“The object of a New Year is not that we should have a new year. It is that we should have a new soul and a new nose; new feet, a new backbone, new ears, and new eyes. Unless a particular man made New Year resolutions, he would make no resolutions. Unless a man starts afresh about things, he will certainly do nothing effective.” ~ G.K. Chesterton (thanks to Book Oblivion for the quote)
As a PhD student it is my “job” to read. And though I struggled with writing except in strong spurts in 2017, reading is the area where I have been the most successful and consistent. I had a few goals for 2017:
- Reduce my reading to 100 books, but read longer books (averaging 320 pages/book)
- 125 articles, shorts stories, essays, or other short pieces (not in collections)
- A 1:3 female:male ratio of authors
- Read C.S. Lewis’ essays in the winter, his poetry in the summer, and his fiction in the fall
- Increase the number of classes/lecture series to 10
- Increase my Canadian literature content
- Read one theological book a month
- Read one literary theory or writing text a week for my Research Methods class in the fall
My goals this year were really about:
- thickening up my reading and focussing it to match my thesis needs
- intentionally building up my CanLit knowledge (with the goal of presenting at a conference in 2018)
- reading for course prep (which overlaps with my PhD program)
80% of my books fit into one of those categories, and another 10% of my books and all the lectures were designed for increasing skills or devotional reading.
So, how did I do?
With due respect to the creepy encouragement from Goodreads–how would they know what I’m good at?–I muffed my first goal. For some reason, I put some omnibus editions in Goodreads, so it looks like 117 books at 36,000 words. When tracking individual books on my excel sheet (below), it was actually 127 books. In either case, the word length is the same, meaning I didn’t read longer books in 2017. This shows that I was a little soft on my thesis reading and filled it out with more fiction than normal. It also attests to how thin C.S. Lewis’ books are–the main character in my PhD dissertation. Lewis’ brevity is legendary, one of the reasons I would like to write essays like he does. Leaving out his journals and letters, Lewis averaged 221.8 pages per book. In 2017 I read 21 Lewis books, which will soften these averages considerably.
I met my learning goals this year, and except for being soft on Lewis’ poetry, I met my Lewis goals (including struggling with Charles Williams). I read 14 books by Canadian fiction writers. In 2018 I want to take that forward, reading a couple of more of Margaret Atwood, more of Lucy Maud Montgomery, and whatever I can fit in of Guy Gavriel Kay. And I fell just short of my 1:3 female:male ratio (though by the goodreads stats I came pretty close). 22% of the books I read were written by women. As a scholar of primarily male figures, that’s to be expected, but I am intent on broadening my experience. The ratio may shift in late 2018 or early 2019 as I come to a question about gender in my thesis.
Over the years of reading, my monthly averages have flattened out. As always, there is a drop in the early fall–I find the fall semester really difficult to get started. What has been consistent in all three previous years is the strength of my summer reading; 2017 was just below average, with a much stronger spring and late fall. Perhaps this might be a bit bent as my summer was taken up by longer books like The Name of the Wind, The Brothers Karamazov, and IT.
Though I don’t tend to count blogs or most internet articles, books are not all of my reading. In 2017, I dropped pretty dramatically in my reading of articles as I found myself reading primary source material more than usual in research. I exceeded the goal with the number of lectures I listened to, going through 13 series in total. In the chart below, gold is books, purple is articles, and green includes lecture series and classes.
My charts have better detail, but honestly, the Goodreads infographic is just so much nicer (see the entire infographic here).
