C.S. Lewis’ acclaimed 1956 work Till We Have Faces: A Myth Retold was his final novel. While not his favourite of his own works – that honour went to Perelandra – it was the one he considered his most mature and accomplished. Till We Have Faces presents a powerful retelling of the myth of Cupid and Psyche. One of its principal themes is that of innocent delight in the divine and the disastrous consequence of renouncing that childlike state in the name of a false, and ultimately cynical, maturity. Significantly, the work was published in the same year as Lewis’ The Last Battle and it clearly resonates with major themes in that book as well as in the Chronicles of Narnia more broadly. In particular, the story of Susan’s tragic journey from ch...