The book offers a blend of humor and insightful reflections reminiscent of the Enlightenment era. It invites readers to explore profound ideas through a witty lens, engaging with themes that challenge conventional thinking. With its clever prose, the work aims to inspire and provoke thought, appealing to those who appreciate both intellect and entertainment.
Robert Sheehan Book order






- 2024
- 2021
Robert Sheehan is one of Ireland's brightest stars of the screen, both at home and abroad. Best known for his roles in Love/Hate and The Umbrella Academy, Sheehan has received widespread critical acclaim for his acting talent.In his debut collection of short stories, he disappears into characters, challenging the complacencies of everyday experience, often from entirely unexpected angles.Surreal, intelligent, dark, and provocative, the collection presents a multitude of observations that will stay with the reader long after the book is finished.Informed by the author's peripatetic life, Disappearing Act reflects on the absurdity of human behavior. Sheehan delves deep into his characters' streams of self-talk and self-imposed delusions, and explores the dark impulses that lurk below the shiny surfaces of many outwardly normal lives."A whacked-out, kaleidoscopic miasma of delightful abandon and fun." - Patrick McCabeWarning: Contains Adult Content
- 2017
English-speaking Christians especially owe a great debt of gratitude to William Tyndale. In Introducing Tyndale John Piper introduces the reader to the deeply moving story of Tyndale's life and death. This serves to whet the appetite for what comes next: an extract from one of Tyndale's significant works in which the reformer clearly explains and robustly defends the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ in response to one of his fiercest critics. A brief epilogue by the late Robert J. Sheehan outlines Tyndale's many-sided legacy, bringing the book to a fitting conclusion. Introducing Tyndale brings to life Tyndale the man, his writings and legacy, for twenty-first-century Christians, and encourages the further exploration of Tyndale's works.