Written by noted Catholic philosopher Michael Novak, the selections in The Myth of Romantic Love and Other Essays highlight the arc of his intellectual career
This new, enlarged edition of an influential book—originally published in 1972 as The Rise of the Unmeltable Ethnics—extends the author's wise and generous view of ethnicity
In The Experience of Nothingness, Michael Novak has two objectives
This book is about the family lives of some 10,000 children and adults who live in an all-Negro public housing project in St Louis
This is perhaps the most widely read of Michael Novak's books
In Choosing Presidents, Novak uses the election of an American president as a means to dissect the symbols of our national life and politics, exposing many as distorted perceptions of American realities
This new, enlarged edition of an influential book originally published in 1972 as The Rise of the Unmeltable Ethnicsextends the author's wise and generous view of ethnicity
Michael Novak's eyewitness report on the second and pivotal session of Vatican II in 1964 vividly inter weaves pageantry, politics, and theology
In this classic work, the foremost historian of science in our time, George Sarton, sums up his reflections on the role of science and of the humanities in our culture
On September 10, 1897, in the hamlet of Lattimer mines, Pennsylvania, an armed posse took aim and fired into a crowd of oncoming mine workers, who were marching in their corner of the coal-mining region to call their fellow miners out on strike
In The Experience of Nothingness, Michael Novak has two objectives