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C. S. Lewis Novels and Nonfiction
In C. S. Lewis: A Critical Essay, Peter Kreeft guides readers on an exploration of the works of Lewis in a comprehensive tour of his faith and his fiction.
Mere Christianity remains one of Lewis’ most beloved apologetic works. It may be the best introduction to what Christians believe and why they believe it ever written.
The Screwtape Letters is a satirical novel by Lewis written from the vantage point of the demon Screwtape. The demon mentors his nephew on the temptation of a mortal man. Through this, Lewis illustrates the importance of resisting evil with Christian faith in a typical human life.
In The Abolition of Man, Lewis defends objective moral values and universal law by reflecting on education in the 1940s. His arguments prove a powerful treatise on education’s purpose and the dangers that irrationality poses to the end of humanity.
The Great Divorce is a novel by Lewis that tells an allegorical story of a bus ride from Hell to Heaven. It provides a meditation on grace, judgment, and the nature of good and evil.
In his preface to John Milton’s work, Lewis compares Paradise Lost to its classical predecessors and defends the Epic as a literary form with the right to exist.