Frederick Buechner was a very important and influential Presbyterian pastor and author who just died last year. His works represent a huge lacuna in the Logos catalog.
These are the most important (IMO) or most easily obtained (since published by a publisher Faithlife already does business with) of Buechner's books. I would encourage you to vote for them:
A fresh, creative look at the underlying meaning of the Gospels that stresses the many dimensions of God's relationship to humanity.
"Buechner has taken the grand story of Jacob—breathed life into it and set its vivid people in motion." — Annie Dillard
Named "the father of today's spiritual memoir movement" by Christianity Today, Frederick Buechner reveals how to stop, look, and listen to your life. He reflects on how both art and faith teach us how to pay attention to the remarkableness right in front of us, to watch for the greatness in the ordinary, and to use our imaginations to see the greatness in others and love them well.
Published by Zondervan, and thus probably an easy one for Faithlife to get.
Frederick Buechner has grappled with the nature of pain, grief, and grace ever since his father committed suicide when Buechner was a young boy. He continued that search as a father when his daughter struggled with anorexia. In this essential collection of essays, including one never before published, Frederick Buechner finds that the God who might seem so silent is ever near. He writes about what it means to be a steward of our pain, and about this grace from God that seems arbitrary and yet draws us to his holiness and care. Finally he writes about the magic of memory and how it can close up the old wounds with the memories of past goodnesses and graces from God.
Published by Zondervan, and thus probably an easy one for Faithlife to get.
This collection of Buechner’s many sermons delivered throughout his lifetime is organized chronologically to reveal the development of his theology and thinking. Culled from great works such as The Magnificent Defeat, The Clown in the Belfry, A Room Called Remember, The Hungering Dark, and The Longing for Home, this collection also includes a new introduction and several new, previously unpublished sermons. It is through Buechner’s sermons that we glimpse his genius most closely, and these reflections from one of today’s best writers, thinkers, and preachers will inspire laughter, hope, and great peace.