Daniel McInerny is associate professor and chair of the Philosophy Department at Christendom College in Front Royal, Virginia. He is the author of The Difficult Good: A Thomistic Approach to Moral Conflict and Human Happiness (Fordham University Press, 2006). He is also an author of fiction and drama. In 2023, he published his novel, The Good Death of Kate Montclair (Chrism Press), which his fellow Catholic novelist Maya Sinha hailed as ""an instant classic of 21st-century Catholic fiction."" He and his wife Amy have three grown children and one grandchild and live in the beautiful Shenandoah Valley of Virginia.
""Daniel McInerny's book clarifies why we enjoy works of art--pictures, music, drama and movies, poetry and novels--and it also shows why we revere such works: not as ends in themselves, but because they place us in the truthful presence of what they depict. The book reactivates Aristotle's understanding of mimesis and Aquinas's enhancement of it. It shows how art elevates what it displays as well as the community that experiences it. It is a metaphysical and theological reflection on the arts, written in the style and spirit of C. S. Lewis: limpid prose, abundant citations, colorful examples. A book to study and learn from, then to browse in and enjoy.""--Msgr. Robert Sokolowski ""McInerny delivers a sustained and compelling defense of art as mimetic form, a philosophical defense rooted in careful analysis of specific works of art, ranging from ancient texts to contemporary film. The book does more than talk about beauty; it offers the careful reader a training in the way of beauty.""--Thomas Hibbs ""This is literally the best book on beauty that I have ever read: the most convincing, clear, and comprehensive; the most eye-opening and satisfying; the most insightful and delightful. It is a masterpiece. I do not use that word lightly, but there is no other word for it. It is to our experience of all the aspects and instances of beauty what sunrise is to a landscape. The 'aha!' experience: recognition, 'that's the way it is.'""--Peter Kreeft ""With the insight born of his own work as a novelist and playwright as well as his immersion in Aristotelian-Thomistic philosophy, McInerny unfolds in greater and greater depth a profoundly Catholic understanding of the crucial place of beauty that draws upon the thought of Jacques Maritain, Hans Urs von Balthasar, and Robert Sokolowski, as well as many contemporary commentators. This is the book many of us have been waiting for.""--Glenn Arbery