I wish I had read this earlier in my short life, a great critique of a variety of issues but the hardest hitting in my mind was him going after the economics of the Protestant work ethic.
The original edition of this book is 50 years old (though this edition was edited by the author before his death in the 80's, and he retained most of it, and just added a few chapters). It's a short book (~112 pages) ostensibly aimed at young adults, but certainly not solely confined to that age group.
Remarkable how prescient and how on target Stringfellow is -- I'd recommend this title to all, except, even though it's not a long read (I finished it in a few hours), Stringfellow's writing is unique in that each sentence and paragraph packs an immense payload. But I pledge to you it it is well worth it -- and the sands of time have not diminished the luminous value one iota. The themes of Christian identity, the culture (and church) inability to properly deal with issues such as death, sexuality, marriage, loneliness, etc. still echo loudly in 2013.
This feels like reading a Biblical prophet translocated to the modern era.
William Stringfellow moves me to action in prayer as well as to meet the world's needs. He points out choices between true life and baubles, vain glory. The world and politics may be calling us to that ever more.