Examines Williams’s conceptions of coinherence, exchange, and substitution as they are portrayed in All Hallows’ Eve—particularly in the actions of Lester Furnival
Reviews the history of Galadriel and Celeborn as revealed in unpublished materials as well as The Lo...
Notes known connections to Lewis and Williams on Sayers’s part (through the evidence of letters). Sp...
Applies the concept of Recovery from Tolkien’s “On Fairy-stories” to an unusual subject—Mark Haddon’...
Cites examples of Williams’s notions of coinherence and exchange in both his works and those of Lewi...
Discusses Williams’s ideas of exchange and coinherence in relation to community, particularly church...
Examines the works of Tolkien, Lewis, and Williams for what they have to say about the nature of evi...
Compares how the three authors shaped their mythopoeic literature—Tolkien as a true creator, Lewis a...
Contends that in Gaudy Night “Sayers has so carefully woven together the setting, the theme and the ...
Counters criticism of fantasy as morally negligible or as leading to morbid escapism; instead applie...
Asserts that “Doris Lessing’s naming of her book and its protagonist was both intentional and ironic...
Sayers, like Lewis, used the vehicle of genre fiction to explore something rarely explored in modern...
Explores Tolkien’s technique of balancing the predictable and every-day with the wonderful by viewin...
Notes that critics have complained about the “pettiness” of evil characters in Lewis’s works, implyi...
Detailed analysis of the symbolism and character of Williams’s Arthurian poems, which are “about the...
Asks why Lewis felt the myth of Cupid and Psyche needed to be retold. The story told by the Priest o...
Reviews the history of Galadriel and Celeborn as revealed in unpublished materials as well as The Lo...
Notes known connections to Lewis and Williams on Sayers’s part (through the evidence of letters). Sp...
Applies the concept of Recovery from Tolkien’s “On Fairy-stories” to an unusual subject—Mark Haddon’...
Cites examples of Williams’s notions of coinherence and exchange in both his works and those of Lewi...
Discusses Williams’s ideas of exchange and coinherence in relation to community, particularly church...
Examines the works of Tolkien, Lewis, and Williams for what they have to say about the nature of evi...
Compares how the three authors shaped their mythopoeic literature—Tolkien as a true creator, Lewis a...
Contends that in Gaudy Night “Sayers has so carefully woven together the setting, the theme and the ...
Counters criticism of fantasy as morally negligible or as leading to morbid escapism; instead applie...
Asserts that “Doris Lessing’s naming of her book and its protagonist was both intentional and ironic...
Sayers, like Lewis, used the vehicle of genre fiction to explore something rarely explored in modern...
Explores Tolkien’s technique of balancing the predictable and every-day with the wonderful by viewin...
Notes that critics have complained about the “pettiness” of evil characters in Lewis’s works, implyi...
Detailed analysis of the symbolism and character of Williams’s Arthurian poems, which are “about the...
Asks why Lewis felt the myth of Cupid and Psyche needed to be retold. The story told by the Priest o...
Reviews the history of Galadriel and Celeborn as revealed in unpublished materials as well as The Lo...
Notes known connections to Lewis and Williams on Sayers’s part (through the evidence of letters). Sp...
Applies the concept of Recovery from Tolkien’s “On Fairy-stories” to an unusual subject—Mark Haddon’...