Some of Books & Culture editor John Wilson�s favorite magazine book review sections (besides CT�s). ���
The Christian Century
Wasn't CT founded as an evangelical alternative to the Century? Yes, but while differences remain, the dividing lines have grown blurrier. For example, senior editor Richard Kauffman, who presides over the Century's excellent books coverage, was formerly at CT. See the May 1 issue - the spring books issue - for a good sampling, starting with Bill Placher on the concluding volume of Gary Dorrien's The Making of American Liberal Theology. You'll find enough that's familiar to make the reading congenial and enough that's different to keep it interesting. Because the Century is published biweekly, you will also encounter a lot more reviews. Value added: The magazine regularly features poetry, selected by poetry editor Jill Pel?ez Baumgaertner.
First Things
Catholic at its core, ecumenically orthodox in its scope, with friendly visitors from the Jewish community (David Novak, for example), First Things routinely features substantial essay reviews as well as shorter pieces and a handful of mini-reviews. Richard John Neuhaus's back of-the-book feature "The Public Square," where most readers turn first, often comments on books and their authors, always with wit and penetration, occasionally with withering scorn. And like the Century, First Things has poetry in every issue.
The Atlantic
This was already the best general-interest magazine on the market. Several years ago, its books section was beefed up and otherwise improved to match the rest of the menu. I miss the hand of longtime editor Cullen Murphy, who left when the magazine moved to Washington, D.C., forsaking its ancestral home in Boston. But the coverage of books remains superb. Literary editor Benjamin Schwarz leads off every section with a delightfully unpredictable "Editor's Choice" column (the June issue focuses on books that show "how a revolution in American domestic architecture put women in command"). Another regular is Christopher Hitchens, an atheist who's often provocative and never boring.
(This originally appeared on p. 59 of the July 2007 issue of Christianity Today.)
Posted by John Wilson on July 18, 2007 9:23AM

Comments
First things is awesome !
Posted by: linda at July 18, 2007
The magazines you list are indeed decent publications with their particular bent. However, the best magazines available in the English language are: (i) The Economist (hands down number one with no close rival) and (ii) The New Yorker. As far as CT goes, unfortunately CT lost sight of whatever mission it had a very long time ago, which is when I allowed my subscription to expire and now enjoy its online edition, which is all the CT I need. Honestly CT has become the People magazine of the Evangelical subculture. I am without a doubt that if Carl Henry ere to flip through the pages of what CT has become, he wouldn't recognize the magazine as CT.
Posted by: Robert at July 18, 2007
Thankfully Hitchens no longer writes for the Nation. Good riddance! One of my favorite magazines, along with CT.
Hey, Robert, what is the beef with CT? Can you say more about why you think it has "lost sight" of its mission and become the evangelical People? My take is that it is one of the few evangelical magazines on the market that accomodates a large range of viewpoints and is fair to each one, and strikes a great balance of passion and dispassion in its reporting. The Christian landscape in the U.S. would not be the same without it.
Posted by: Patrick at July 18, 2007
All excellent selections. Though the economist is the best English weekly, its books section can't offer the breadth or depth of coverage of the listed publications. I'm surprised you left out the New Republic, considering its current book reviewing chief.
Posted by: James at July 18, 2007
Once upon a time I was a subscriber to The Atlantic. Then the Bush-Bashing really started in earnest, particularly by James Fallows, a writer for the magazine. It's much more fun to read a magazine when you don't have to carefully weigh whether something cited is actually true or the writer merely wants it to be true.
But I have an admission to make; I still find myself purchasing it off the newstand and it's usually engrossing. Not as great as it used to be but still enjoyable.
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