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Nadya Williams

Nadya Williams is the author of Cultural Christians in the Early Church (Zondervan Academic, 2023), Mothers, Children, and the Body Politic: Ancient Christianity and the Recovery of Human Dignity (forthcoming, IVP Academic, 2024), and Christians Reading Pagans (forthcoming, Zondervan Academic, 2025). She is Managing Editor for Current, where she also edits The Arena blog, and Contributing Editor for Providence Magazine and Front Porch Republic.

No, accreditation requirements won’t save the humanities

Nadya Williams   |  December 3, 2024

Gutting the humanities in declining institutions never stops the decline–but leaders still try.

Interview: John McCabe on Dietrich Bonhoeffer–The Last Eight Days

Nadya Williams   |  December 2, 2024

John McCabe’s new book focuses on Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s final eight days.

Thanksgiving with Harold and the Purple Crayon

Nadya Williams   |  November 28, 2024

Harold reminds us, ultimately, that there is much wonder and joy in imagining our favorite things and dreaming of them with wild and reckless abandon.

Current writer and novelist, Fred Durbin, featured in USA Today

Nadya Williams   |  November 26, 2024

Fred Durbin is part of the typewriter revolution!

Blessing of Unicorns: Putin bearing gifts, AI and seeking truth, J.D. Vance’s mom, and books

Nadya Williams   |  November 22, 2024

And just like that, we’re less than a week removed from Thanksgiving. This roundup will take next week off while we all eat ourselves into a pie coma. *** In the spirit of appreciating Unicorns for the wild creatures that […]

A new era for humanities and social science PhD programs?

Nadya Williams   |  November 20, 2024

BU is suspending admission into humanities and social science PhD programs for next year. What does this mean?

Blessing of Unicorns: Monkeys on the loose, a lesser-known Inkling, Davy Crockett, and more

Nadya Williams   |  November 15, 2024

What makes a Unicorn-worthy story? Monkeys on the loose, for one.

Footnotes!

Nadya Williams   |  November 14, 2024

The love of footnotes is a well ordered love.

“60 Minutes” investigates “mysterious Russian death syndrome”

Nadya Williams   |  November 12, 2024

Cecilia Vega asks: “Is Russia pursuing Putin foes abroad, going after critics and defectors on Western soil?”

FORUM: Election 2024

John H. Haas, Jim Cullen and Nadya Williams   |  November 9, 2024

A time to weep, a time to laugh

Blessing of Unicorns: Python hunters, writer-welder, Chesterton, and swapping babies (but you get ā€˜em back)

Nadya Williams   |  November 8, 2024

There are pythons in Florida–and python hunters too.

Post-election reading list: books to encourage and discourage

Nadya Williams   |  November 7, 2024

A short, idiosyncratic, and utterly eclectic post-election reading list of books that might encourage or discourage.

Good citizens under a bad emperor

Nadya Williams   |  November 5, 2024

The ā€œemperorā€ for the next four years will be bad. We, the citizens, however, don’t have to be.

Interview: Chris Gehrz, College for Christians

Christopher Gehrz and Nadya Williams   |  November 4, 2024

Your choice of college may be less important than the choices you make at college.

If you need a non-political read this weekend: “The Novel and the Dictator”

Nadya Williams   |  November 2, 2024

Okay, it’s not entirely non-political, to be honest. Still, if you’d like to read about Russian politics and the effect on writers, my essay “The Novel and the Dictator” is out in the new issue of Ekstasis Magazine. A taste: […]

Blessing of Unicorns: Politics and virtues, 18 Jewish stories in 18 languages, and more books

Nadya Williams   |  November 1, 2024

This week’s Unicorns round up thoughts on politics and a lot of good books.

Where Do Dead Babies Go?

Nadya Williams   |  October 30, 2024

Personhood laws matter for the living—and the dead

Interview: Emily Carrington on early pregnancy loss

Emily Carrington and Nadya Williams   |  October 28, 2024

How we talk about miscarriage matters.

Blessing of Unicorns: compassionate politics, political misogyny, motherhood, and Boethius

Nadya Williams   |  October 25, 2024

This week’s Unicorns think about the election—but compassionately; and also essays on political misogyny, motherhood, and the 1,500th anniversary of the death of Boethius.

Eerdmans books: kindle sale alert and book recs

Nadya Williams   |  October 21, 2024

Need some new kindle reads? Here’s a list!

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