Sunstone
April 25, 2018[…] Logic and syntax—even basic facts—which are unmistakably clear and irrefutable in manuscript form have a way of breaking down when committed to print. And when they do hold up, one can always find typographical […]
[…] Logic and syntax—even basic facts—which are unmistakably clear and irrefutable in manuscript form have a way of breaking down when committed to print. And when they do hold up, one can always find typographical […]
Prospective Latter-day Saint readers of Donna Hill’s biography of Joseph Smith will want to know two things: Is there anything new, and is it sympathetic to the Prophet? The answer to both questions is […]
[…] contractors who raised their bids by 20% because payment was so slow in coming, and starving Indians breaking out of one reservation while Indians at another reservation had too much food. Sometimes the problems […]
[…] calling it “a nervy, very witty romp through contemporary Academe” (as quoted on the jacket). Most Mormon readers will be first interested in the character of Larry Boosinger and his language, because they, and […]
[…] thickened by the screech, slam, purr and shove of traffic one nerve sent early warning, spun the world past your eyes, milking your fear of falling and scalding the Fall with fear; then that […]
Ask any Mormon culture buff about Dialogue, Sunstone, BYU Studies or perhaps the Utah Historical Quarterly and you will get an informed response. But the Charles Redd Monographs in Western History? The odds are better…
[…] that kind of a mess.) And my brothers had inexplicably appeared from their basement bedrooms with the news that they were going with us. It took my mother ten minutes to convince them that […]
[…] the last century to the current one, Leone relies heavily on the familiar model of Federal aggression breaking up the organic Mormon kingdom. While he would rather use internal contradictions within Mormondom to make […]
[…] On first glance, Treason looks much like other examples of the fantasy genre which are on the market. The cover art has a familiar look to it; the endpapers have the requisite global map […]
[…] knows, the blurb on the dust cover of a book is of vital importance, because many reviewers read nothing else. I found the blurb of Thy Kingdom Come invaluable after reading every word of […]