What We Are Reading Today: The End of the World is Just the Beginning

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Updated 13 July 2022
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What We Are Reading Today: The End of the World is Just the Beginning

  • Zeihan brings readers along for an illuminating ride packed with foresight, wit, and his trademark irreverence

Author: Peter Zeihan

In The End of the World is Just the Beginning, Peter Zeihan maps out the next world: A world where countries or regions will have no choice but to make their own goods, grow their own food, secure their own energy, fight their own battles, and do it all with populations that are both shrinking and aging.
The list of countries that make it all work is smaller than you think. Which means everything about our interconnected world — from how we manufacture products, to how we grow food, to how we keep the lights on, to how we shuttle stuff about, to how we pay for it all — is about to change.
Zeihan brings readers along for an illuminating ride packed with foresight, wit, and his trademark irreverence.


Book Review: ‘Small Things Like These’ by Claire Keegan

Updated 19 February 2026
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Book Review: ‘Small Things Like These’ by Claire Keegan

In “Small Things Like These,” Irish writer Claire Keegan delivers a quietly devastating meditation on conscience, courage and compassion.

Set in a small Irish town in 1985, the novella follows Bill Furlong, a coal merchant and devoted father whose steady routine is disrupted when he uncovers disturbing secrets within a local convent’s Magdalene laundry, institutions known for placing women in harsh working conditions under the guise of care. 

What unfolds is not a story of grand heroics but of moral awakening and quiet bravery. Keegan’s writing is economical yet deeply expressive, her sentences carrying a stillness that mirrors the winter atmosphere and the emotional restraint of her characters.

Furlong’s dilemma, whether to remain silent or act, reflects a broader question about how ordinary people respond to injustice when it happens in plain sight and when society prefers to look away. 

Keegan’s restraint is one of her greatest strengths. The novella avoids overt judgment or sentimentality, relying instead on nuance, rhythm and suggestion.

Everyday details, a gesture or a silence, reveal the quiet conflicts of conscience. Furlong’s character embodies the tension between comfort and conviction, reminding readers that doing nothing is itself a choice and that small decencies can carry immense moral weight. 

The book’s impact lies in its understatement. Within its brief length, Keegan captures the weight of an entire community’s silence and the redemptive power of individual decency. Her prose feels timeless in its precision, emotional intelligence and empathy. 

“Small Things Like These” is a beautiful, haunting work that lingers long after it ends.

It asks readers to consider how goodness survives in a world inclined toward indifference and how small acts can illuminate even the darkest corners of collective memory.