In his excellent essay about why people ought to read old books, C.S. Lewis recommends that all readers should read them as much as they do contemporary ones. Posting about broadening our literary experiences from In All Things - an online journal for critical reflection on faith, culture, art, and every ordinary-yet-graced square inch of God’s creation. https://inallthings.org/digging-into-durable-books
“\u27Life is far too short to ever know enough. The only way to gain knowledge is to have a steady d...
Stephen F. Hayes: Review of Nancy M. Tischler, Encyclopedia of Contemporary Christian Fiction: From ...
We stand amazed by the vitality of printed books, a more than 500-year-old technique, both on and of...
This thesis examines the reasons why Christians should read literature, how they should read, and wh...
In this essay I will show how novel reading—and especially novel re-reading—can do what Zylstra says...
C.S. Lewis and a Return to the Great Books - Martin Batts In our present day, reasoned and informed...
I keep finding people to admire in books. Posting about developing a love of reading from I...
Review of Jason M. Baxter, The Medieval Mind of C. S. Lewis: How Great Books Shaped a Great Mind (Do...
Discusses Lewis’s literary criticism and his conviction that “a love for and a sound approach to lit...
Though well known for his fiction and essays, C.S. Lewis also wrote in poetry. Often forgotten or co...
Books are cultural artefacts in a way that bits and bytes and signals across the World Wide Web can ...
Review of Mark Neal and Jerry Root, The Neglected C. S. Lewis: Exploring the Riches of His Most Over...
WISE COMMENTATORS have long evaluated books and bookmaking. Man builds no structure which outlives ...
The term Great Books as used in this article refers in general to the classics on the lists compil...
To several of his correspondents who asked of him, “What can I read to strengthen my faith?”, C.S. L...
“\u27Life is far too short to ever know enough. The only way to gain knowledge is to have a steady d...
Stephen F. Hayes: Review of Nancy M. Tischler, Encyclopedia of Contemporary Christian Fiction: From ...
We stand amazed by the vitality of printed books, a more than 500-year-old technique, both on and of...
This thesis examines the reasons why Christians should read literature, how they should read, and wh...
In this essay I will show how novel reading—and especially novel re-reading—can do what Zylstra says...
C.S. Lewis and a Return to the Great Books - Martin Batts In our present day, reasoned and informed...
I keep finding people to admire in books. Posting about developing a love of reading from I...
Review of Jason M. Baxter, The Medieval Mind of C. S. Lewis: How Great Books Shaped a Great Mind (Do...
Discusses Lewis’s literary criticism and his conviction that “a love for and a sound approach to lit...
Though well known for his fiction and essays, C.S. Lewis also wrote in poetry. Often forgotten or co...
Books are cultural artefacts in a way that bits and bytes and signals across the World Wide Web can ...
Review of Mark Neal and Jerry Root, The Neglected C. S. Lewis: Exploring the Riches of His Most Over...
WISE COMMENTATORS have long evaluated books and bookmaking. Man builds no structure which outlives ...
The term Great Books as used in this article refers in general to the classics on the lists compil...
To several of his correspondents who asked of him, “What can I read to strengthen my faith?”, C.S. L...
“\u27Life is far too short to ever know enough. The only way to gain knowledge is to have a steady d...
Stephen F. Hayes: Review of Nancy M. Tischler, Encyclopedia of Contemporary Christian Fiction: From ...
We stand amazed by the vitality of printed books, a more than 500-year-old technique, both on and of...