An appreciation of Lewis’s work as an author of scholarly, fantastic, theological, and philosophical...
Discusses Lewis’s theory of mythology as “an intensely Christian one” that is “essential to an under...
The powerful, learned woman is a figure of fear in the works of Williams, seen as transgressing her ...
Presents “those chauvinistic elements which have irritated so many women” who encounter Lewis’s work...
Building on the work of Diana Pavlac Glyer to establish a framework and set of terms for understandi...
C.S. Lewis: A Biography. A.N. Wilson. Reviewed by Nancy-Lou Patterson. C.S. Lewis: A Biography. A....
This study examines how C.S. Lewis’ final novel, Till We Have Faces, demonstrates a significant dive...
Review of: Carolyn Curtis and Mary Pomroy Key, eds., Women and C. S. Lewis (Oxford: Lion Hudson, 20...
Describes Sayers’s relationships with Lewis and Williams in particular, and their mutual influences ...
The C. S. Lewis Reader’s Encyclopedia. Foreword by Christopher Mitchell. Ed. Jeffrey D. Schultz and...
Praises The Great Divorce because in it the two sides of the author—“the atomically rational Lewis a...
This thesis explores the evidence of sexism in the literary works of C. S. Lewis. Lewis’s relationsh...
Speculates about reasons for comparative critical neglect of Lewis’s early poetry collection. Discus...
In her book The Fame of C.S. Lewis, Stephanie Derrick seeks to examine the question of Lewis’s conti...
Suggests that the character of the Queen of Underland in The Silver Chair was unconsciously based on...
An appreciation of Lewis’s work as an author of scholarly, fantastic, theological, and philosophical...
Discusses Lewis’s theory of mythology as “an intensely Christian one” that is “essential to an under...
The powerful, learned woman is a figure of fear in the works of Williams, seen as transgressing her ...
Presents “those chauvinistic elements which have irritated so many women” who encounter Lewis’s work...
Building on the work of Diana Pavlac Glyer to establish a framework and set of terms for understandi...
C.S. Lewis: A Biography. A.N. Wilson. Reviewed by Nancy-Lou Patterson. C.S. Lewis: A Biography. A....
This study examines how C.S. Lewis’ final novel, Till We Have Faces, demonstrates a significant dive...
Review of: Carolyn Curtis and Mary Pomroy Key, eds., Women and C. S. Lewis (Oxford: Lion Hudson, 20...
Describes Sayers’s relationships with Lewis and Williams in particular, and their mutual influences ...
The C. S. Lewis Reader’s Encyclopedia. Foreword by Christopher Mitchell. Ed. Jeffrey D. Schultz and...
Praises The Great Divorce because in it the two sides of the author—“the atomically rational Lewis a...
This thesis explores the evidence of sexism in the literary works of C. S. Lewis. Lewis’s relationsh...
Speculates about reasons for comparative critical neglect of Lewis’s early poetry collection. Discus...
In her book The Fame of C.S. Lewis, Stephanie Derrick seeks to examine the question of Lewis’s conti...
Suggests that the character of the Queen of Underland in The Silver Chair was unconsciously based on...
An appreciation of Lewis’s work as an author of scholarly, fantastic, theological, and philosophical...
Discusses Lewis’s theory of mythology as “an intensely Christian one” that is “essential to an under...
The powerful, learned woman is a figure of fear in the works of Williams, seen as transgressing her ...