief A Climate for Change: Global Warming Facts for Faith-Based Decisions (2009) by Katharine Hayhoe and Andrew Farley When I first read this book some 15 years ago, what struck me most was the gentle, sincere way that evangelical co-authors Katharine Hayhoe, a climate scientist, and her husband Andrew Farley, a pastor, invited even those with fundamentalist theology to engage with the science of climate change. A Climate for Change aims to bypass the politicization of the topic and meet science-skeptical believers with respect and care. While ideological splits have arguably worsened, Hayhoe continues to bring courage and optimism to her award-winning work as a researcher and advocate for collective action to slow climate change, including in Saving Us: A Climate Scientist’s Case for Hope and Healing in a Divided World (2021). — Julie Polter, editor
Common Prayer: A Liturgy for Ordinary Radicals (2010) by Shane Claiborne, Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove, and Enuma Okoro Liturgy offers the gift of words and structure when our hearts and mouths aren’t sure what to say. Drawing from deep wells of two millennia of Christian witness across denominations and geography, Common Prayer: A Liturgy for Ordinary Radicals is a beautifully curated collection of prayers, quotes, and songs organized around the church calendar and the rhythms of life in community. Compiled by Shane Claiborne, Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove, and Enuma Okoro, this book offers both prayers for every day of the year and “occasional prayers” like “Prayers for a Workplace,” or the “Death of Someone Killed in the Neighborhood.” These pages include short biographies of both canonized and unconventional saints. The wisdom of Julian of Norwich meets the courage of Septima Clark. Certain days honor the martyrdom of Paul Chong Hasang and early Korean converts or Jean Donovan, one among many killed in the Salvadoran Civil War. Born from the New Monasticism movement, this book is best enjoyed aloud in the company of two or more people eager to meet Jesus and one another at the intersection of faith and justice.— Josina Guess, associate editor The Cross and the Lynching Tree (2011) by James H. Cone For progressive Christians, it has become commonplace to associate the cross and the lynching tree with one another. But before James H. Cone’s seminal text, such comparisons were exclusive to Black communities in the U.S. “If the God of Jesus’ cross is found among the least, the crucified people of the world, then God is also found among those lynched in American history,” writes Cone in The Cross and the Lynching Tree. A year after the book’s publication, a Black 17-year-old named Trayvon Martin was shot dead by a vigilante who thought Martin looked suspicious in his hoodie. The killing of Martin sparked what we now know as the Black Lives Matter movement. It’s hard to over-exaggerate the influence of The Cross and the Lynching Tree, as it provides an explicit connection between the country’s racist past and present that resonates with both religious and secular audiences. At a Black Lives Matter protest for Eric Garner, who was killed after being put in an illegal chokehold by a Staten Island police officer in 2014, I remember someone had written on the sidewalk in chalk: The cross, the lynching tree, the chokehold.— Josiah R. Daniels, senior associate opinion editor Short Stories by Jesus: The Enigmatic Parables of a Controversial Rabbi (2014) by Amy-Jill Levine  Amy-Jill Levine is a Jewish New Testament scholar who has for decades helped preachers and commentary writers identify and remove anti-Judaism, sexism, and other prejudices from our biblical interpretation. With Short Stories by Jesus, she corrects misunderstandings around the parables, beginning with the idea that they are specific to Jesus’ teachings. In truth, parables appear in the Jewish scriptures and were part of Jewish culture among Jesus’ contemporaries, Levine writes.  Interpretations vary for any parable, but that doesn’t mean there isn’t right and wrong: Christians have too-often perpetuated inaccurate ideas about first-century Judaism, for example, in seeing the Levite and priest in the good Samaritan story as adhering to Jewish law in fear of touching a corpse. In fact, they were neglecting duty, as Levine argues the original audience would have understood. And the parable is about loving one’s enemies, not simply being a do-gooder, as in the domesticated version. There and elsewhere, she encourages delving into these provocative stories from Jesus without taming them, instead letting them disturb and challenge us. — Celeste Kennel-Shank, copy editor
Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption (2014) by Bryan Stevenson In the decade since the release of Just Mercy, Bryan Stevenson has become something of a household name, and the work of the Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery, Ala., has gained international acclaim. Just Mercy is Stevenson’s telling of the decades of long, often lonely, and harrowing work. As a public defender, Stevenson represented wrongfully incarcerated men on death row, children who were sentenced to die in prison, and men and women denied their rights and human dignity within the U.S. carceral system.  By weaving together his personal narrative of loss and forgiveness, his professional legal work, and his abiding Christian faith, Stevenson succinctly traces the path from slavery to mass incarceration and explains how racism is embedded in U.S. history. As local municipalities take on the work of remembering lynching victims, Just Mercy is a field guide to the unfinished work of justice in the U.S. Stevenson’s faith and optimism are dizzying in the face of the brutal inequalities his work reveals. He sees the best in everyone. Reading or re-reading his book or watching the 2019 film adaptation can offer us courage to walk the way of peace, love, and redemption against all odds.— Josina Guess, associate editor Searching for Sunday: Loving, Leaving, and Finding the Church (2015) by Rachel Held Evans We could probably include any of Evans’ numerous books on this list, but in Searching for Sunday, Evans probes a question that I suspect is familiar to many of us: What happens when the spiritual places that once sustained you cease to feel like home … and what comes after that? With her characteristic insight, humor, and deeply personal writing, Evans describes wrestling with her faith and a longing for a kind of Christianity that doesn’t offer pat answers, a 5-step plan, or “a ladder to holiness to climb.” Instead, she writes, the heart of Christianity is “just death and resurrection, over and over again, day after day, as God reaches down into our deepest graves and with the same power that raised Jesus from the dead wrests us from our pride, our apathy, our fear, our prejudice, our anger, our hurt, and our despair.”— Betsy Shirley, editor in chief Stand Your Ground: Black Bodies and the Justice of God (2015) by Kelly Brown Douglas In her book, womanist theologian and Episcopal priest Kelly Brown Douglas looks starkly at the deaths of Jesus Christ and Trayvon Martin (and other victims of police brutality). Douglas, like James Cone, interprets these police killings of Black people as modern-day lynchings. Then she brings this theology of the cross and Christ’s solidarity with the “crucified class” to bear on the U.S. culture of “Stand Your Ground” laws. Narrating the racial history of the U.S., Douglas explains how race influences ideas of guilt, hierarchy, and domination. She defines the justice of God, in the context of our history, as a liberation from “the sin of setting one’s self above or against another.”
“God’s justice means an end to the very culture that has declared war on innocent, young black bodies,” she writes. “This means an end to the systemic, structural, and discursive sin of Anglo-Saxon exceptionalism, which makes black bodies the target of war.”— Mitchell Atencio, senior associate news editor Jesus and John Wayne: How White Evangelicals Corrupted Faith and Fractured a Nation (2020) by Kristin Kobes Du Mez I had assumed that Kristin Kobes Du Mez’s Jesus and John Wayne was an “exvangelical” screed and so, I had avoided it — there is a glut of such literature and I typically find that these books contain surface-level criticism or bitter derision toward those of us who’ve left evangelicalism but remain Christian. After finally reading it, I am happy to report it is not a screed but, instead, a well-written and meticulously researched history of evangelicalism in the U.S. Du Mez, who is a historian, offers detailed examples of how “Despite evangelicals’ frequent claims that the Bible is the source of their social and political commitments, evangelicalism must be seen as a cultural and political movement rather than a community defined chiefly by its theology.” For those looking to understand how and why evangelicals have been so successful at establishing and retaining power in the U.S., this book is required reading.— Josiah R. Daniels, senior associate opinion editor Brown Church: Five Centuries of Latina/o Social Justice, Theology, and Identity (2020) by Robert Chao Romero In this expansive and ambitious book, Robert Chao Romero — a historian, minister, and lawyer — explores 500 years of the Latin American church and its consistent role in fighting systems of oppression, including colonialism, racism, and economic injustice. “The failure to recognize the important role of ethnic culture and experience in shaping biblical interpretation can produce damaging results because it can lead a culturally dominant community to insist that its own interpretations of the Bible are ‘objective’ and ‘official’ to the exclusion of all others,” he writes. Romero connects historical advocacy of people like Bartolomé de las Casas — who advocated for the rights of Indigenous people in the 16th century — to modern liberation theology, showing how faith has inspired advocacy and resistance in the “Brown Church” for generations. Brown Church celebrates the history and impact of Latina/o Christians and inspires readers to challenge how culture may have shaped their interpretation of the Bible. No matter what the reader’s cultural background is, this book will inspire them to join Latina/o Christians in acting out their faith through advocacy for the marginalized and resistance of the systems that create marginalization.