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Saviourgate

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About the author

Russell Kirk

185 books304 followers
For more than forty years, Russell Kirk was in the thick of the intellectual controversies of his time. He is the author of some thirty-two books, hundreds of periodical essays, and many short stories. Both Time and Newsweek have described him as one of America’s leading thinkers, and The New York Times acknowledged the scale of his influence when in 1998 it wrote that Kirk’s 1953 book The Conservative Mind “gave American conservatives an identity and a genealogy and catalyzed the postwar movement.”

Dr. Kirk wrote and spoke on modern culture, political thought and practice, educational theory, literary criticism, ethical questions, and social themes. He addressed audiences on hundreds of American campuses and appeared often on television and radio.

He edited the educational quarterly journal The University Bookman and was founder and first editor of the quarterly Modern Age. He contributed articles to numerous serious periodicals on either side of the Atlantic. For a quarter of a century he wrote a page on education for National Review, and for thirteen years published, through the Los Angeles Times Syndicate, a nationally syndicated newspaper column. Over the years he contributed to more than a hundred serious periodicals in the United States, Britain, Canada, Australia, Austria, Germany, Italy, Spain, Bulgaria, and Poland, among them Sewanee Review, Yale Review, Fortune, Humanitas, The Contemporary Review, The Journal of the History of Ideas, World Review, Crisis, History Today, Policy Review, Commonweal, Kenyon Review, The Review of Politics, and The World and I.

He is the only American to hold the highest arts degree (earned) of the senior Scottish university—doctor of letters of St. Andrews. He received his bachelor’s degree from Michigan State University and his master’s degree from Duke University. He received honorary doctorates from twelve American universities and colleges.

He was a Guggenheim Fellow, a senior fellow of the American Council of Learned Societies, a Constitutional Fellow of the National Endowment for the Humanities, and a Fulbright Lecturer in Scotland. The Christopher Award was conferred upon him for his book Eliot and His Age, and he received the Ann Radcliffe Award of the Count Dracula Society for his Gothic Fiction. The Third World Fantasy Convention gave him its award for best short fiction for his short story, “There’s a Long, Long Trail a-Winding.” In 1984 he received the Weaver Award of the Ingersoll Prizes for his scholarly writing. For several years he was a Distinguished Scholar of the Heritage Foundation. In 1989, President Reagan conferred on him the Presidential Citizens Medal. In 1991, he was awarded the Salvatori Prize for historical writing.

More than a million copies of Kirk’s books have been sold, and several have been translated in German, Italian, Spanish, Dutch, Korean, and other languages. His second book, The Conservative Mind (1953), is one of the most widely reviewed and discussed studies of political ideas in this century and has gone through seven editions. Seventeen of his books are in print at present, and he has written prefaces to many other books, contributed essays to them, or edited them.

Dr. Kirk debated with such well-known speakers as Norman Thomas, Frank Mankiewicz, Carey McWilliams, John Roche, Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., Michael Harrington, Max Lerner, Michael Novak, Sidney Lens, William Kunstler, Hubert Humphrey, F. A. Hayek, Karl Hess, Clifford Case, Ayn Rand, Eugene McCarthy, Leonard Weinglass, Louis Lomax, Harold Taylor, Clark Kerr, Saul Alinsky, Staughton Lynd, Malcolm X, Dick Gregory, and Tom Hayden. Several of his public lectures have been broadcast nationally on C-SPAN.

Among Kirk’s literary and scholarly friends were T. S. Eliot, Roy Campbell, Wyndham Lewis, Donald Davidson, George Scott-Moncrieff, Richard Weaver, Max Picard, Ray Bradbury, Bernard Iddings Bell, Paul Roche, James McAuley, Thomas Howard, Wilhem Roepke, Robert Speaight

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Richard Dominguez.
958 reviews128 followers
December 24, 2022
Saviourgate by Russell Kirk is a Christmas ghost story whereby a man stumbles into an English pub on a snowy Christmas Eve. In the convivial atmosphere he meets people he recognizes though he doesn't remember being there before and he is given one more chance.

A great little story much in the vain of Dickens's Christmas Carol.
Profile Image for Red Claire .
396 reviews5 followers
August 11, 2021
Beautiful, beautiful work - a haunting, evocative Christmas tale with a very realistic invocation of the depths of everyday suicidal ideation and the unexpected rising of hope. A very traditional theme done very well in a more modern setting.
Profile Image for Erin Powe.
188 reviews10 followers
December 29, 2019
Part of my post-Christmas ghost story fixation.
Haunting in the best way. wow.
but some strange ideas in the story and works-based theology.
Profile Image for Heidi.
887 reviews2 followers
December 25, 2022
This story was first published in the November 1976 issue of The
Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction and is 15 pages long.

It was re-printed in the anthology Ancestral Shadows: An
Anthology of Ghostly Tales.
Profile Image for Liz.
1,836 reviews13 followers
December 30, 2023
An interesting Christmas ghost story. It's worth checking out. A man is rushing to catch a train back to London when he has an unusual encounter. I found it on the Classic Ghost Stories podcast. It was nicely narrated by Tony Walker.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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