C. S. Lewis: Difference between revisions

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'''C. S. Lewis''' ("Clive Staples Lewis") was an Irish fantasist. He is best known for the ''[[The Chronicles of Narnia]]'' and his Christian apologetics.  
'''C. S. Lewis''' ("Clive Staples Lewis") was an Irish fantasist. He is best known for the ''[[The Chronicles of Narnia]]'' and his Christian apologetics.  
==Commentaries & reviews==
* [[Ursula K. Le Guin]] on Lewis: ""simply Christian apologia, full of hatred and contempt for people who didn't agree. The division into good and evil was different from Tolkien, where evil beings are only a metaphor for the evil in our lives; he never casts people into the outer darkness as Lewis enjoyed doing."<ref>Maya Jaggi, "Review: A life in writing: The magician" (interview with Ursula K. Le Guin), ''The Guardian (London)'', Dec. 17, 2005.</ref>


==Works of interest==
==Works of interest==
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* "[[Ministering Angels]]"  
* "[[Ministering Angels]]"  


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==References==
[[Category:1898 births]]
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[[Category:1963 deaths]]
 
[[Category:Writers]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lewis}}
[[category:1898 births]]
[[category:1963 deaths]]
[[category:Writers by name]]
[[category:People by name]]
 
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Latest revision as of 13:51, 13 January 2011

C. S. Lewis ("Clive Staples Lewis") was an Irish fantasist. He is best known for the The Chronicles of Narnia and his Christian apologetics.

Commentaries & reviews

  • Ursula K. Le Guin on Lewis: ""simply Christian apologia, full of hatred and contempt for people who didn't agree. The division into good and evil was different from Tolkien, where evil beings are only a metaphor for the evil in our lives; he never casts people into the outer darkness as Lewis enjoyed doing."[1]


Works of interest

References

  1. Maya Jaggi, "Review: A life in writing: The magician" (interview with Ursula K. Le Guin), The Guardian (London), Dec. 17, 2005.
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