C. S. Lewis
Recommended reading:
Reading Rat Criticism (articles, essays, reviews):
What Would Jack Do? The Japery column, New Pantagruel, December 2, 2004
C.S. Lewis and Mother Kirk: Why Lewis was a Protestant, by S.M. Hutchens, Books & Culture, November/December 2004
Lewis biography takes an honest approach, review by Kevin O'Kelly of
C.S. Lewis: A Life, by Michael White, Boston Globe, November 3, 2004
When Worldviews Collide, by Armand Nicholi, Jr., at Leadership U.
Why There Are Seven Chronicles of Narnia: British scholar discovers hidden design of C.S. Lewis' perennially popular series, by John Wilson, Books and Culture, April 25, 2003
Lewis Reimagined, review by Alan Jacobs of
C. S. Lewis Then and Now, by Wesley Kort, First Things, March 2002
A labour of loathing: The worship of Philip Pullman, who has set out to destroy Narnia, by Peter Hitchens, Spectator, January 18, 2003
He Draws Them to Him: C. S. Lewis converted. Now he converts, by Gina R. Dalfonzo, Guest Comment, National Review Online, December 21, 2002
Narnia books attacked as racist and sexist: Philip Pullman dismisses work of C S Lewis as blatant religious propaganda, by John Ezard, The Guardian, June 3, 2002
Lewis Remembered, by Gilbert Meilaender, First Things August/September 1999
C. S. Lewis in the Public Square, by Richard John Neuhaus, First Things, December 1998
C. S. Lewis on Mere Science, by M. D. Aeschliman, First Things, October, 1998
The Darkside of Narnia by Philip Pullman, The Guardian, October 1, 1998, republished by Richard James at The Cumberland River Lamp Post
The Everyday C.S. Lewis, by Gilbert Meilaender, First Things, August/September 1998
The Second Coming of C. S. Lewis, by Alan Jacobs, First Things, November 1994