If my reading had themes this past year, it was these:
- C.S. Lewis and books about him (21 and 11 books respectively); the book above where I was the only reader is the Revised Psalter, which Lewis helped edit
- Books by and about the Inklings (10 books), including a focus on Tolkien
- CanLit books (14), including a turn to L.M. Montgomery
- Theological works (24 books)
- SF and Fantasy books, other than Inklings (24 books), including some classic SF, some Stephen King, and my ongoing reading of Discworld
- Literary theory, literary criticism, and literary history (17 books and a couple of dozen articles), mostly in the fall, but I try to read a literary history book ever season
This coming year, my reading will be determined by season:
- Winter: Because I am precepting a course called Literature, Film, and Technoculture with Signum University, my winter and part of the spring will be dominated by SciFi (I think my SHANWAR read is SF, but I’m not sure yet)
- Spring: I will be finishing up the SciFi class reading and focussing on two areas for the rest of the spring: L.M. Montgomery’s work from 1908-1917, and C.S. Lewis’ teenage work (1914-1919)
- Summer: The summer is all about C.S. Lewis, especially secondary material; my reading will lighten as I have 6 weeks of dedicated writing time
- Fall: Continues the C.S. Lewis work with a supplement in theology; I will probably also reread Harry Potter, as I do every other autumn
And I will be going slowly through the catalogues that I love: Tolkien, Discworld, and a couple of the lists from this blog.
The Goodreads app is kind of limited, though you can check out my 2017 infographic. They have a thousand possibilities for creating infographics, yet they can’t figure out how to give us that power. Until then, I’ll stick with the classic excel sheet list. I wish I was infographically-inclined, but I do like lists! Here is my list of reading form 2017. “CSL” below means “C.S. Lewis.” I’ve linked some of the blogs that connect with the things I’ve read. Are any of these books or papers yours? If so, feel free to link my list. If you have your own year-end list or best-of blog, make sure you link it in the comments.
# | Date | Book or Short Piece |
January | ||
1 | Jan 01 | Kenneth E. Bailey, “Informal Controlled Oral Tradition and the Synoptic Gospels” (1995) |
2 | Jan 01 | Courtney Petrucci, “Abolishing Man in Other Worlds: Breaking and Recovering the Chain of Being in C.S. Lewis’s Ransom Cycle” (2016) |
3 | Jan 01 | Terry Pratchett, Jingo (1997) |
4 | Jan 01 | J.K. Rowling, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (2003) |
5 | Jan 02 | David C. Downing and Bruce R. Johnson, “C.S. Lewis’s Unfinished ‘Easley Fragment’ and his Unfinished Journey” (1928; 2011) |
6 | Jan 06 | J.K. Rowling, The Tales of Beedle the Bard (2003) |
7 | Jan 08 | CSL, God in the Dock (1966) |
8 | Jan 08 | Arend Smilde, “A History of C. S. Lewis’s Collected Shorter Writings” (2012; 2015) |
9 | Jan 10 | CSL, The Weight of Glory (1980) |
10 | Jan 12 | CSL, Foreword to Joy Davidman, Smoke on the Mountain (1955) |
11 | Jan 14 | CSL, Christian Reflections (1967) |
12 | Jan 17 | CSL, Present Concerns (1986) |
13 | Jan 17 | CSL, “Blimpophobia” (1944) |
14 | Jan 17 | J.R.R. Tolkien, The Father Christmas Letters (1920s-30s; 1976) |
