Richard Holloway was Bishop of Edinburgh and Primus of the Scottish Episcopal Church. A former Gresham Professor of Divinity and Chairman of the Joint Board of the Scottish Arts Council and Scottish Screen, he is a fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. Leaving Alexandria won the PEN/Ackerley Prize and was shortlisted for the Orwell Prize. His most recent book, Waiting for the Last Bus, was a Sunday Times bestseller.
This may be the book I've been searching for, desperately,
throughout most of my life . . . it represents a first step toward
a new form of spiritual thought . . . What Holloway does most
powerfully is dismiss certainty in all its forms, political as well
as religious . . . Holloway brings a message of spiritual hope for
all
* * Herald * *
An engaging, erudite explanation of how he came to be where he now
stands and is a warning against the cruel righteousness of many
belief systems
* * Sunday Times * *
If every priest and imam, every MP and CEO, every person like you
and me read this, then the world would be a better place. It is
devastatingly humane. It blends science, philosophy and religion
and admits the art (and artifice) in these avowedly objective
forms. Erudition and empathy; I wept
*DAMIAN BARR*
Engaging and uplifting. . . . this personal, scientific and
philosophical journey to explore what might be the answers to the
world's biggest questions is both playful and inspiring . . . The
richness of this book challenged the short space of a review
* * Daily Mail * *
Thought-provoking [and] stimulating . . . a sane guide through the
turbulence of the modern world, one written with humour and
self-deprecating pessimism
* * Independent * *
There is much in this book to make you think, much to provoke
argument for and against
* * Scotsman * *
Wise, witty and provocative . . . This is an important book, for
all of us who want to understand the world and each other. You put
it down refreshed
* * The Tablet * *
[Told] exceptionally well . . . Holloway is right to ask us to
examine the story we live by to see whether it does in fact make us
respond in practice to suffering. He does so with his
characteristic honesty, verve and punch
* * Church Times * *
Praise for Waiting for the Last Bus: A wonderful, wise,
compassionate and befriending piece of work
*KATHRYN MANNIX, author of With the End in Mind*
Thought-provoking, revelatory, grave and comforting. It is
impossible not to be moved by it in the most profound way
*ALEXANDER McCALL SMITH*
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