A moving and personal anthology from the Sunday Times bestseller, encompassing melancholy, morality, mortality and more
Richard Holloway is one of our most beloved public thinkers. Throughout his life he has turned to poets and writers to help answer the big questions, and for solace and guidance in the face of life’s challenges. Now he shares those poems and words which have been his own guide, offered in the hope they will help us too.
This is a book to turn to for inspiration, guidance and comfort. It offers lessons from those who, in Richard’s words, ‘know best how to listen and teach us to listen’, all united by ‘the sensual appeal of words, the pain and pleasure they impart’. It is a book to treasure.
“Open-hearted and wide-minded … Holloway’s commentary and anthology will indubitably bring a crumb of comfort to many readers”
scotsman
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“This is a marvellous book: refreshing, wise, sincere and sophisticated … a sustained work of spiritual autobiography … beautifully written … The Heart of Things is a moving book, and it does indeed ask the reader to reflect on last things”
tablet
“A deeply personal collection of poems, images, and quotations … an anthology that will speak tenderly and sometimes searingly into lives that have more past than future, more memory than promise … This is an immensely readable book … beautiful and generous”
church Times
”Praise for Stories We Tell Ourselves: An engaging, erudite explanation of how he came to be where he now stands and is a warning against the cruel righteousness of many belief systems”
sunday Times
“If every priest and imam, every MP and CEO, every person like you and me read this, then the world would be a better place. It is devastatingly humane. It blends science, philosophy and religion and admits the art (and artifice) in these avowedly objective forms. Erudition and empathy; I wept”
Damian Barr
Richard Holloway was Bishop of Edinburgh and Primus of the Scottish Episcopal Church. A former Gresham Professor of Divinity and Chairman of the Joint Board of the Scottish Arts Council and Scottish Screen, he is a fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. Leaving Alexandria won the PEN/Ackerley Prize and was shortlisted for the Orwell Prize. It was a Sunday Times bestseller, together with Waiting for the Last Bus.