C.S. Lewis
C.S. Lewis was a famous Christian and children’s literature author. Even 50 years after his death, his Chronicles of Narnia books are still a favorite of young children and his Christian books are still read by Christians today.
Clive Staples Lewis was born on November 29, 1898, in Belfast, Ireland into a Christian family. His parents were Albert James Lewis and Flora Augusta Hamilton Lewis. He had a brother named Warren Hamilton Lewis. When he was younger, he had a dog named Jacksie, who was hit by a car. He “changed” his name to Jacksie which he later shortened to Jack. A name he would go by the rest of his life. As a child, Lewis and his brother loved Beatrix Potter’s books and often made their own stories and own worlds. One of those worlds was called
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Lewis created a group called the 'Inklings'. They were a group of men that would meet and talked about their works. They would meet at a place called The Eagle and The Child or at Magdalen College. There he was joined by J.R.R Tolkien, Warren Lewis, Owen Barfield, Christopher Tolkien, Roger Lancelyn, Adam Fox, Hugo Dyson, J.A.W. Bennett, Lord David, and Nevill Coghill. The group ended when C.S. Lewis died. Several of his books were based on his belief in his Christin faith. Some of his most famous books about Christianity are Mere Christianity, Miracles and The Problem of Pain. He, also, came up with ideas for stories from Mythology. Till We Have Faces, was written about Cupid and Psyche. While he was writing his first book in The Chronicles of Narnia series, he was greatly criticized by his friend, Tolkien. Tolkien was very critical of the book, he gave him grief about the mixed mythology. Lewis stopped writing the book and threw out his first copy. But, Lewis kept dreaming about a lion and later started the book completely over, because of this, it took ten years to finish the first book. Tolkien started to approve of the books when Aslan came into the
Lewis’s conversion to Christianity was the biggest influence on his literature. As stated before, Lewis was raised a Catholic by his parents, but he eventually turned his back on all of his Catholic beliefs and became an atheist. As time went on, the Holy Spirit kept on softening Lewis’s atheist heart until one day Lewis’s life would change. Lewis would turned away from atheism and turned back to God. This all started in 1929 when Lewis started acknowledging the existence of God again like his Catholic root taught him years ago. This is a big step for any atheist who is on the road of converting to Christianity. He would receive his first test of faith that same year however because that was the year his dad died. This was obviously hard for him to mourn, but he got through it by the grace of God. Lewis officially became a Christian after a long talk with fellow Christian writer J.R.R. Tolkien. Lewis helped many other writers establish a discussion group of writers called The Inklings. Lewis’s Christian faith was a major influence on his
Meriwether Lewis, an adventures, courageous, and outgoing man. He was an explorer who is most known for exploring the western part of America, after the Louisiana purchase. This report is going to be about Meriwether Lewis and the amazing things he did in his lifetime, from walking around 2,500 miles to killing a bear.
There wasn’t a large group for the first meeting, but John learned about the Montgomery bus boycott, war resistance, and Gandhi. John Lewis was curious about Jim Lawson because he explained the importance of reinforcing their philosophy, discipline, and understanding of non-violence to everyone including John. After his meeting with Jim Lawson, he said “His words liberated me. I thought, this is it… This is the way out.” (Lewis et al 78) John Lewis was a different man after the workshop because he thought of it as a way out to gain back freedom and dignity that he and others have not had before until now. John Lewis felt now that he could do something more to help people and
C.S. Lewis wrote The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe because he wanted to write a children’s book “as a gift for his godchild” (Palmer). It began for him with a series of pictures that came into his mind. “Lewis stated, ‘Everything began with images; a faun carrying an umbrella, a queen on a sledge, a magnificent lion” (Kennedy). A fairy tale was forming in his mind and “‘At first there wasn't anything Christian about them; that element pushed itself in of its own accord’” (Kennedy), As the story progresses and Lewis’s characters and storyline begin to develop a seemingly clear relationship formed between The Bible and this novel. “Given Lewis’s strong Christian faith, that is not surprising. In fact, once the story was established, Lewis said he ‘...saw how stories of this kind could steal past a certain inhibition which had paralysed much of my own religion in childhood’” (Kennedy.) Even though C.S. Lewis started off writing a children's novel, many people perceive it to be a novel written in parallel to the Bible. Lewis has used Biblical references and a classic storyline to prove that good will alway triumph over evil. Aslan is labeled as a divine figure in the novel; he is also known as the son of the Emperor-Beyond-the-Sea. Aslan’s death and resurrection is like that of Christ. The four children are all considered important to in the world of Narnia, but in the real world they are
During this time he published a collection of poetry called Spirits of Bondage. This was his only work of poetry in his life. He completed his studies and obtained his bachelor’s degree, and two years later became a fellow at Magdalen College, Oxford. In July 1930, he purchased a house called The Kilns. After multiple discussions with Hugo Dyson and J.R.R. Tolkien, Lewis returned to God on Christmas Day 1931. Over the following years, he wrote several books and lost a friend of quite some time, Janie Moore. Beginning in 1950, he published the seven Chronicles of Narnia books over the following six years. A fan of his writings, Joy Gresham came into his life in 1952. She became an aggressive suitor, something Lewis was absolutely unused to. He was confused by her actions, but continued to spend time with her. When her visa expired and the British government refused to renew it, Joy and Jack came up with a solution so she didn’t have to leave. The two were civilly married in 1956. At the beginning, they viewed it as a formality so she could remain in England. However, she was diagnosed with bone cancer and admitted into the hospital in October of the same year. Now Lewis realized home much he truly loved Joy and they both desired for their marriage to be a religious one. At Joy’s bedside on March 21, 1957, they were married by a sympathetic minister. Joy died July 13, 1960, and Jack followed November 22, 1963.
