 | C. S. Lewis - Literary Criticism - 2002 - 180 pages
The theme of this collection is the excellence of the Story, especially the kind of story dear to Lewis-fantasy and science fiction, which he fostered in an age dominated by ... | |
 | C. S. Lewis - Religion - 2002 - 132 pages
“We are not the playwright, we are not the producer, we are not even the audience. We are on the stage. To play well the scenes in which we are "on" concerns us much more than ... | |
 | C.S. Lewis - Fiction - 1996 - 384 pages
Dr. Ransom enters the increasingly pressing conflict between science and ethics and embarks on a mysterious journey | |
 | C. S. Lewis - Fiction - 2002 - 168 pages
A collection of Lewis’s complete shorter fiction, including two previously unpublished works, “The Dark Tower” and “The Man Born Blind.” Edited and with a Preface by Walter Hooper. | |
 | C.S. Lewis - Fiction - 1996 - 158 pages
Dr. Ransom is abducted to the eerie red planet, Malacandra, where his escape and flight endanger both his life and his chances of ever returing to Earth | |
 | C. S. Lewis - Poetry - 2002 - 168 pages
A collection of Lewis’s shorter poetry on a wide range of subjects-God and the pagan deities, unicorns and spaceships, nature, love, age, and reason: “Idea poems which ... | |
 | C. S. Lewis - Literary Criticism - 1979 - 354 pages
This volume, available in print for the first time since 1980, includes over twenty of C. S. Lewis' most important literary essays, written between 1932 and 1962. The topics ... | |
 | C. S. Lewis - Literary Collections - 2002 - 112 pages
Nineteen essays-on democratic values, threats to educational and spiritual fulfillment, literary censorship, and other topics all displaying Lewis’s characteristic sanity and ... | |
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