— Matt Murphy, chief operations officer The Power Worshippers: Inside the Dangerous Rise of Religious Nationalism (2020) by Katherine Stewart In this timely book, investigative journalist Katherine Stewart pokes holes in our common understandings of the Religious Right. “While many Americans still believe that the Christian right is primarily concerned with ‘values,’ leaders of the movement know it’s really about power.” And the movement, as thoroughly dissected by Stewart, is more calculated, ethnically diverse, and well-funded than I’d ever realized. Stewart profiles several current leaders of the movement and also traces today’s brand of Christian nationalism all the way back to slavery. “Today’s Christian nationalists talk a good game about respecting the Constitution and America’s founders, but at bottom they prefer autocrats to democrats,” she writes. In order to stop Christian nationalism’s surging power, we first have to understand it. Reading The Power Worshippers is a strong place to start.— Jenna Barnett, senior associate culture editor A Women’s Lectionary for the Whole Church Year (2021) by Wilda C. Gafney Gafney, one of our greatest biblical interpreters, delivers fresh voices and perspectives out of scripture’s ancient texts. As a Hebrew biblical scholar, Black womanist theologian, and Episcopal priest, Gafney fuses the intellectual, prophetic, and pastoral vocations through her monumental work of a new Christian lectionary focused on women. “What would it look like to tell the Good News through the stories of women who are often on the margin of scripture and often set up to represent bad news?” To build her response, Gafney first had to establish “a female canon within the broader canon” of scripture, map these scriptures with the liturgical year, and sort passages with shared themes for each Sunday. And the selected texts were drawn from Gafney’s own highly skilled, probing, and thoughtful original translations. For example, the Good Friday readings pair Jesus’ crucifixion with the brutal deaths of Jephthah’s daughters, revealing themes of a feminine Christ who suffers. An Easter passage from Psalm 18 declares: “The Rock Who Gave Us Birth is my rock!” keying beautifully with the full then empty tomb. Gafney’s lectionary series is strong at every level; it also includes text notes and preaching prompts. “I was (and remain) convinced it ought to be possible to tell the story of God and God’s people through the most marginalized characters in the text,” writes Gafney. More than 1 billion Christians worldwide receive their weekly exposure to the Bible through a lectionary. How different the world would be if those readings centered the experiences of women and girls.— Rose Marie Berger, senior editor We Survived the End of the World: Lessons from Native America on Apocalypse and Hope (2023) by Steven Charleston  If you want to know how to survive the end of the world, ask those who have done it before. Steven Charleston (Ladder to the Light), Choctaw Episcopal bishop, animates the prophecies of 19th-century Indigenous leaders for lessons on surviving the collapse of climate, culture, religion, and community. With a fierce tenderness toward settler Christians, Charleston explores how Native ancestors survived the “greatest human cataclysm in history” by turning to “the prophets who had seen it coming and who, once it arrived with a vengeance, helped their people live through it with courage and dignity.”  First Charleston turns to John of Patmos as one example of first-century spiritual thrivance in apocalypse, then he opens the scrolls of Seneca diplomat Ganiodaiio, Shawnee prophet Tenskwatawa, Nez Perce spiritual leader Smohalla, and Paiute Ghost Dancer Wovoka. But history serves the future. “Prophets do not arise out of a vacuum. They are part of the apocalyptic process.” Charleston believes that all who still claim the ancient spiritual traditions can learn to navigate “the path through apocalyptic fear to the revelation of a new apocalyptic hope.” A brave, original, wise, accessible account for the anxious and spirit-starved generations of the 21st century.— Rose Marie Berger, senior editor Hell Is a World Without You (2023) by Jason Kirk It’s audacious to claim that a book published in the final 13 months of the first quarter belongs on a “best of the century” list. But Kirk’s book, a fiction coming-of-age story told via Isaac Siena, Jr. and his youth group friends, stands out. Kirk’s novel weaves together the wisdom of someone who has found God beyond fundamentalism with the cringe of Y2K evangelical culture. More than a trip down memory lane, Kirk’s characters shine with sass, introspection, kindness, and anxiety as they navigate high school lunch tables, fall in love, and confess their sins in front of the whole church camp.  Hell Is a World Without You boldly shows exactly what it was like growing up conservative Christian, down to the cussing that can only be found in the head of an evangelical teen: “Gosh-f—ing-dangit!” followed by the obligatory “Sorry,” to God, who is listening to his every thought. It shines with a sympathy for even the worst of those born into the Religious Right — a sympathy that highlights harms rather than excusing them. The book rallies around the ethos of a generation forced to reckon with their evangelical upbringings: “Anything that can be built, can be rebuilt better.”— Mitchell Atencio, senior associate news editor