Marilynne Robinson
Marilynne Robinson is the author of Gilead, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the National Book Critics Circle Award, and Home, winner of the Orange Prize, the L.A. Times Book Prize, and a finalist for the National Book Award. Her first novel, Housekeeping, won the Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award. Robinson's nonfiction books include Absence of Mind, The Death of Adam, and Mother Country, which was nominated for a National Book Award. She teaches at the University of Iowa Writers’ Workshop and lives in Iowa City.
Bio last updated April 30th, 2018.
Articles by Marilynne Robinson
Marilynne Robinson’s Metaphysical Inklings
By Marilynne Robinson
February 15, 2017
Reporter Sarah Grochowski reports from the University of British Columbia, as Pulitzer Prize winning novelist and essayist Marilynne Robinson delivered spoken essays as part of the 2017 Laing Lectures hosted by Regent College’s graduate school of theology.
Thoughts Robinson articulated began just as they ended, with her essays on the theological virtues of faith, hope, and love coming to a crux at the humanity of God documented in ancient scriptures Noting that much of the human world is “engulfed by suffering,” Robinson said to love another is to behold the dignity and beauty of God’s image in them, and by this regard to owe that person love and act boldly in their favour
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Fear
Marilynne Robinson
April 25, 2016
In her most recent collection of essays, The Givenness of Things, Marilynne Robinson once again proves to be one of the most important voices for Modern North America. In "Fear," she provides a timely analysis of the pervasive fears smothering American culture. Rather than give in to the alarmism, she reminds us that the best antidote to fear is not more security and higher walls, it's more faith, hope, and love..
If the point of American yearnings for our past is to recover a religious culture that was uniquely ours, how do we deal with the many pasts that have come with immigration or that we have accepted as our share in a part of Western history? Must we not be a little careful about proceeding without in...