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Chesterton and Lewis for Beginners
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| July 4, 2009
| David Mills
Posted on 07/24/2009 10:00:50 AM PDT by NYer
Almost 75 years after the death of G. K. Chesterton and 45 years after the death of C. S. Lewis, millions continue to read them as guides and gurus. New readers will pick up a book, or even just an essay or two, and become lifelong fans and devotees. These portly, homely, undramatic men are still the bookish Christian's rock stars.
Their new readers, having become fans, excitedly look up the lists of their books -- and stop dead. There's just too much to read, and too little time, and some of those books look like slow going. Chesterton wrote more than 100 books, Lewis more than 50, including the posthumous collections of essays, letters, and diaries.
The fan suddenly becomes an investor, who is balancing his love of the writer with the cost in time and energy that reading him will require. He may even begin looking for a discount, knock-off version on the bestseller shelves at the Christian bookstore. These he can find in abundance, though often they're on the bestseller shelves partly because their thought is not as rich or deep, and therefore as difficult, as Chesterton's and Lewis's.
So here are Beginner's Reading Lists for the two writers. The lists are not intended to include every insight or even every important subject they covered, and in fact they leave out some of my own favorite works. These men wrote so much, and so cleverly, that some of the choices are nearly arbitrary, in the sense that several other books would have done as well. (The lists include only non-fiction books, but at the end of each, I've included a few works of their fiction that put their thinking into a story.)
I followed three rules when compiling the lists: First, each should include no more than seven books. The reader I have in mind actually reads, and will put in the time to understand a writer of this quality, but even he has his limits. These are writers you want to read, if you like them; they pull you through the book, and if you stop to reread a passage, you do so not to figure out what the writer meant but to ponder his argument or insight. But even seven is an optimistic number of books by one author to expect anyone to read.
Second, the lists focus on books that express the author's mind or imagination or worldview and engage cultural and religious subjects.
Third, the result of reading the books should be a knowledge of the man and not just his writings. The reader should not only know what the writer had said about X, but should be able to guess with some confidence what he would say about Y.
Here are my suggestions. The books are listed in the order I suggest they be read.
G. K. Chesterton
· Autobiography. Published in the last year of Chesterton's life (1936), this winsome introduction to the man and his mindoffers less a record of his life than a reflection on the world through selected events and people. Those interested in his Catholicism will want to read his short book The Catholic Church and Conversion, as well as the essay collections The Thing and The Well and the Shallows.
· Heretics. A collection of essays on his contemporaries, like Shaw and Kipling, and their characteristic errors, which, for the most part, happen to be the characteristic errors of our contemporaries. The introductory and concluding chapters "on the importance of orthodoxy" should certainly be read, but some of the others may be skipped, since understanding them can depend on a knowledge of their long-forgotten subjects.
· Orthodoxy. One of Chesterton's two greatest works, it argues for Christianity through his unfolding discovery that it answered all the questions the world presented him. Some people find the book hard to read, because following the way his mind works is almost like learning a new language, but they should persevere. (An earlier work, The Blatchford Controversies, contained in Vol. 1 of Ignatius Press's uniform edition, provides a good short introduction and summary of the arguments of this book and Heretics.)
· St. Thomas Aquinas. Not a very useful biography, but a revealing study and a book worth reading even if you don't read St. Thomas -- and if you do, it's very helpful in understanding what all that formal theology was about. The book is also known as The Dumb Ox.
· The Everlasting Man. The other of Chesterton's two greatest works, and the one written after he became a Catholic, this book reads history as a preparation for and then a working out of the Incarnation -- working out not only in the Christian West but in response to Eastern philosophies and cultures as well, including Islam.
· What's Wrong with the World. One of Chesterton's many works of social analysis, chosen as probably the most comprehensive, and one in which he combines criticism with his description of the ideal, especially for the family.
· Charles Dickens: A Critical Study. An early work, written between Heretics and Orthodoxy, and not exactly a religious work, but one that reveals a lot about his thinking, Dickens being such a sympathetic subject for him.
