I stumbled onto this book through Willie Jennings. I can see why he admired it. I've not read any other Farley so I can't compare this to her other work. I can say though that the thinkers she is engaging with (Plato, Aristotle, Levinas, Derrida, Weil, Jaspers, Lorde) resonate with projects I've worked on in the past. Here there is a robust and nuanced defense of the pursuit of truth. In some ways it is dated but in others so contemporary to be very helpful and enlightening. Take the first line, written in 1996 "As I listen to many of my students, study debates on postmodernism, and realize that for many Americans game shows and talk shows are a primary resource of information about the world, I begin to suspect that we already live in a society in which the capacity for distinguishing truth from falsehood has been lost." Talk shows and postmodernism date it; the issue of truth and falsehood is entirely contemporary. The dated parts have analogs in the contemporary world (Facebook and Twitter instead of talk and game shows) and the urgency for distinguishing truth from falsehood is all the more important and fraught. Definitely worth reading.