Eliza Griswold’s “Circle of Hope” is about four pastors at a Philadelphia church riven by its response to racial discrimination after a Minneapolis police officer murdered George Floyd in 2020. Hahrie Han’s “Undivided” focuses on four parishioners of a Cincinnati church having similar conversations after several police shootings of Black men.
That isn’t all the books have in common. Both show that up-close, long-term reporting can yield stories as gripping as any novel.
Combining rigorous research with relatable real-life characters whose stories are told in straightforward sentences, Griswold and Han have written insightful books about faith, race and the failures of communication that often plague us.
Reporting by Griswold, who won a Pulitzer Prize for “Amity and Prosperity,” reflects the steady decline in churchgoing. In 2021, Gallup pollsters published an unprecedented finding: Fewer than half of Americans were church members. The church in her book sought to offer something different from the Protestant evangelical congregations many of its Gen X members attended as kids. But from a peak of 700, its membership tanked amid internal controversies.

Circle of Hope — the book takes its name from the church — was founded in 1996. Members believed they had a responsibility to help their community’s poor and marginalized residents. Inspired by an “anti-capitalist, anti-empire vision,” they fed unhoused people and raised money “as a form of reparations” for Black residents.
But, as Griswold demonstrates, the church’s pastors couldn’t agree on Circle of Hope’s response to Floyd’s murder. Some Black members, suggesting the mostly white church needed to fix itself first, recalled racially insensitive comments made at private gatherings, and said their contributions had been “erased” by white leadership.
The pastors hired a diversity, equity and inclusion consultant. But when he believed nobody was cooperating, the DEI guy quit. Inevitably, disagreements worsened. Wounded by the church’s only non-white pastor’s claim that his colleagues upheld white supremacy, Circle of Hope closed for good a few months ago.
Determined to capture her subjects’ conflicts, self-recrimination and body language, Griswold spent countless hours by their sides and “sat in on more than one thousand hours of Zoom meetings,” an unenviable but fruitful task.