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At Liberty: Reconciling to a Life Worthy of the Calling

At Liberty: Reconciling to a Life Worthy of the Calling

By: Christina Nordstrom
Publication Date: June 3, 2026
ISBN: 979-8240465307
Reviewed by: Ephantus Muriuki
Review Date: July 6, 2026

In her introduction of At Liberty: Reconciling to a Life Worthy of the Calling, Christina Nordstrom describes herself as a lifelong learner, a position that makes the reader feel invited as a companion into her ongoing journey of understanding.

What follows in the first chapter is a deeply moving moment of her confession and awakening where she shares a dream in which she encountered her seven-year-old self, who was angry and wounded from years of being silenced by an oppressor, none other than her now-grown self. For Nordstrom, that dream marked her turning point, where amends with her inner self and confronting that which was still unresolved inside of her felt not only necessary, but urgent.

Next, Nordstrom, after finally deciding to take action, turns her attention to the deeply rooted bias against women in her cultural environment where male dominance was prevalent. The oppression, she states, ran deep, and for the longest time contributed its version of trauma to many women, herself included. This was a culture in which many parents visibly got disappointed when they gave birth to a girl instead of a boy, and worse still, children's books and television shows displayed a clear male preference by making sure that the main characters, sometimes up to 95 percent, were male. Looking at herself, Nordstrom feels that many of the beliefs she held growing up were simply not from her own convictions, but that they were unconsciously inherited from that culture.

In the book, she engages with a number of thinkers who have boldly questioned deeply embedded concerns and assumptions about women's roles in both society and intellectual life. They include Irene Stiver and Professor Manning, Professors Mary Frank Fox and Sharlene Biber-Hesse, among others. She uses their findings to bring on board a cumulative argument especially about how the bias was, and is, still woven into the very frameworks through which knowledge is produced, validated and circulated. Beyond that, these voices push a greater idea: that what we often treat as normal knowledge is actually shaped by relationship and institutional habits that go unquestioned for a long time.

As you read this book, you realize that instead of moving fast in a conventional narrative sense, it actually circles around the same ideas but from different angles. This helps you, as the reader, absorb the ideas slowly and more deeply. Additionally, what you encounter through a deliberate pacing is a deeply researched exposition whose weight lies in the author's ongoing observations, questions, reflections and realizations, many of which are lived-in. Step-by-step, she reveals how she arrives at certain conclusions, revealing the mark of a great author, one who is willing to let meaning develop gradually. The question of the actual source of what we call 'choice' in life is what really makes the book feel current, in a world where as of today, the patterns haven't really disappeared but simply become subtler.

Quill says: At Liberty: Reconciling to a Life Worthy of the Calling is, without a doubt, a book that will continue to echo in the background of how its target audience sees themselves and the world around them. It is especially outstanding for how it treats knowledge as something you unlearn as much as you learn. This rare approach contributes deeply to its depth. The intellectual frameworks that helped the author understand her experience, including Liberation Theology and the Pedagogy of the Oppressed, are brilliant. It is a meaningful work to gift a friend or to yourself, especially if you are drawn to thoughtful, reflective works that linger long after the final page is turned.

For more information about At Liberty: Reconciling to a Life Worthy of the Calling, please visit the author's website at: christinanordstrom.com/

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