
Introduction
It’s funny how you end up reading related books, even when you didn’t plan it that way. In this case. several of the books I reviewed this month concerned the early church’s discussions of the Trinity and the Incarnation. I reviewed a couple of books from university presses, one on free will and one on inflation. I read a wonderful early work by Wallace Stegner and Nobel prize winner Han Kang’s latest novel. There are books in this list on communication and leadership. And of course, there are several mysteries, including the inaugural volume of the Thursday Murder Club and another Cork O’Connor mystery. I loved a new compilation of the works of Stanley Hauerwas and a classic by Simone Weil. You’ll find all these and more in The Month in Reviews: March 2025.
The Reviews
The Trials of Jesus, Paul Barnett. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. (ISBN: 9780802884336) 2024. The historical and geopolitical context, the principle figures involved, and the succession of trials Jesus undergoes. Review
Yellowface, R. F. Kuang. William Morrow (ISBN: 9780063250833) 2023. What happens when a famous author dies immediately after sharing an unpublished draft of her latest work with her writer friend. Review
Crowned with Glory and Honor (Studies in Historical and Systematic Theology), Michael A. Wilkinson. Lexham Academic (ISBN: 9781683597308) 2024. Argues for a Christian anthropology based on Chalcedon’s understanding of Christ’s person-nature constitution. Review
Heaven’;s Keep, (Cork O’Connor, 9), William Kent Krueger. Atria Books (ISBN: 9781416556770) 2010. The charter plane Jo is in in goes down in a snowstorm in Wyoming and is not found. Subsequent evidence offers hope. Review
Triune Relationality (New Explorations in Theology), Sherene Nicholas Khouri, foreword by Gary R. Habermas. IVP Academic (ISBN: 9781514008843) 2024. Argues that relationality is among the perfections of God that only a Triune God meets. Review
Leading Well in Times of Disruption, Joseph W. Handley, Jr., Gideon Para-Mallam, and Asia Williamson, editors. Langham Global Library (ISBN: 9781839739859) 2024. Amid global disruptions, focuses on the qualities needed in those who lead the church’s global mission. Review
Collected Poems of Emily Dickinson, Emily Dickinson, edited by Mabel Loomis Todd and Thomas Wentworth Higginson. Gramercy Books (ISBN: 0517362422) 1982 (originally published 1890, 1891, 1896). A republication of Dickinson’s poems as first published in three series shortly after her death. Review
Shock Values, Carola Binder. University of Chicago Press (ISBN: 9780226833095) 2024 An economic history of the United States, considering the various means used to stabilize prices and control inflation. Review
The Thursday Murder Club (Thursday Murder Club, 1), Richard Osman. Penguin Books (ISBN: 9781984880987) 2021. Four seniors meet on Thursdays to solve cold cases until a present day murder leads to something more. Review
Remembering Laughter. Wallace Stegner, afterword by Mary Stegner. Penguin Books (ISBN: 9780140252408) 1996, (first published 1937). An early Wallace Stegner novella. What happens when Margaret Stuart’s sister comes to live with her and her husband. Review
Communicating for Life, Quentin J. Schultze, foreword by Martin E. Marty. Integratio Press (ISBN: 9781959685098) 2024. An introductory text in communication grounded in a theology of communication and a vision of faithful stewardship. Review
Scripture in Doctrinal Dispute (Doctrine and Scripture in Early Christianity, Volume 2), Frances M. Young. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. (ISBN: 9780802882998) 2024. A study of how scripture was used in the doctrinal controversies concerning the Trinity and Christology. Review
Beren and Lúthien, J.R.R. Tolkien, edited by Christopher Tolkien, with illustrations by Allen Lee. HarperCollins (ISBN: 9781328915337) 2018. An edited collection of different versions and extracts of one of the most celebrated love stories of Middle-earth. Review
Free Agents, Kevin J. Mitchell. Princeton University Press (ISBN: 9780691226231) 2023. An argument based on the evidence of the development of nervous systems, for the evolution of individual agency–free will. Review
Light Unapproachable, Ronni Kurtz. IVP Academic (ISBN: 9781514007105) 2024. An explanation of the doctrine of divine incomprehensibility as well as God’s gracious accommodation. Review
Waiting for God, Simone Weil, Translated by Emma Craufurd with Introduction by Leslie A. Fiedler. Harper & Row Perennial Library (ISBN: 0060902957) 1973 (Originally published in 1951, link and cover photo are to current edition in print). Weil’s correspondence with her mentor and four essays on her religious thought focused around loving and attending to God. Review
Jesus Changes Everything (Plough Spiritual Guides), Stanley Hauerwas, edited by Charles E. Moore with an Introduction by Tish Harrison Warren. Plough Publishing House (ISBN: 9781636081571) 2025. The radical implications of Jesus’ call to follow him for every area of life from personal to societal. Review
The Hollow (Poirot, 26), Agatha Christie. William Morrow (ISBN: 9780062073853) 2011 (first published in 1946). When Poirot sees Dr. John Christow lying dead poolside with Christow’s wife holding the gun, the murderer seems obvious. Review
Paul the Storyteller: A Narratological Approach, Christoph Heilig. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. (ISBN: 9780802878953) 2024. A narratological approach showing that Paul combines implicit and explicit narratives, making him a gifted storyteller. Review
We Do Not Part, Han Kang, translated by E. Yaewon and Paige Aniyah Morris. Hogarth (ISBN: 9780593595459) 2025. Kyungha makes a harrowing journey through a blizzard to save a friend’s bird, confronting the reality behind her nightmares. Review
Best Book of the Month
I chose Light Unapproachable by Ronni Kurtz. I thought this an example of the best of theological writing. Kurtz offers a highly comprehensible account of divine incomprehensibility, writing with brevity, clear organization, and at a level understandable by the lay person.
Quote of the Month
One of the books I really liked this month was Stanley Hauerwas’ Jesus Changes Everything, part of the Plough Spiritual Guides series. These are edited compilations. In this case I thought it read seamlessly. I loved this statement by Hauerwas on the church:
“Put starkly, the first task of the church when it comes to social ethics is to be the church. Such a claim may well sound self-serving or irrelevant until we remember that what makes the church the church is its faithful manifestation of the peaceable kingdom in the world. As such, the church does not have a social ethic; the church is a social ethic.”
What I’m Reading
A few months ago, I read James F. McGrath’s Christmaker, on the life of John the Baptist. I liked it so much that I’ve followed it up with his more in-depth treatment, John of History, Baptist of Faith. I’ve thoroughly enjoyed a memoir by a former campus minister on the Ignatian Camino, a lesser known pilgrimage than the Camino de Santiago. It’s titled Finding God along the Way. Tending Tomorrow is an Anabaptist reflection on seeking the flourishing of both people and the planet. As part of an Anabaptist community, I find this of great interest.
I decided to tackle American Prometheus on the life of Robert Oppenheimer, who led the effort to make the atom bomb. From the trailers, the movie portrays him as brilliant and troubled. That comes through in the book as well. Finally, I’m reading another Cork O’Connor, in which Cork seems to be in the process of uncovering truths about his long-deceased father.
The Month in Reviews is my monthly review summary going back to 2014! It’s a great way to browse what I’ve reviewed. The search box on this blog also works well if you are looking for a review of a particular book.



















