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Thin Places by Jordan Kisner
Thin Places by Jordan Kisner









When you find yourself in one of these thin places, she says, it becomes clear that “reality is not what you thought it was.” A new perspective on the world can then emerge.

Thin Places by Jordan Kisner

What these collisions reveal, she says, is always sacred, even if just metaphorically. As the diversity of topics suggests, although Kisner’s consideration of thin places is partially shaped by her own Christian background, she uses the word in a more secular sense to mean any place where ideas considered to be opposites collide. They range from the story of young Christian evangelicals who do mission work in beachfront bars to an account of doctors who treat obsessive-compulsive disorder with experimental brain surgery. The essays in Thin Places are at once journalistic, philosophical, and personal. In other words, thin places are locations where “you might poke a hole through to another reality.”

Thin Places by Jordan Kisner

“Distinctions between you and not you, real and unreal, worldly and otherworldly fall away,” writes Kisner. The debut collection by Jordan Kisner, Thin Places: Essays from In Between, explores the idea of liminality and considers how “certain inviolable boundaries” can “collide and reveal something.” The author explains that the idea of so-called “thin places” comes from Celtic folklore: that “the barrier between the physical world and the spiritual world wears thin and become porous.” What we normally cannot see-God, our dead loved ones, or even music-might suddenly become visible or at least become easier to approach.











Thin Places by Jordan Kisner