Dive into a daring poetry collection that wrestles with God, mind, and the self, in voices that bridge philosophy and faith.
The book gathers long, dense poems that blend personal insight with big questions about God, existence, and knowledge. Its speakers move through conversations with history’s great thinkers, from Kant to Augustine, and set their search against everyday life and a restless conscience. The result is a meditation on how belief, reason, and experience shape what it means to be human.
In vivid, semi-dramatic scenes, the poems invite readers to consider how truth is found, how duty and freedom relate, and how the self can be both finite and connected to the infinite. The work uses the cadence of verse to probe philosophy, theology, and the quest for meaning in a complex world.
- Grounded in encounters with historical figures and ideas
- Centers on the tension between reason, faith, and experience
- Blends personal confession with systematic reflection
- Written in a contemplative, dialogic poetic voice
Ideal for readers drawn to philosophical poetry, theological inquiry, and rigorous reflection on mind and spirit.