R. R. Tolkien were close friends. They both served on the English faculty at Oxford University, and were active in the informal Oxford literary group known as the Inklings. According to Lewis's memoir Surprised by Joy, he was baptised in the Church of Ireland, but fell away from his faith during adolescence. Lewis returned to Anglicanism at the age of 32, owing to the influence of Tolkien and other friends, and he became an "ordinary layman of the Church of England".[1] Lewis's faith profoundly affected his work, and his wartime radio broadcasts on the subject of Christianity brought him wide acclaim.
Clive Staples Lewis said, ‘There are far far better things ahead than any we leave behind.’ C.S. Lewis’s mother, Flora Lewis died when he was ten years old. It was hard for ten years old boy to take her mom’s death. However, Lewis was determined person and he achieve what he was looking for. Clive Staples Lewis, the most author of The Lion, The Witch and The wardrobe, was admirable not only because he was a good writer, and a true Christian, but also he used his talent to share his beliefs.
Clive Staples Lewis has become known as one of contemporary society’s most distinguished Christian authors. Throughout his career, Lewis emphasized a continuing Christian experience in almost all of his major writing, despite an early intolerance for the Church because of its institutionalized nature. Ironically, the idea for this novel came about at Holy Trinity Church near Headington Quarry. Actually, to be more politically correct, the letters were conceived shortly after listening to a radio broadcast by Adolph Hitler the night before. At this time Lewis remarked, "Statements which I know to be untrue all but convince me, at any rate for the moment, if only the man says them unflinchingly." These events, along with written narratives, were printed in several corresponding letters to his brother, Warnie Lewis. The narratives would
C.S Lewis was an author, essayist and Christian apologist. He is best known for his children’s classic series called The Chronicles of Narnia. Clive Staples Lewis was born on 29 November 1963. He was born in Belfast, North Ireland. In his life he retained strong roots to Ireland, He took an active interest in Celtic literature and myths.
To start off, he created a large range of books from fantasy to non-fiction. He liked literature from the beginning, but after he crashed a war plane and nearly lost his nose, writing seemed better and better. His first book ever published was actually for adults. He had success and published another book for the adults, but later moved to the
Lewis talked about how he came to write the books of Narnia, saying that they
Born and raised in Tarrytown, New York Noah Elswood was always the quiet and easygoing type who often times found comfort in books, whether they contain stories or compilations of poetry. This fascination with literature could always be linked back to his parents who were both avid writers and published authors. As he grew into a teenager, Noah's love of books began to dwindle and his time was now more focused on his friends and social life. Comics replaced books and his calm attitude shifted to rambunctious. Though he was by no means a difficult teen, he now liked to find innocent trouble that would often times land him in hot water with his parents.
Few authors of fantasy literature are as beloved as C.S. Lewis, born in Belfast, Northern Ireland, on November 29, 1898. Time magazine has listed the first of his Chronicles of Narnia, The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, as one of the top 100 English language novels written in the twentieth century. Time had earlier confirmed Lewis’s stature as a writer of international renown when it featured him on its cover in September 1947.But then, Time was merely affirming what millions of readers then and now understood: Lewis was a writer whose gifts gave his books an enduring appeal. Unforgettable characters, places and prose that stir the imagination and heart. The world of Narnia is one to which readers return again and again. It evokes a magic
The fantastic author of the world’s most wonderful children’s stories is Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, or better known by his pen name, Lewis Carroll (Heath). Coming from a clerical family in Cheshire, England, Dodgson grew up to be a fairly interesting mathematician, deacon, and writer (Heath). Ultimately prospering in the art and absurdity of children’s literature, which is what Carroll is best known for today.
The novel, The Lion, the Witch, & the Wardrobe, a fictional story by C.S. Lewis, took ten years to write and publish during the chaos of World War II. The war-torn historic reality of the 1950’s is reflected within the story as a fictional war breaks out inside Lewis’s story world, Narnia. Despite the atrocities of war, both real and fanatical, Lewis manages to drive home a message of forgiveness through his use of allusion to religious figures and beliefs within Christianity. From the moment we meet our protagonists, to the last scenes of the novel, religious allusions remain constant and poignant, as they reflect not only the ability to forgive others, but the ability of God to forgive.