15 | Jan 18 | CSL, Of This and Other Worlds (1982) |
16 | Jan 20 | Jeff McInnis, In and Out of the Moon (2015) |
17 | Jan 23 | CSL, Preface to George MacDonald: An Anthology (1946) |
18 | Jan 23 | CSL, The Abolition of Man (1943) |
19 | Jan 23 | Katharine MacDonald, “Youth Retention and Repatriation in PEI” (2016) |
20 | Jan 25 | J.R.R. Tolkien, Beowulf: A Translation (1920-6; 2014) |
21 | Jan 26 | Mary Anne Phemister & Andrew Lazo, Mere Christians (2009) |
22 | Jan 26 | Emily Strand, “Rogue One and the Paschal Mystery” (2016) |
23 | Jan 26 | Tom Shippey, “J.R.R. Tolkien’s Beowulf” (2017) |
24 | Jan 26 | J.R. Lucas, “Restoration of Man” (1992) |
25 | Jan 27 | W.W. Robson, “C.S. Lewis” (1966) |
26 | Jan 29 | CSL, “A Slip of the Tongue” (1956; 1963) |
27 | Jan 29 | CSL, Reflections on the Psalms (1958) |
28 | Jan 30 | J.R.R. Tolkien and Verlyn Flieger (ed.), The Lay of Aotrou and Itroun (1930; 2016) |
29 | Jan 31 | Walter Hooper, ed, introduction and editorial note of They Stand Together: The Letters of C.S. Lewis to Arthur Greeves (1979) |
30 | Jan 31 | Clyde S. Kilby, Letters to an American Lady (1969) |
31 | Jan 31 | CSL, Dymer (1925; 1950 preface) |
February | ||
32 | Feb 01 | Bruce Hindmarsh, “The Roots of Evangelical Spirituality” (2007) |
33 | Feb 01 | CSL, “Christian Reunion” (1944) |
34 | Feb 03 | CSL, The World’s Last Night and Other Essays (1960) |
35 | Feb 04 | J.R.R. Tolkien, Tales from the Perilous Realm (1992) |
36 | Feb 05 | N.T. Wright, Surprised by Hope: Rethinking Heaven, the Resurrection, and the Mission of the Church (2007) |
37 | Feb 06 | J.R.R. Tolkien and Verlyn Flieger (ed.), The Story of Kullervo (1914; 2015) |
38 | Feb 07 | David Baggett, Jerry L. Walls, Gary Habermas, et al, C.S. Lewis as Philosopher: Truth, Goodness and Beauty (2008) |
39 | Feb 10 | Mark Noll, “Opening a Wardrobe” (1986) |
40 | Feb 10 | Jean L.S. Patrick, ed., A Christian for All Christians: Essays in Honor of C.S. Lewis (1990) |
41 | Feb 14 | Matthew Lee, “To Reign in Hell or to Serve in Heaven: C.S. Lewis on the Problem of Hell and Enjoyment of the Good” (2008) |
42 | Feb 16 | J.R.R. Tolkien, “The Lay of Aotrou & Itroun” (1930) |
43 | Feb 16 | Verlyn Flieger, “Tolkien Dark: Kullervo, Aotrou and Itroun” (2016) |
44 | Feb 18 | J.I. Packer, “Still Surprised by Lewis” (1998) |
45 | Feb 21 | Kenneth C. Harper, “C.S. Lewis: A Survey of Recent Scholarship” (1989) |
46 | Feb 21 | Terry Pratchett, The Last Continent (1998) |
47 | Feb 22 | CSL, “Religion Without Dogma?” (1946) |
48 | Feb 25 | Walter Hooper, Preface to Christian Reunion and Other Essays (1990) |
49 | Feb 25 | H. Rider Haggard, King’s Solomon’s Mines (1885) |
50 | Feb 27 | John McWhorter, Our Magnificent Bastard Tongue: The Untold History of English (2008) |
51 | Feb 28 | Bruce R. Johnson, “Answers that Belonged to Life: C. S. Lewis and the Origins of the Royal Air Force Chaplains’ School, Cambridge” (2012) |
52 | Feb 28 | Edumnd Cooper and Roger Lancelyn Green, Double Phoenix (1971) |
53 | Feb 28 | Harry Lee Poe, “C.S. Lewis Was a Secret Government Agent” (2015) |
54 | Feb 28 | Suzanne Bray, “‘The Exact Programme a Particular Country Wishes to Have’: C.S. Lewis’ Literary Broadcast for Iceland” (2016) |
55 | Feb 28 | Gregory Anderson, “Lost Letters of Lewis at the Lambeth Palace Library” (2016) |
56 | Feb 28 | John G. West “Darwin in the Dock” (2012) |
