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This book was very interesting. It would be best classified as an autobiography, but as the author notes at the beginning, it isn't a normal autobiography. The reason for that is because the book is really written about the author's search for 'joy,' and how that eventually led to him to faith in Jesus Christ. It has always been interesting to me how the individual who was probably the most vocal defender...
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In C.S. Lewis' book, Surprised by Joy, he describes his own childhood and young adulthood experiences and maps his meandering path to conversion. C.S. Lewis is both candid and reticent at the same time. He describes many of his most personal struggles and insights, while witholding some important details from the reader, and exagerrating others. Lewis does not pretend to be an objective observer...
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While I grew up in the United States and never attended boarding school, I found amazing similarities between Lewis' quest for understanding the existence, power and authority of our Divine Creator - and my own. Lewis was not a theologian, but in terms of relating human experience to Christian faith, there was none better in the 20th Century. The Four Loves, Mere Christianity and his works on grieving...
A candid autobiography by C. S. Lewis that recollects his rational path to God
An unfailingly honest and perceptive observer of humanity, C. S. Lewis embarked on a spiritual journey that led him from a traditional Christian childhood in Belfast to a youthful atheism and, finally, back to a confident Christianity. With no pretense, Lewis describes his early schooldays, his experiences in the trenches during World War I, and his undergraduate life at Oxford, where he reasoned his way to God. Since its first publication in 1955, Surprised by Joy continues to be deeply important to Lewis's admirers and to those concerned with the compatibility of the rational and the spiritual.
C. S. Lewis was famous both as a fiction writer and as a Christian thinker, and scholars sometimes divide his personality in two. Yet a large part of Lewis's appeal, for both his audiences, lay in his ability to fuse imagination with instruction. "Let the pictures tell you their own moral," he once advised writers of children's stories. "But if they don't show you any moral, don't put one in."
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