September’s Baccalaureate
A combination is
Of Crickets—Crows—and Retrospects
And a dissembling Breeze
That hints without assuming—
An Innuendo sear
That makes the Heart put up its Fun
And turn Philosopher.
—Emily Dickinson, "September’s Baccalaureate”
Featured Recent Releases
She Was Always There
Sophia as a Story for Our Time
Signe Eklund Schaefer
“Who, or perhaps what, is she?” Signe Eklund Schaefer poses this question as she leads us into a heartfelt exploration of the great mystery that is Sophia. Her book does not take an academic or theological path but one that is personal and full of warmth and genuine interest in discovery that goes toward living reality, well beyond mere names and fixed ideas. As Schaefer says, she decided to “forego the idea of a straightforward narrative and instead interweave musings, poems, saved quotations, and other assorted notes from my many years of living with questions about and to her.”
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Fugitive
Three Covid Pieces: A Goethean Appreciation
Allan Kaplan
In striving to make himself a vessel for sensing the dynamics of our time—the struggle for meaning, the will toward freedom, the experience of powerlessness and surrender, and the urge to defend and secure the capacity for human thinking and discernment—Allan Kaplan allows the profound questions of our time to arise and be explored in thought that is free of the compulsion to arrive at fixed conclusions. Here is a little book—an example in practice—to help strengthen our humanity.
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Ita Wegman and the Clinical-therapeutic Institute
A Photographic Documentation
Mirela Faldey and Peter Selg
Ita Wegman, MD, founded and directed the first anthroposophical medical clinic in the world—the Clinical-Therapeutic Institute in Arlesheim near Basel, Switzerland. This photographic documentation was compiled to mark the centenary of the clinic and offers a pictorial introduction to Wegman’s life and work.
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For Children
Tall Oak and Small Owl
Nina Pick
Illustrated by Shuning Liu
Small Owl is born in a huge oak tree in the middle of the forest. As Small Owl grows and learns to fly, she and Tall Oak become the best of friends. Day by day, the seasons pass and the weather grows colder. Soon Tall Oak loses his leaves and falls asleep, leaving Small Owl alone through the long winter. She finds, however, that the return of spring brings new surprises, as life and joy return to the forest.
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From the Collected Works of Rudolf Steiner
The Driving Force of Spiritual Powers in World History
7 lectures in Dornach, Switzerland, March 11–23, 1923 (CW 222)
Translated by Dorothy S. Osmond and Johanna Collis
“Historical happenings on Earth can be understood in their reality only when we see them as reflections of what is being enacted in the supersensible, spiritual world between the beings of the higher hierarchies.” — Rudolf Steiner (March 17, 1923)
Is there a difference between true and untrue words? How about between living and dead thoughts? What is the origin of war and strife among peoples on Earth? How can humanity find a right relationship to the beings of the spiritual world? These are among the compelling questions addressed by Rudolf Steiner in this concise yet powerful series of lectures.
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