File# | Title | First Line | Rev.Author | Citation | Year |
01 | A kinsman to many | A decade ago, when I first took the first tentative, frightened step | Baker, James T. |
Commonweal 108 (10 April 1981): 214-216.
| 1981 |
02 | Merton: Not Yet Disappeared | Thomas Merton, a widely known figure of American Catholicism, was a man of significant | Elwood, J. M. |
National Catholic Register 16 (19 September 1980) : 18.
| 1980 |
03 | | What Merton wrote was never so fascinating as the man himself. | Lane, Belden C. |
Theology Today 38.2 (July 1981): 242-246.
| 1981 |
04 | | I am pleased to review this book in light of the grossly unfair treatment it received from | Teahan, John F. |
Journal of Religion 63.1 (January 1983): 95-96.
| 1983 |
05 | | Selecting as her theme a crisp statement of Thomas Merton in his Asian Journal (1968): | Kelley, Frederic J. |
Horizons 8 (Fall 1981): 398-399.
| 1981 |
06 | | At last, twelve years after his untimely death in Bangkok on Dec. 10, 1968, a full | Kelly, Frederic J., SJ |
Theological Studies 42 (March 1981): 154-157.
| 1981 |
07 | | Malits, an acknowledged authority on Thomas Merton and Chair of the Religious Studies | |
Choice 18 (January 1981): 676.
| 1981 |
08 | The Ordeal of Thomas Merton | They found him lying dead on the floor of a hotel room in Bangkok, the victim of accidental | Gray, Francine de Plessix |
New York Times Book Review (19 October 1980): 3, 28, 30.
| 1980 |
09 | | Thomas Merton continues to exert great influence on American spirituality | Bailey, Raymond H. |
Review & Expositor [Louisville] 79.1 (Winter 1982): 177-179.
| 1982 |
10 | Four on Merton | It is nearly thirteen years since the death of Thomas Merton. The interest in his life and thought | Terry, James S. |
Cross Currents 31 (Spring 1981): 102-105. James S. Terry.
| 1981 |
11 | | The intemperance which characterizes so much of what is written and said about Thomas Merton | Garvey, Michael |
Critic 40.2 (February 1981): 2-4.
| 1981 |
XREF1 | Merton's Affirmation and Affirmation of Merton: Writing about Silence | Thomas Merton chose to be a cloistered contemplative within one of the most austere religious orders in the United States. | Kramer, Victor A. |
Review [Charlottesville, VA] 4 (1982): 295-333 [see review author file].
| 1982 |