Clive Staples LewisComplete Works of C.S. Lewis – The Chronicles Of Narnia (Complete Collection), The Space Trilogy, Out of the Silent Planet, The Great Divorce, The Screwtape Letters and others
Clive Staples Lewis, better known as C.S. Lewis, was a respected academic, writer, and speaker. While he might be best known for his works of fantasy, especially the Chronicles of Narnia and Space Trilogy series, he also wrote many books on Christian apologetics, including Mere Christianity, Miracles, and The Problem of Pain. While Lewis was a lecturer at Oxford, he became close friends with fellow lecturer J.R.R. Tolkien, future author of The Lord of the Rings trilogy. Both authors participated in an informal writing group, The Inklings, where they critiqued and debated each other’s texts and ideas. His works have been translated into more than 30 languages and have sold millions of copies. The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe stands out as his most popular fantasy work. Initially, the first book in the Chronicles of Narnia, though chronologically the second by order, it tells of the adventures of children who magically arrive in a magical country called Narnia. In Narnia, magic comes as no surprise, animals both speak and act, and good strives against evil. Lewis weaves Christian themes throughout the Chronicles of Narnia in a manner that is both accessible and picturesque for readers young and old. Attentive readers will also spot elements of Roman and Greek mythology as well as British and Irish folklore.The Chronicles Of Narnia. Complete Collection:The Lion, The Witch And The WardrobePrince CaspianThe Voyage Of The Dawn TreaderThe Silver ChairThe Horse And His BoyThe Magician’S NephewThe Last BattleThe Space TrilogyOut Of The Silent PlanetPerelandra Or, Voyage To VenusThat Hideous StrengthOther FictionThe Pilgrim’S RegressThe Screwtape LettersThe Great DivorceTill We Have FacesShort StoriesThe Poetry CollectionsSpirits In BondageDymerThe Complete PoetryThe Non-FictionThe Problem Of PainOn StoriesAn EssayA Preface To Paradise LostBroadcast TalksThe Abolition Of ManBeyond PersonalityGeorge Macdonald: An AnthologyMiraclesHamlet: The Prince Or The Poem?Mary NeylanPreface To Essays Presented To Charles WilliamsArthurian TorsoWilliams And The ArthuriadTransposition And Other AddressesMere ChristianityReflections On The PsalmsStudies In WordsThe Four LovesA Grief ObservedAn Experiment In CriticismThey Asked For A Paper: Papers And AddressesThe Discarded ImageLetters To Malcolm: Chiefly On PrayerIt All Began With A Picture…The Autobiography
Keep everything hazy in his mind now, and you will have all eternity wherein to amuse yourself by producing in him the peculiar kind of clarity which Hell affords.