Union’s Holiday Gift Guide

Union’s Holiday Gift Guide

Categories: Uncategorized

Looking for meaningful gifts this holiday season? Union’s faculty and staff have authored so many wonderful titles over the last few years that will make thoughtful and inspiring gifts for the ones you love. With book subjects ranging from dance to economic injustice, Christian nationalism to Advent devotionals, Black Lives Matter to chaplaincy, Latinx religious politics to gardening, and Christian ethics and evangelicalism, there’s much to explore in this year’s holiday gift guide. 

A person with short gray hair and a gray sweater is sitting in front of a bookshelf filled with various books. They are holding up a book titled "Dance Leadership: Theory into Practice" and smiling at the camera.

Dance Leadership: Theory into Practice (Palgrave Macmillan, 2017)
by Jane M. Alexandre

This “what is”—rather than “how to”—volume proposes a framework for understanding dance leadership, illustrated by portraits of leaders in action in India, South Africa, UK, US, Brazil and Canada; it considers such questions as whether the pursuit of art and culture is a human right? Does leadership require followers?


A person with short hair, wearing glasses, a face mask, and a checkered blazer is holding up a book titled "Resurrection Hope." The book features an illustration of several faces and the subtitle "A Future Where Black Lives Matter." The author's name is Kelly Brown Douglas.

Resurrection Hope: A Future Where Black Lives Matter (Orbis, 2021)
by Kelly Brown Douglas 

In Resurrection Hope, 2023 Grawemeyer Award recipient Dean Kelly Brown Douglas reflects on the persistence of white supremacy in America and the impact of a “white way of knowing” on American identity. By reflecting on her own faith and experiences, as well as a series of text messages she received from her son, she examines the failures of “good white Christians” and struggles with hope in the time of the “Black Lives Matter”.


Two smiling women in conference badges stand behind a table with a book titled "The Psychology of Christian Nationalism" by Pamela Cooper-White prominently displayed. The woman on the right holds a glass of red wine. People are seen socializing in the background.

The Psychology of Christian Nationalism: Why People Are Drawn in and How to Talk Across the Divide (Fortress Press, 2022)
by Pamela Cooper-White 

This timely book illuminates Christian nationalism as a historical, cultural, and political movement that serves as a pseudo-religious cloak for white masculinist supremacy; identifies social and psychological factors behind its powerful fear-and-hate mongering recruiting; and offers recommendations on when, whether, and how to dialogue across this populist assault on truth. 


A person with glasses and a beard stands in a room holding a book titled "The Unjust Steward: Wealth, Poverty, and the Church Today.” The person is wearing a yellow shirt and smiling at the camera. Behind them are a thermostat on the wall and a partially visible kitchen.

The Unjust Steward: Wealth, Poverty, and the Church Today (Forward Movement, 2022) 
by Miguel Escobar 

The Unjust Steward presents a compelling case for a profound overhaul in the way the church and its people value the poor and transform into servants of God instead of stewards of wealth.


The cover of the book titled "Spiritual Care for Non-Communicative Patients: A Guidebook" by Linda S. Golding and Walter Dixon. The cover is gradient blue with the authors' names and book title in light text. It includes a foreword by Rabbi Mychal B. Springer.Spiritual Care for Non-Communicative Patients (Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2019)
by Linda S. Golding

Research shows that non-communicative patients benefit significantly from spiritual and pastoral care, and this book equips chaplains and other care providers with the confidence and skills to deliver excellent care in this challenging context.


A person wearing glasses and a blue blazer is smiling and holding a book titled "Virgin Territory: Configuring Female Virginity in Early Christianity" by Julia Kelto Lillis. The background is a green wall.

Virgin Territory: Configuring Female Virginity in Early Christianity (University of California Press, 2022)
by Julia Kelto Lillis

Virgin Territory, written for a broad academic audience, describes the surprisingly diverse things “virginity” (even “bodily virginity”) could mean in the ancient world and charts the gradual rise of problematic ideas about women’s anatomy among early Christians and their neighbors.


A woman with short gray hair and a big smile sits in front of a wooden bookcase holding a book titled "Advent Days: A Christmas Devotional" by Genise Aria Reid. She wears a black jacket. The bookcase behind her has decorative items and books.

Advent Days: 28 Readings for the Season (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2018)
by Genise Aria Reid 

Advent Days: 28 Readings for the Season is a devotional booklet written from a Wesleyan-Holiness perspective, with a multigenerational lens (youth through adulthood). Designed for quick reading and slow reflection, it is versatile enough for use by both new Christians and those well-versed in Christian education.


A bearded man wearing glasses and a white shirt smiles while holding a colorful book titled "Faith + Power." The background consists of a beige stone wall with intricate carvings.

Faith and Power: Latino Religious Politics since 1945 (NYU Press, 2022) edited by Felipe Hinojosa, Maggie Elmore, and Sergio M. González
Contributor Dr. Jorge Rodríguez V

Faith and Power explores the intersections of religion and Latinx social activism since World War II. Dr. Rodríguez’ chapter, “Lived Religion in East Harlem,” examines the history of Puerto Rican migration and the New York Young Lords.


A person with short gray hair and glasses, wearing a maroon and purple scarf, holds up a book titled "Sacred Soil: A Gardener's Book of Reflection" by Melina Rudman. The background is a softly lit indoor space with a window.

Sacred Soil: A Gardener’s Book of Reflection (Anamchara Books, 2020)
by Melina Rudman

In these fifteen intimate essays, Melina Rudman explores the pain of loss and the joy of connection, all within the context of her garden; she writes of gardening as a spiritual practice, one that has the power to ground us in the seasons of and cycles of nature.


A person with short brown hair and a beard is holding two books while standing in front of a wooden background. The book in the right hand is titled "Christian Ethics in Conversation," and the book in the left hand is "The Other Evangelicals.

Christian Ethics in Conversation: A Festschrift in Honor of Donald W. Shriver Jr., 13th President of Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York (Wipf and Stock Publishers, 2020)
by Isaac B. Sharp and Christian T. Iosso 

Inspired by Donald W. Shriver Jr.’s leadership of Union Theological Seminary, Christian Ethics in Conversation brings together essays by members of a stellar faculty—including Gary Dorrien, Larry Rasmussen, Phyllis Trible, and Cornel West—and interdisciplinary colleagues, such as Columbia University biologist Robert Pollack, Chancellor Emeritus of the Jewish Theological Seminary Ismar Schorsch, and Pulitzer Prize–winning Yale historian David W. Blight.


The Other Evangelicals (Eerdmans, 2023) by Isaac B. Sharp

What’s the first thing that comes to mind when you hear “evangelical”?  For many, the answer is “white,” “patriarchal,” “conservative,” or “fundamentalist”—but as Isaac B. Sharp reveals, the “big tent” of evangelicalism has historically been much bigger than we’ve been led to believe. In The Other Evangelicals, Sharp brings to light the stories of those twentieth-century evangelicals who didn’t fit the mold, including Black, feminist, progressive, and gay Christians.

 

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