A Visit to Vanity Fair: Moral Essays on the Present AgeThese perceptive moral essays crackle with wit, intelligence, and a wide range of knowledge. A cultural hawk eye delivers relevant, down-to-earth meditations on the way we live now. "A Visit to Vanity Fair" blends personal reflection with cultural criticism to address such topics as reading with children, sitting with a dying friend, and watching TV documentaries. |
Contents
Preface | 11 |
Introduction | 13 |
A Bible Fit for Children | 25 |
Copyright | |
14 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
admirable Alcott American animals anthology appears asked become believe Bible C. S. Lewis called century child Christ Christian church claim criticism culture death Donald Dumbledore Dylan Edwards English essay essayist eternity evangelistic evil Expanded Books faith famous fascinating fear feel friends friendship genre gospel Harry Potter Hazlitt heart Hogwarts human innocent interest J. R. R. Tolkien Jesus Josiah kind later Lewis's literary look magic Manguel Max Ehrmann mere Christianity mind Montaigne moral Narnia Neale Donald Walsch never noted novel once one's Orwell passage perhaps poem poet poetry preachers preaching Puritan question readers rhetorical Rousseau Samuel Johnson scroll seems sense sermons Slytherin songs Sorting Hat Spirit story style T. S. Eliot talk tell theological thing thought tion Tolkien tradition ture Vanity Fair verse virtue W. H. Auden Walsch Williamson wonder words writing wrote