tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19678732.post360754380850287787..comments2023-07-31T10:39:53.182-05:00Comments on The Blog of the American Chesterton Society: Chesterton SpottingsNancy C. Brownhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06169395014931291729noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19678732.post-50270035159641518202009-08-05T17:20:56.733-05:002009-08-05T17:20:56.733-05:00The current edition of The Tablet (http://www.thet...The current edition of The Tablet (http://www.thetablet.co.uk/) has lots about GKC and distributism!TonyTheProfhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10486414706261508994noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19678732.post-37168228532895933052009-08-04T11:28:04.022-05:002009-08-04T11:28:04.022-05:00I would certainly love to read the Our Sunday Visi...I would certainly love to read the <i>Our Sunday Visitor</i> article<br /><br />Anyway, another mention of Chesterton (though not an article about him) in an interview with author Dean Koontz:<br /><br />http://catholicexchange.com/2009/08/01/120925/<br /><br /><b>Dean Koontz:</b> By the time I was going to college, I was looking for a different path from where I had been. Then I began to be drawn to — I wouldn’t say more organized, but a more formalized kind of faith. I did become engaged, more and more as the years went by, by the intellectual rigor that lies behind the Catholic Church. A lot of people will possibly laugh at that but if you know St. Thomas Aquinas and some of the other famous writers of the Church — <b>or laymen who wrote brilliantly from a Catholic perspective like G.K. Chesterton —</b> then you understand what I’m talking about. There is a deep intellectual basis behind it and that always appealed to me.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com