March | ||
58 | Mar 01 | William Law, A Serious Call to a Devout and Holy Life (1728) |
59 | Mar 02 | Phyllis A. Tickle, The Great Emergence: How Christianity is Changing and Why (2008) |
60 | Mar 05 | Neil Gaiman, Norse Mythology (2017) |
61 | Mar 11 | William Paul Young, The Shack (2008) |
62 | Mar 12 | Orson Scott Card & Christopher Yost, Ender’s Game: The Graphic Novel (2010) |
63 | Mar 14 | Robert Lacey, The Year 1000: What Life Was Like at the Turn of the First Millennium, An Englishman’s World (1998) |
64 | Mar 15 | Dallas Willard, Renovations of the Heart (2002) |
65 | Mar 20 | Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale (1986) |
66 | Mar 20 | Larry Keeley, Kyla Fullwinder, “Design Thinking” (2016) |
67 | Mar 20 | Margaret Atwood, “What ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ Means in the Age of Trump” (2017) |
68 | Mar 22 | Paul Tillich, The Courage to Be (1952) |
69 | Mar 22 | Timothy Smith, “Whitfield, Wesley, and Evangelical Social Reform” (1987) |
70 | Mar 26 | Stephen King, The Stand (1978) |
71 | Mar 27 | Charles Williams, “What the Cross Means to Me” (1943) |
72 | Mar 28 | G.K. Chesterton, The Man Who Knew Too Much (1922) |
73 | Mar 30 | Roger E. Olson, How to be Evangelical without Being Conservative (2008) |
April | ||
74 | Apr 01 | Michael R. Phillips, The Garden at the Edge of Beyond (1998) |
75 | Apr 05 | Terry Pratchett, Carpe Jugulum (1998) |
76 | Apr 06 | J.R.R. Tolkien, The Silmarillion (1977) |
77 | Apr 07 | Ray Bradbury, The Martian Chronicles (1949) |
78 | Apr 10 | Margaret Atwood, Oryx and Crake (2003) |
79 | Apr 13 | Monika B. Hilder, Surprised by the Feminine: A Rereading of C. S. Lewis’s and Gender (2013) |
80 | Apr 13 | Jean Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion: Book III (1559) |
81 | Apr 18 | Boethius, The Consolations of Philosophy (524) |
82 | Apr 19 | Margaret Atwood, The Year of the Flood (2009) |
83 | Apr 20 | Mark Sampson, Sad Peninsula (2014) |
84 | Apr 29 | Melvyn Bragg, The Adventure of English: The Biography of a Language (2003) |
May | ||
85 | May 01 | G.K. Chesterton, The Man Who Was Thursday (1908) |
86 | May 03 | L.M. Montgomery, Anne of Green Gables (1908) |
87 | May 05 | Brian Paulsen, The River (1992) |
88 | May 07 | J.K. Rowling, Jack Thorne, John Tiffany, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child (2016) |
89 | May 08 | J.R.R. Tolkien, The Legend of Sigurd & Gudrún (1920s-30s; 2009) |
90 | May 10 | Tom Shippey, Review of The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrún, by J.R.R. Tolkien, ed. Christopher Tolkien (2010) |
91 | May 10 | Joe Christopher, Review of Gender Dance by Monika Hilder (2014) |
92 | May 10 | Laura Lee Smith, Review of Surprised by the Feminine by Monika Hilder (2016) |
93 | May 10 | Charles Huttar, Review of Monika Hilder Trilogy (2016) |
94 | May 10 | Sigrid Undset, Catherine of Siena (1951) |
95 | May 11 | Michael S. Jeffress & William J. Brown, “Freedom of Choice in The Great Divorce: C.S. Lewis’ Rhetorical Vision of the Afterlife” (2017) |
96 | May 15 | William Morris, News from Nowhere (1890) |
97 | May 15 | Carl Edlund Anderson “The Legends of Sigurd and Gudrún” (2017) |
98 | May 16 | Jean Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion: Book IV and 100 Aphorisms (1559) |
