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Q&A with Joshua Brown

Q&A with Joshua Brown

We are pleased to have Joshua Brown on our blog to discuss his new book Aquinas and the Early Chinese Master. Joshua Brown is associate professor of theology at Mount St. Mary’s University (Md.).
An Essay by Graham McAleer

An Essay by Graham McAleer

Today, we are delighted to share an essay by Graham McAleer, discussing his new book Tolkien, Philosopher of War!
How Do You Like Your Books, Rare or Well Done?

How Do You Like Your Books, Rare or Well Done?

Today, CUA Press (our books are always done well!) traveled over to CUA’s Rare Books Library to learn how our medieval and early modern forebears produced the reading matter we all know and love.
Happy Halloween! 🎃

Happy Halloween! 🎃

We proudly present The CUA Press Pumpkin patch! Or, rather, The Old Testament Abstracts for October 2024 (Vol. 47 No. 3) which are ready to be “picked” for your bookshelf
Q&A with Robert Dobie

Q&A with Robert Dobie

Robert J. Dobie is Professor and Chair of Philosophy at LaSalle University, and author of Thinking through Revelation: Islamic, Jewish, and Christian Philosophy in the Middle Ages and Logos and Revelation: Ibn ‘Arabi, Meister Eckhart, and Mystical Hermeneutics. 
Staff Bookshelf October

Staff Bookshelf October

As we begin to fall into…well, fall, the staff cozies up to some chilling new reads! Featured is a delightful range of genres: post war novels, apocalyptic literature, translated Tolkien works, fantasy, and more. Just like a bowl of Halloween candy, you never know what you might just pick up!
Excerpt From “Why Read Pavel Florensky?”

Excerpt From “Why Read Pavel Florensky?”

Why, then, read Pavel Florensky? In an era in which pressing concerns of this world—political, social, technological, and material—so easily become all-consuming, Florensky directs us to the “other”—heavenly, divine—world that is always near us and around us but that we so easily miss. As he probes the mystical depth of all that exists, he teaches us to attend also to the “otherness” of the people and things with which we share “this” world—to enter into their unique existence, where we will rediscover ourselves. We will learn to treat the created order with reverence, to live in right relation with one another, and to open ourselves to a transcendent dimension of life.
Let it be Printed!: Fr. James Bradley on Canon Law and Banned Books Week

Let it be Printed!: Fr. James Bradley on Canon Law and Banned Books Week

During “Banned Books Week” what often comes to mind is the censorship of important historical works of fiction, like Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird. However, banning books purely in the name of censorship is wildly different from taking measures to ensure the publication of accurate Catholic theology. In this blog post, we take a nuanced look at the complexities of complexities of the Nihil Obstat.
Fall & Winter 2024-2025 Catalog OUT NOW!

Fall & Winter 2024-2025 Catalog OUT NOW!

We are delighted to unveil our Fall/Winter 2024-25 New Books catalog. We are honored to publish a wide array of some of the finest authors and editors in the fields of theology and philosophy, and we remain grateful to them for choosing us to be their publisher. We continue to publish some of the finest scholarship in the fields, and we are proud of all the work it takes from our wonderful staff to get these beautiful and important books out into the world. Happy browsing…
Q&A with Daniel Waldow

Q&A with Daniel Waldow

In this blog we welcome Daniel Waldow, assistant professor of theology at Saint Francis University, PA, to discuss the the theological impact of his book The Suffering Servant.