Peepiceek
Well-known member
I've just been reading 'Surprised by Joy', and noted some interesting things that I didn't really expect. I wonder if anyone else has similar comments or thoughts about mine.
1) Several times as I was reading I felt a clear echo of 'Last Battle' themes - particularly in his discussion of heaven/eternal reality, judgement, and the dwarfs who 'refused to be taken in'. Then I looked to see when it was written and found that it was 1955, the same year (I think) as TLB was published. Does anyone know if these connections are deliberate, accidental, or imagined on my part?
2) To what extent do you think Eustace's character in VDT is intended by Lewis to be autobiographical?
3) I was really surprised that many of the things Lewis says do not fit with what you might expect a Christian writer to say - he seems far more honest about his actual feelings than I would have expected, and does not seem to try to rework them or explain hem away. I was quite stunned and shocked in places - especially on some of the descriptions of his school life and his attitude towards it.
Peeps
1) Several times as I was reading I felt a clear echo of 'Last Battle' themes - particularly in his discussion of heaven/eternal reality, judgement, and the dwarfs who 'refused to be taken in'. Then I looked to see when it was written and found that it was 1955, the same year (I think) as TLB was published. Does anyone know if these connections are deliberate, accidental, or imagined on my part?
2) To what extent do you think Eustace's character in VDT is intended by Lewis to be autobiographical?
3) I was really surprised that many of the things Lewis says do not fit with what you might expect a Christian writer to say - he seems far more honest about his actual feelings than I would have expected, and does not seem to try to rework them or explain hem away. I was quite stunned and shocked in places - especially on some of the descriptions of his school life and his attitude towards it.
Peeps