Cs Lewis Influences

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Clive Staples Lewis, better known under the pen name C. S. Lewis, is probably one of the most popular, respected, and beloved children’s writers of the 20th century reaching the height of his acclaim through his Chronicles of Narnia Series. However while he may be best known for writing childhood fiction he also impacted his time drastically by writing religious paraphernalia. During his lifetime he was successfully able to find a balance of recognition and respect for his fiction and nonfiction works. Overall C. S. Lewis impacted his time period equally as both a writer and a Christian helping him to inspire both children and adults’ beliefs in Christianity. When Lewis was 18 he turned down a scholarship to oxford in order to join the British…show more content…
Influenced by arguments with his Oxford colleague and friend J. R. R. Tolkien, and by the book “The Everlasting Man by G. K. Chesterton,” (“Lewis, C. S” Facts on File). he slowly rediscovered Christianity. He fought profusely up to the moment of his conversion noting that “he was brought into Christianity like a prodigal, ‘kicking, struggling, resentful, and darting his eyes in every direction for a chance to escape’” (“Lewis, C. S” Facts on File). After his conversion to theism in 1929,…show more content…
The year she died, the couple took a brief holiday in Greece and the Aegean; Lewis was fond of walking but not of travel, and this marked his only crossing of the English Channel after 1918.” (156) Lewis’s book A Grief Observed describes his experience of “bereavement in such a raw and personal fashion that Lewis originally released it under the pseudonym N.W. Clerk” (“Lewis, C. S” Facts on File) to keep readers from associating the book with him. However, so many friends “recommended the book to Lewis as a method for dealing with his own grief that he made his authorship public” (“Lewis, C. S” Facts on File). Lewis continued to raise Gresham's two sons after her death. While Douglas Gresham is, like Lewis and his mother, a “Christian, David Gresham turned to the faith into which his mother had been born and became Orthodox Jewish in his beliefs” (“Mere Lewis”
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