Interdisciplinary Essays on John Henry Newman, University Press of America, Lanham 1994, 210 pp.
– MAGILL G., Introduction: Newman’s Sense of Personal Belief, pp. xi-xviii;
– KER I., The Greatness of Newman, pp. 3-24;
– BURKE R.R., Newman: The Man Behind the Cloud, pp. 25-41;
– WESSLING J.H., The Androgynous Ideal: Newman’s Callista, pp. 43-52;
– SUGG J., Newman and the Intellectual Advancement of Women, pp. 53-62;
– HOLLAHAN E., Newman’s Crisis-Trope in the Apologia, pp. 63-71;
– BRINKMAN M., Newman’s Personal Principle at Its Source, pp. 75-87;
– KERPNECK H., Newman and Arnold: Liberalism Tempered by Reflection, pp. 89-108;
– BIEMER G., Newman’s Catechesis in a Pluralistic Age, pp. 109-125;
– NEWMAN J., Newman’s Advice to Victims of Anti-Catholic Prejudice, pp. 127-143;
– MARTIN M., Enlargement of Mind and Religious Judgment in Loss and Gain; pp. 147-160;
– ENRIGHT E.J., The Letters to Charles Newman as Background to the Grammar, pp. 161-172;
– STREETER C.M., The Lonergan Connection with Newman’s Grammar, pp. 173-183;
– GILLEY S., Epilogue. Newman: A Toast, pp. 185-196.