Agnostic: A Spirited Manifesto
By (Author) Lesley Hazleton
Penguin Putnam Inc
Hudson Street Press (an imprint of Penguin Group (USA) Inc)
3rd July 2017
United States
General
Non Fiction
Philosophy of religion
Comparative religion
Religious issues and debates
211.7
Paperback
224
Width 130mm, Height 203mm
In this provocative, brilliant book, Lesley Hazleton gives voice to the case for agnosticism, breaks it free of its stereotypes as watered-down atheism or amorphous 'seeking', and celebrates it as a reasoned, revealing, and sustaining stance toward life. Stepping over the lines imposed by rigid conviction, she draws on philosophy, theology, psychology, science, and more to explore agnosticism with curiosity and passion. Inspired and inspiring, Agnostic recasts the question of belief not as a problem to be solved but as an invitation to an ongoing, open-ended adventure of the mind.
Praise forAgnostic:
In Hazletons vital, mischievous new book, the term [agnostic] represents a positive orientation towards life all its own, one that embraces both science and mystery, and values the immediate joys of lifeIn each of her wide-ranging reflections.she remains intimately grounded and engaged in our human, day-to-day life. --New York Times Book Review
"A beautiful, inquisitive, energetic 200-page tribute to uncertainty... thats about 50 times as charming as anything Sam Harris has ever written and 500 times more inspiring than any of Joel Osteens books...You might give yourself windburn turning these pages." --Seattle Review of Books
Provocative[Hazleton] paddles the river of doubt with energy and exuberance. --Seattle Times
Hazleton makes a compelling case for why agnosticism matters, and sets out a comprehensive and though-provoking definition of what it means. Its a powerful and deeply humanistic argument, told deftly through these pages. Vol. 1 Brooklyn
"The title of Hazletons manifesto on agnosticism is not a contradiction: she imbues the middle ground between belief and non-belief with spirit by showing that agnosticism itself is a disposition in favor of intellectual and emotional dexterity. A book that should be read as much by the believer (the religious or atheist) as anyone else." -- Flavorwire, "A Must Read"
"A heady romp through the mind of an intellectual adventurer who relishes curiosity and questioning over the dubious comforts of dogma and certainty. --Seattle Met
To be agnostic is not to sidestep the question of belief, for Hazleton, or to commit to a wishy-washy moral framework. It is instead to have enough backbone to stand firm in the liminality of uncertainty. She wants readers to give agnosticism a fair shake, and many will be convinced by her appealing voice and accessible prose. --Publisher's Weekly (starred)
"Here, with clever elucidation, are artful essays that celebrate the wonder of the unknown Hazleton does not deny possibilities; she denies only assured and implacable dogma. --Kirkus Reviews
Personably persuasive Informed by science, philosophy, literature, history, travel, hiking, and more, Hazletons manifesto makes the suspension of conviction as attractive as any theist or atheist testament. --Booklist
At last, a liberating antidote to the either/or thinking of the atheist/believer debate. Hazleton makes an impassioned and persuasive case for the insights and joys to be gained from a stance of not-knowing.
--Reza Aslan, author of Zealot and No God but God
It's a fraught enterprise to take on the big questions--God, meaning, mortality, existence--but Hazleton has done it here with remarkable aplomb, and in a singular voice devoid of pretension. Her manifesto is, for me, a celebration--a welcome infusion of joy in an arena preponderantly inhabited by dogmatists. --David Guterson, author of Snow Falling on Cedars
As a rabbi whose search for religious meaning is constantly renewed by doubt, I loved Lesley Hazelton's book. It is vibrant, challenging, extremely interesting, funny and profound. It is wise in its embrace of paradox, mystery and science.
--Rabbi Rachel Cowan, Former Director of the Institute for Jewish Spirituality
Praise for The First Muslim:
The First Muslim succeeds. It makes its subject vivid and immediate. Hari Kunzru, The New York Times Book Review
Richly detailed and beautifully written . . . [Hazleton] is able to do with words what is almost never attempted in pictures . . . indispensable. The Seattle Times
Like her subject, Hazleton brilliantly navigates the vast and often terrifying arena in which politics and religion intersect, revealing the deep humanity of faith. More
The First Muslim finds the human in the sacred. The Stranger
Lesley Hazleton is an award-winning writer whose work focuses on the intersection of religion, history, and politics. She reported on the Middle East from Jerusalem for more than a dozen years, and has written forTime, The New York Times, The New York Review of Books, Harper's, The Nation, and The New Republic, among others. Her book After the Prophet was a finalist for the PEN Center USA Literary Award, and she is the recipient of The Stranger's "Genius in Literature" Award. Hazleton lives in Seattle.