What Are the Best Titles in American Religious History?
BY ED BLUM
After I posted about Courtney Bender's book and praised her for the title, she sent me an emailing mentioning that her title was conceived in conversation with her press editor. She wanted U Chicago Press to feel some of the accolades as well.
And it got me thinking: what are the best titles in American religious history? Not the best books, but the best literary titles - and why.
So, if you have an opinion on this, please leave a comment and defend your choice. Let's have a comment-off.
After I posted about Courtney Bender's book and praised her for the title, she sent me an emailing mentioning that her title was conceived in conversation with her press editor. She wanted U Chicago Press to feel some of the accolades as well.
And it got me thinking: what are the best titles in American religious history? Not the best books, but the best literary titles - and why.
So, if you have an opinion on this, please leave a comment and defend your choice. Let's have a comment-off.
Comments
Baptized in Blood.
But Baptized in Blood probably wins.
Great topic, Ed.
Shopkeeper's Millennium by Paul Johnson
Cradle of the Middle Class by Mary Ryan
Those titles, I think, are just terrific.
Consumer Rites by Leigh E. Schmidt
New England's Generation by Virginia DeJohn Anderson
Henry May, The End of American Innocence: A Study of the First Years of Our Own Time.
Then, on Catholics:
William Halsey, The Survival of American Innocence: Catholicism in an Era of Disillusionment.
Boom. Thesis in title. No need for subtitle.
I also like When Church Became Theatre and Body Piercing Saved My Life.
One has to like titles that reflect the religious economy: Cimino and Latin's _Shopping for Faith_, George's _God's Salesman_, Chesnut's _Competitive Spirits_, and Miller's _Consuming Religion_.
Daniel Hofrenning's In Washington But Not Of It
Hudnut-Beumier's In Pursuit of the Almighty's Dollar
Edward Larson's Summer of the Gods
And the winner? Blood Done Sign my Name by Tim Tyson.