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- Elizabeth Newman, Adjunct Professor of Theology, Duke Divinity School
"Hinojosa deftly navigates the fields of literary theory, Marxist thought, and Christian theology to appraise the hollowed-out accounts of history and hope in much contemporary fiction. Novels as disparate as The English Patient and Parable of the Sower come under scrutiny for circumventing "the historic character of reality," a phrase from Hinojosa's primary interlocutor, Jürgen Moltmann. These and other works manifest hope as ironic detachment or triumph over time or presumptuous utopia, while Marilynne Robinson's fiction, in contrast, discloses the congruity of history and hope as her characters experience transformation within, not in spite of, the brokenness of the past, present, and their longed-for futures. For specialists perhaps, this book nonetheless speaks to the urgency of our cultural moment in which the myriad crises we face cry out for a practical, actionable hope by which we can claim that another world-of wounds healed, of violence reckoned with-is possible."
- Debra Dean Murphy, Associate Professor of Religious Studies, West Virginia Wesleyan College