Fiction: Here the list is even more arbitrary, because so many of Chesterton's novels are of the same sort and quality. It includes The Innocence of Father Brown and The Wisdom of Father Brown, the first two volumes of the Father Brown stories, though the other three volumes are also engaging; Manalive, the story of a man whose apparently criminal acts reveal much about the world; The Flying Inn, an entertaining view of a Prohibitionist and Islamified England; and his Collected Poems. I haven't included The Man Who Was Thursday, thinking it an overrated work that appeals to many because they can read so much into it (this is a minority opinion).
C. S. Lewis
· Surprised by Joy. Lewis's autobiography, written in his mid-50s, which is not only a winsome introduction to the man but an indirect exposition of his way of seeing the world.
· God in the Dock: Essays on Theology and Ethics. A posthumous collection of 48 articles and essays and a few letters to the editor. It is mostly a kind of applied or occasional theology, in the sense that Lewis expresses his insight and learning in responding to various ethical, apologetic, evangelistic, and cultural problems.
· The Problem of Pain or Miracles. Lewis's most "academic" books and the slowest-going for the average reader, but books that clearly and systematically lay out his thinking on God's relation to the world.
· The Screwtape Letters. Lewis's innovative collection of letters from a senior devil to his incompetent nephew, a book that offers many striking and usually convicting insights into the nature of evil, not only in man but in society. It is a book often imitated, but never well.
· The Abolition of Man. A very short book, originally a series of lectures, shrewdly analyzing the ways in which modern man rejects Man and presenting the classical and Christian alternative. It is a genuinely prophetic work.
· The Four Loves. Lewis's exposition of the four different kinds of love and the challenges we face in loving others. Letters from Malcolm: Chiefly on Prayer, one of Lewis's last books, could have gone in this place, as an example of Lewis's devotional insight.
· Selected Literary Essays. A posthumous volume, it contains his famous lecture De Descriptione Temporum, an excellent short guide to his understanding of Western history it covers a great diversity of other subjects, from Austen to Kipling to psychoanalysis and literary criticism. It's not overtly religious, but his engagement with these subjects says much about his mind.
Some readers will have noted the absence of Mere Christianity. It is not included because, as good as it is as a description of and argument for traditional Christianity, it is not the most revealing of his particular way of thinking -- though readers may disagree.
Fiction: The Magician's Nephew and The Last Battle, the last two books of the Narnia Chronicles and the most "adult" of the seven, which I think became deeper and more fruitful for reflection as they went along; That Hideous Strength, the third book of his Space Trilogy and a fictionalized version of his Abolition of Man (though fans are divided on the subject of which book in the trio is the best); and Till We Have Faces, his exploration of questions of identity and of redemption through Greek myth.
The Others
Chesterton and Lewis are the major but not the only rock stars for the bookish Christian. We were blessed in the last century with many writers of great intellectual and verbal gifts who wrote the same kind of synthetic and accessible works. In particular: Hilaire Belloc, Christopher Dawson, Graham Greene (at a certain period of his life), Ronald Knox, Malcolm Muggeridge, Flannery O'Connor, Walker Percy, Dorothy Sayers, J. R. R. Tolkien, Evelyn Waugh, and Charles Williams.
One of the great advantages of the Internet is the opportunities it allows for collaboration. With that in mind, what selections do readers recommend for a Beginner's Reading List for these writers? What changes or modifications for the lists for Chesterton and Lewis?
TOPICS: Catholic; General Discusssion; Religion & Culture
KEYWORDS: chesterton; christian; cslewis
1
posted on
07/24/2009 10:00:51 AM PDT
by
NYer
To: Salvation; narses; SMEDLEYBUTLER; redhead; Notwithstanding; nickcarraway; Romulus; ...
With only 5 months ‘til Christmas, here’s a head start on your shopping :-)
2
posted on
07/24/2009 10:02:22 AM PDT
by
NYer
("One Who Prays Is Not Afraid; One Who Prays Is Never Alone"- Benedict XVI)
To: NYer
I picked up a C.S Lewis collection at B&N for about $27 that included “The Problem of Pain”, “Miracles”, “Screwtape Letters”, “The Great Divorce”, “A Grief Observed”, “The Abolition of Man” and “Mere Christianity”.
