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Clive Staples Lewis was a British scholar and author who lived from 1898 to 1963. Born in Belfast, Ireland, Lewis served in the British Army during World War I before joining the faculty of Magdalen College at Oxford, where he eventually became a Fellow and Tutor in English Literature. He later left for Cambridge University, where he assumed the post of Chair of Medieval and Renaissance Literature in 1954.
Raised a Christian, Lewis abandoned his beliefs in 1911, only to experience what he termed a “conversion” as a university student. His journey from atheism back to Christianity was a common topic of Lewis’s writings, the earliest of which were published under the pseudonym Clive Hamilton. Lewis belonged to the Church of England and is known as an Anglican author. Despite never training as a theologian, Lewis did receive an honorary Doctor of Divinity from the University of St. Andrew’s in 1946.
C. S. Lewis authored over 30 books and became one of the best-known and most widely read Christian writers in the world. His most well-known books are The Screwtape Letters (1942), Mere Christianity (1952), and the Chronicles of Narnia series (1950-1956). One of the chief reasons C.
By C. S. Lewis
A Grief Observed
C. S. Lewis
Mere Christianity
C. S. Lewis
Out of the Silent Planet
C. S. Lewis
Perelandra
C. S. Lewis
Prince Caspian
C. S. Lewis
Surprised by Joy
C. S. Lewis
That Hideous Strength
C. S. Lewis
The Abolition of Man
C. S. Lewis
The Discarded Image
C. S. Lewis
The Four Loves
C. S. Lewis
The Great Divorce
C. S. Lewis
The Horse And His Boy
C. S. Lewis
The Last Battle
C. S. Lewis
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
C. S. Lewis
The Magician's Nephew
C. S. Lewis
The Pilgrim's Regress
C. S. Lewis
The Screwtape Letters
C. S. Lewis
The Silver Chair
C. S. Lewis
The Voyage of the Dawn Treader
C. S. Lewis
Till We Have Faces
C. S. Lewis