The St. Austin Review
The St. Austin Review (StAR) is an international journal of Catholic culture, literature, and ideas. In its pages, printed every two months, some of the brightest and most vigorous minds around meet to explore the people, ideas, movements, and events that shape and misshape our world.

Education for Truth and Life
Sample Article: Meeting Socrates: Educating Modern Philosophers
Have any of you faithful readers of Peter Kreeft’s many, many books ever wondered what it would be like to attend his philosophy
course at Boston College? Save yourself ninety grand in freshman fees, and cough up instead a hundred bucks, plus or minus (Word on Fire lists it now at ninety-seven on their website), for his eight-volume inquisition of modern thought.
Reprinting the original Socrates Meets series from Ignatius Press (and St. Augustine’s), Word on Fire packs together Kreeft’s fanciful critique of post-classical philosophy into a handsome white, red, and gold box that will stretch only five and three-quarters inches (fourteen centimeters on the Continent) across your Greats shelf. Since Socrates is the main character in these dialogues, the conceit takes the last four hundred years of big brains back two millennia. The result is a leisurely cram-course, sprightly but pointed, illuminating, and a little annoying, like the gadfly himself: Kreeft imagining Socrates in dialogue with Machiavelli, Descartes, Hume, Kant, Kierkegaard, Marx, Freud, and Sartre. Get ready for terse definitions and close reasoning, with enthymemes here in place of the much longer syllogisms (and minus Kreeft’s self-described bad puns).
The Ink Desk Blog
January-February Issue: Education for Truth and Life
Sample Content from Our Latest Issue Table of Contents Sample [...]
January-February Issue: Education for Truth and Life
Sample Content from Our Latest Issue Table of Contents Sample [...]
September-October Issue: Shamrock, Thistle, Daffodil and Rose: The Cultures of the British Isles
Sample Content from Our Latest Issue Table of Contents [...]
Caesar or Christ: Who Can Save Europe?
Rendering unto Caesar the things that are Christ's is not [...]
Madly in Love
Romeo's "love" lacks any sign of sanity or sanctity... Madly [...]
A Light in the East
Joseph Pearce interviews Iranian composer Farhad Poupel... A Light in the East [...]
St. Austin Review Issues
More From The Ink Desk Blog
Conversion and Coercion
Is it ever legitimate to use force or coercion to win converts to a creed or a cause? Conversion and Coercion - Joseph Pearce
Betty Groff’s Happy Cooking
Ten years have gone by since Betty Groff passed away. In her eighty years, she became a treasure in Pennsylvania, and she received attention in national magazines, newspapers, and television shows. What got her such [...]
Why Real Men Read the Classics
Joseph Pearce discusses manhood and literature on Good Shepherd Radio... Why Real Men Read the Classics - Joseph Pearce
The Goodness, Truth and Beauty of Classical Education
In this Memoria Academy Community Lecture, Professor Joseph Pearce explores the transcendent ideals of Goodness, Truth, and Beauty and their essential place at the heart of classical education. Drawing on philosophy, theology, and literature, he [...]
The Song that Never Ends
As we celebrate All Saints and All Souls, it is a good time to remember that these Feast days specifically call to mind all the forgotten Saints and holy souls... The Song that Never Ends [...]
November-December Issue: Life, Literature & the Love of Wisdom
Sample Content from Our Latest Issue Table of Contents Sample Article From the Golden Bough to the Grace of God: Heroic Journey & Personal Vocation in Virgil & Dante The intertextual influence between Virgil and [...]