Collected Letters: The Christian Scholar 1931-1951
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On Sale:
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16/01/2010
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Formats:
E-Book
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C.S. Lewis was a most prolific letter writer and his personal correspondence reveals much of his private life, reflections, friendships and feelings. This collection, carefully chosen and arranged by Walter Hooper, is the most extensive ever published.
In this great and important collection are the letters Lewis wrote to J.R.R. Tolkien, Dorothy L. Sayers, Owen Barfield, Arthur C. Clarke, Sheldon Vanauken and Dom Bede Griffiths. To some particular friends, such as Dorothy L. Sayers, Lewis wrote over fifty letters alone. The letters deal with all of Lewis′s interests: theology, literary criticism, poetry, fantasy, children′s stories as well as revealing his relationships with family members and friends.
The second volume begins with Lewis quietly trying to lead a Christian life and writing his first major work of literary history, The Allegory of Love. He was unknown during the 1930s and at this time wrote some of his finest letters, mainly to his brother Warren and to his boyhood friend Arthur Greeves. Then he is ′discovered′ by the BBC and the publishers Geoffrey Bles, resulting in the most popular works of Christian apologetics ever written. C.S. Lewis became a household name and from the 1940s onwards some of his greatest theological letters were written.
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Author Extras
Reading Guides:
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Mere Christianity
MERE CHRISTIANITY brings together Lewis′s legendary broadcast talks of the war years, talks in which he set out simply to ′explain and defend the belief that has been common to nearly all Christians at all times.′ Rejecting the boundaries that divide Christianity′s many...
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The Four Loves
C.S. Lewis′s famous work on the nature of love divides love into four categories: Affection, Friendship, Eros and Charity. The first three are loves which come naturally to the human race. Charity, however, the Gift-love of God, is divine in its source and...
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The Great Divorce
In a dream, the narrator finds himself in the grey limbo of Hell, where the disgruntled and ghostly inhabitants take a bus-ride to the plains of Heaven, where they meet angels and the souls of those already in Heaven. This striking fable portrays Hell as small and shrunken,...
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The Bicycle Book
By Bella Bathurst
Since the millennium, use of the bicycle in Britain has doubled -- and doubled again. Every day, more people take up cycling and thousands now cycle to work. Yet, cycling is more than merely a form of transport; it is a way of life, a philosophy. Companionable or...
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The Address Book: Our Place in the Scheme of Things
By Tim Radford
THE ADDRESS BOOK starts with some of the fundamental questions asked by everyone, in every culture since the beginning of civilisation. Who am I? Where am I? Where am I going? Tim Radford attempts to answer them by drafting in a technique he first used as a school-boy, when he wrote...
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The Meadow: Kashmir 1995 - Where the Terror Began
By Adrian Levy, Cathy Scott-Clark
They have come in search of many things - nirvana, exhilaration, a sense of self. But over the course of the next week, their holidays take a terrifying turn when they become entangled in a nail-biting hostage drama that will suck them into an alien world of jihad and Islamic...
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