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Cross Word Books

Cross Word Books

Di: Michele McAloon
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Listen. Learn. Engage.

Welcome to Cross Word Books, the podcast where we delve into compelling conversations with authors who illuminate history, politics, culture, faith, and art.

Each episode uncovers intriguing insights and untold stories that shape our understanding of today’s world and the rich tapestry of ideas that define it. Whether you’re passionate about the cultural impact of art or curious about how history informs our political landscape, Crossword invites you to explore the diverse forces that influence human experience.

Join our community of curious minds and subscribe now to embark on a journey of discovery, thoughtful reflection, and deeper connection with the world around us.

© 2026 Cross Word Books
Arte Storia e critica della letteratura
  • Pangolins, Faith, And A Librarian’s Quest
    Jan 20 2026

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    https://www.bookclues.com

    Care about wildlife conservation, China-Africa politics, religious freedom, and character-driven storytelling with real stakes, this conversation is for you.

    An interview with author David Pinault on his real world fiction book

    Earth Dragon Run

    A Spiritual Entertainment

    Ignatius Press

    A quiet librarian gets pushed out, grabs a stuffed monkey, and walks straight into the underbelly of our global moment. We dive into Earth Dragon Run, a propulsive novel that uses one endangered creature—the pangolin—to map the hidden circuitry of animal trafficking, cyber scams, and state-backed extraction across Africa and Asia. What starts as a quirky quest becomes a moral investigation: How do you keep your soul when markets price everything and protect nothing?

    We follow Danny Quirk, a 70-year-old with more books than friends, and Minnie Meixing, a Hong Kong student-turned-refugee who channels her courage into wildlife rescue near the China border and later in South Africa. Their paths illuminate hard truths: demand for pangolin scales in traditional medicine, snares that silently kill in the bush, and mines where “cost optimization” erases worker safety and scars the land. Along the way we unpack Cardinal Zen’s witness, the Vatican’s uneasy deal with Beijing, and why younger Chinese volunteers abroad quietly defy cruelty even as the Party tightens its grip.

    The conversation moves from San Francisco’s Chinatown to Hong Kong marches, from snare sweeps near Kruger to casino-linked cyber scam hubs in Cambodia. We meet characters inspired by real encounters—Afrikaner farmers, Zimbabwean migrants, mixed patrol teams—whose cooperation in the bush cuts through propaganda. We also set Catholic tradition beside Jain nonviolence to ask what genuine compassion demands now: not slogans, but practices that shield the vulnerable. And yes, we talk Latin, old prayers, and the armor of God—because spiritual formation isn’t nostalgia; it’s training for a world that fights back.

    Find out more about Professor Pinault other books https://ignatius.com/authors/david-pinault/




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    47 min
  • So, About That “Solved In One Day” Plan
    Jan 9 2026

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    Article by Adam Entous of the New York Times

    The Separation: Inside the Unraveling U.S.-Ukraine Partnership

    https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2025/12/30/world/europe/ukraine-war-us-russia.html

    We trace Ukraine’s war from early U.S.–Ukraine partnership to a fragile “separation,” where support is uneven, Europe scales up late, and a DMZ-style end state competes with continued attrition. Adam Entous of the New York Times lays out the battlefield, the backchannels, and the choices that could lock in peace—or prolong risk.

    • The shift from artillery dominance to drone warfare and frozen lines
    • Why Donetsk and Luhansk are strategic, not just symbolic
    • Security guarantees as deterrence architecture short of NATO
    • Sanctions and Ukrainian drone strikes targeting Russian refineries
    • U.S. policy splits: munitions for Ukraine vs Indo-Pacific stockpiles
    • The Whitkoff–Kushner channel and Russia’s “inevitability” narrative
    • Europe’s rearmament and the slow ramp of 155 mm production
    • Russian incompetence vs Ukrainian resilience on the ground
    • What a DMZ-style settlement might require to hold

    Please tell your friends about my show
    You can find out more about me at https://www.bookclues.com

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    47 min
  • Gold, Frankincense, Myrrh, And A Whole Lot Of Geopolitics
    Jan 5 2026

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    Forget the tinsel and crowns—let’s meet the Magi where history lives. We sit down with Fr. Dwight Longenecker, author of The Mystery of the Magi, to rethink the famous journey to Bethlehem through the lenses of archaeology, geopolitics, and Scripture. Instead of mystical monarchs following a neon star, we explore a compelling alternative: Nabataean court advisors—astrologers and diplomats—from Petra, navigating trade routes, Roman power, and Herod’s volatile court.

    We dig into why Matthew includes the Magi while Luke doesn’t, and how reading the Bible with historical context can strip away later legends without losing wonder. Fr. Longenecker maps the power players of the era—Rome, Herod the Great, and the Nabataeans—and explains how Aretas IV’s shaky throne and dependence on Roman goodwill could have sparked a diplomatic mission to Judea. The gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh move from pure symbolism to economic fingerprints of Arabian trade, pointing to a real origin and a recognizable protocol of royal homage.

    And the star? We weigh leading theories: supernatural sign, astrological reading, or rare astronomical event. Rather than a celestial spotlight dragging caravans across dunes, Matthew suggests discerning signs that prompt a journey to Jerusalem and then to Bethlehem. Along the way, we call out Gnostic embellishments—like the “burning baby in the sky”—and return to a leaner, stronger account where faith and reason meet. If you care about biblical history, Epiphany, or how ancient trade networks intersected with theology, this conversation brings the Nativity’s most enigmatic visitors into crisp focus.

    If the reframe sparks your curiosity, follow the show, share this episode with a friend who loves history, and leave a review with your take on who the Magi really were.

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    29 min
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