If this doesn't disturb the frowning unibrow on our pallid hyper-rationalist foreheads, nothing will. I read it as an extended meditation on Chesterton's insight that a maniac isn't someone who has lost his reason, but someone who has lost everything except his reason. Gabelman, reminding us how there are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in a world of iron logic, shows the value of nonsense without taking refuge in nonsense.
MICHAEL WARD, Fellow of Blackfriars Hall, Oxford, and Professor of Apologetics, Houston Baptist University
Josephine Gabelman exhibits a high-spirited belief that theological redescriptions of the world can disclose that world to us more fully. She combines a Wildean delight in pointing out the failure of narrowly conceived 'realism' as a literary method (because of the way it starves the human imagination's innate and essential striving for mythopoetic meaning) with a performance of something like what Dietrich Bonhoeffer once called 'hilaritas': in her case, a confidence that, in its radicalness, a Christian mythopoesis discloses the world's truest and surest goods. It is a bold and exhilarating book.
BEN QUASH, Professor of Christianity and the Arts, King's College London
A provocative and probing exploration of the senses in which Christian theology, by being faithful to its central premise and point of departure, is bound always to appear 'nonsensical' to those wedded not just to particular rationalities, but to 'rationality' as such as a primary desideratum and aspiration to be privileged above all others. The author demonstrates persuasively that reason in its highest mode may be something rather different, and better suited to the theological circumstance.
TREVOR HART, Professor, University of St. Andrews
This book begins with an invocation of Jane Austen at her wittiest, on the matter of balls and boredom . . . One might say that Josephine Gabelman has more boldly suggested than anyone hitherto that the Christian life, if it is true to the Christian vision, should be more like a ball than a conversation - however fascinating.
JOHN MILBANK, Author, Theology and Social Theory