Just an FYI. It is called “The Complete C.S Lewis Signature Classics”.
3
posted on
07/24/2009 10:06:41 AM PDT
by
rom
(Obama '12 slogan: Let's keep on hopin'!)
To: Titus Quinctius Cincinnatus
4
posted on
07/24/2009 10:12:46 AM PDT
by
marron
To: NYer
5
posted on
07/24/2009 10:14:45 AM PDT
by
PGR88
To: NYer
Chesterton rightly observed that; "America is the only nation ever founded on a creed". That creed is embodied in the Declaration of Independence;
"We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.--That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, --That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness."
To: NYer
7
posted on
07/24/2009 10:24:10 AM PDT
by
Palmetto
To: NYer
8
posted on
07/24/2009 10:26:17 AM PDT
by
MANO
To: NYer
To: NYer
To: NYer
I recall Chesterton once said that he became a Roman Catholic “because it was the only thing that made any sense!”
11
posted on
07/24/2009 11:33:37 AM PDT
by
Ozone34
("There are only two philosophies: Thomism and bullshitism!" -Leon Bloy)
To: NYer
Thank you for such great information on these two great, yet humble godly men. C.S.Lewis has been one of our favorites for many years,(I’m now 75 and my wife 73) although at the present I only own one copy of “Mere Christianity.”
Just in the recent past 5 or 6 years, I have begun to see a few quotes and writings of G.K. Chesterton. Wow, he was wonderful! I especially would like to purchase more of his writings.
In our times, I also must include Francis Schaeffer, (my wife came to know our Saviour through his ministry, when she was about 12.
And personally I must include William MacDonald, author of “Truth Disciplship”....”Once in Christ In Christ Forever.” and many others.
And of old to me, was W.B. Riley, author of many books, especially “Inspiration verus Evolution.” Copywritten 1923.
I especially would like to purchase more of Chesterton’s and Riley’s writings.
12
posted on
07/24/2009 1:15:02 PM PDT
by
LetMarch
(If a man knows the right way to live, and does not live it, there is no greater coward. (Anonyous)
To: Natural Law
Praise and Glory to God!
Chesterton seemed to see things other men do not see, or chose not to see.
All facts and history prove our foundation, as well as our constitution are inseparable from the principles of God’s Word and Christianity.
To separate our Nation (the state) from the principles of the Church and its founder, Jesus Christ our Saviour, would destroy our Nation.
13
posted on
07/24/2009 1:23:21 PM PDT
by
LetMarch
(If a man knows the right way to live, and does not live it, there is no greater coward. (Anonyous)
To: LetMarch
"To separate our Nation (the state) from the principles of the Church and its founder, Jesus Christ our Saviour, would destroy our Nation. Contrary to the proclamations of Obama, the United States IS a Christian nation. That is not to say that we are a nation exclusively for Christians, or even that we are a nation with a plurality of Christians. It means that we share an identity with and owe our continued existence on the Christian God. However self-evident that once was, we need to proclaim and jealously defend it today.
To: NYer
15
posted on
07/24/2009 1:53:03 PM PDT
by
Lee N. Field
(2)How many things are necessary for thee to know,..? the first, how great my sins and miseries are;)
To: rom
What a great deal!! Amazon.com is charging $77 for the hardcover edition of the next Potter book. Would that more parents would point their children towards CS Lewis’ books.
16
posted on
07/24/2009 2:25:13 PM PDT
by
NYer
("One Who Prays Is Not Afraid; One Who Prays Is Never Alone"- Benedict XVI)
To: marron
Thanks for the ping, marron!
17
posted on
07/25/2009 9:11:40 AM PDT
by
Titus Quinctius Cincinnatus
(We bury Democrats face down so that when they scratch, they get closer to home.)
To: LetMarch
18
posted on
07/25/2009 10:55:54 AM PDT
by
choirboy
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