-Bishop Robert Narron, Bishop of the Diocese of Winona-Rochester and founder of Word on Fire Catholic Ministries
Cynthia Haven's treatment of the theorist René Girard's religious conversion is lively and lucid, but above all, it is judicious. Her careful attention to context and history remind us that Girard's experience has a universal, human dimension that will make his seminal work widely appreciated for generations to come.
-Gregory Wolfe, Publisher and Editor of Slant Books and author of Beauty Will Save the World and other books.
René Girard devoted his career to tracking down the twists and turns of mimetic desire in literature, philosophy, and anthropology. Cynthia Haven's primer makes an invaluable contribution to Girard studies by tracking down the places where Girard discussed how his theories emerged from a personal process of intellectual and spiritual conversion-
and its public consequences. What emerges is a compelling picture of Girard as a post-secular thinker who tears down artificial boundaries, such as the ones between the religious and the secular, between the private and public. Haven invites would-be Girard readers to see themselves as participating in a common struggle rather than scapegoating each other. This is a must-read book for a time when mimetic competition, shorn of scapegoating safeguards, rends the fabric of civil society.
-Artur Rosman, literary scholar, translator, and blogger at Cosmos the in Lost.