99 | May 19 | CSL, T.S. Eliot et al., The Revised Psalter (1959-64) |
100 | May 19 | Walter Hooper, “Reflections on the Psalms” in C.S. Lewis: A Companion and Guide (1996) |
101 | May 19 | Margaret Atwood, MaddAddam (2013) |
102 | May 24 | George M. Marsden, A Short Life of Jonathan Edwards (2008) |
103 | May 24 | Travis Buchanan, “An Unwelcome Transposition: Review Essay of Paul H. Brazier’s C.S. Lewis: Revelation and the Christ” (2016) |
104 | May 24 | Dabney. “A Letter from C.S. Lewis” (2016) |
105 | May 26 | N.T. Wright, The Lord and His Prayer (1996) |
106 | May 29 | Jason Fisher, “Little Known Lewis Letters” (2017) |
107 | May 29 | Francis Warner, “Lewis’ Involvement in the Revision of the Psalter” (2011) |
108 | May 30 | Terry Pratchett, The Fifth Elephant (1997) |
109 | May 30 | Terry Pratchett, “The Sea and Little Fishes” (1998) |
June | ||
110 | Jun 03 | Joseph Laconte, A Hobbit, A Wardrobe, and a Great War (2015) |
111 | Jun 06 | Dante, The Divine Comedy (1308-1320) |
112 | Jun 07 | James M. Houston, “The Prayer Life of CSL” (1989) |
113 | Jun 10 | Arthur G. Holder, The Blackwell Companion to Christian Spirituality (2005) |
114 | Jun 13 | J. Gresham Machen, Christianity & Liberalism (1922) |
115 | Jun 13 | Ron Dart, “CSL and Bede Griffiths” (2017) |
116 | Jun 14 | Brenton D.G. Dickieson, “Mixed Metaphors and Hyperlinked Worlds: A Study of Intertextuality in CSL’s Ransom Cycle” (2015) |
117 | Jun 14 | Suzanne Bray, “’Any Chalice of Consecrated Wine’: The Significance of the Holy Grail in Charles Williams’s War in Heaven” (2017) |
118 | Jun 16 | Marsha Daigle-Williamson, Reflecting the Eternal: Dante’s Divine Comedy in the Novels of CSL (2015) |
119 | Jun 16 | Samuel Johnson, Rasselas (1759) |
120 | Jun 18 | Mark Sampson, The Slip (2017) |
121 | Jun 26 | John Lawlor, C.S. Lewis: Memories and Reflections (1998) |
122 | Jun 27 | John Foxe, Foxe’s Book of Martyrs (1563) |
July | ||
123 | Jul 01 | John Warwick Montgomery, “Contemporary Religious Thoughts” (1970) |
124 | Jul 01 | Terry Pratchett, The Truth (2000) |
125 | Jul 08 | Sinclair B. Ferguson, The Whole Christ: Legalism, Antinomianism, and Gospel Assurance—Why the Marrow Controversy Still Matters (2016) |
126 | Jul 17 | L.M. Montgomery, Anne of Avonlea (1909) |
127 | Jul 19 | L.M. Montgomery, Anne of the Island (1915) |
128 | Jul 20 | Niall Ferguson, The War of the World: History’s Age of Hatred (2006) |
129 | Jul 23 | Charles Williams, Shadows of Ecstasy (1930) |
130 | Jul 27 | CSL, selections from Letters I (1930) |
131 | Jul 27 | David L. Neuhouser, “Crossing the ‘Great Frontier'” (2016) |
132 | Jul 27 | Dale Nelson, “Fantasy and Science Fiction: The C.S. Lewis Issues” (2017) |
133 | Jul 28 | L.M. Montgomery, Anne’s House of Dreams (1917) |
134 | Jul 29 | Eugene Peterson, “Jesus and Prayer” (c. 1996) |
135 | Jul 30 | L.M. Montgomery, Chronicles of Avonlea (1912) |
135 | Jul 31 | Patrick Rothfuss, The Name of the Wind (2008) |
August | ||
137 | Aug 01 | Fyodor Dostoevsky, The Brother’s Karamazov (1879) |
138 | Aug 03 | David Teems, Tyndale: The Man Who Gave God an English Voice (2012) |
139 | Aug 08 | Marilynne Robinson, Housekeeping (1980) |
140 | Aug 09 | CSL, “Philia” (1958) |
141 | Aug 12 | Terry Pratchett, Thief of Time (2001) |
142 | Aug 13 | Jonathan Culler, Literary Theory: A Very Short Introduction (1997) |
143 | Aug 14 | