Explore the Works of Connie Marshner

Monastery and High Cross

Monastery and High Cross is a cross-disciplinary meta-analysis of English-language research into these questions over the last one hundred and sixty years.

Blackboard Tyranny

Blackboard Tyranny explores the profound tension between family authority and public school influence in the United States. The book presents a detailed critique of  how public schools overstep parental rights and calls for preserving family authority.

Can Motherhood Survive?

Can Motherhood Survice offers a Christian-centered critique that calls for stronger family authority and resistance to external interference in maternal responsibilities.

Decent Exposure

Marshner offers a faith-based guide to helping Christian parents approach adolescent sexuality with clarity, integrity, and grace. She emphasizes open, honest communication that aligns with traditional moral values and preserves parental leadership in shaping a child’s worldview.

A Blueprint for Education Reform

Marshner offers a strategic plan for reforming the U.S. public education system, emphasizing the restoration of parental authority and traditional educational values.

The book critiques bureaucratic control and advocates for a return to more localized, family-centric schooling

The New Traditional Woman

Marshner presents a vision of modern womanhood rooted in traditional Christian values, emphasizing motherhood, family-centered living, and a rejection of the feminist redefinition of women’s roles.

She advocates for a cultural identity grounded in home, faith, and community rather than career or secular autonomy

Why the Family Matters

Why the Family Matters emphasizes that the family is the core foundation of society, and that political and educational institutions should prioritize supporting family integrity over bureaucratic expansion.

Future 21: Weyrich and Marshner

Published in 1984, this volume presents 14 essays by conservative thinkers calling for a renewed American nationalism across economics, education, foreign policy, health care, and culture.