To listen to this or any of our episodes in full, visit ttf.org/podcasts and to help make content like this possible, join the Trinity Forum Society.
Our Summer 2025 series, Beside Still Waters, focuses on the places where creativity brings life into a world fatigued by brokenness and division. From jazz to Jane Austen and in between, this season we’re focusing on the ways literature and the arts can refresh and challenge our inner lives—and connect us with the Creator of the good, the true, and the beautiful.
Today’s episode concludes our summer series. Our guide today is the acclaimed writer Marilynne Robinson, author of the Gilead series, and much else.
In this episode, originally an Online Conversation recorded in 2020, Marilynne reflects on the art of writing as a means of exploring truth and engaging questions around learning to live well, to love others, and to create a home and community, in our fractious world:
“The unique brilliance of a human being … is something that we tend utterly to disparage, demean, utterly fail to notice … every person lives out a beautiful, complicated, inaccessible to other consciousnesses, sort of terrible life. And it is sacred.”
And if this conversation resonates with you, consider joining the Trinity Forum community as a member, at ttf.org. You can find the full video of this conversation there too.
Podcast Pairing
Accompany your episode listening with a fresh summer recipe curated by our staff!

Marilynne Robinson’s Novels | Housekeeping, Gilead, Home, Lila, Jack, Reading Genesis
Article in Breaking Ground from our event.
Authors and books mentioned in the conversation:
Moby Dick, by Herman Mellville
Piers Plowman, by William Langland
Related Trinity Forum Readings:
- Sacred and Profane Love | A Trinity Forum Reading by John Donne
- Bulletins from Immortality | A Trinity Forum Reading by Emily Dickinson
- Confessions | A Trinity Forum Reading by Saint Augustine
- Brave New World | A Trinity Forum Reading by Aldous Huxley
Marilynne Robinson is a novelist, essayist, and teacher, one of the most renowned and revered of living writers. Her novels Housekeeping, Gilead, Lila, and Home have been variously honored with the Pulitzer Prize, National Books Critics Circle Award (twice), a Hemingway Foundation Award, an Orange Prize, The Library of Congress Prize for American Fiction, and the Ambassador Book Award. She’s also the author of many essays and non-fiction works, including her work, “Mother Country”, and her essay collections, “Death of Adam,” “Absence of Mind,” “When I was a Child I Read Books,” “The Givenness of Things,” and “What Are We Doing Here?”. She’s the recipient of the National Humanities Medal and an elected fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In addition to her writing has spent over 20 years teaching at the Iowa Writers Workshop, as well as several universities.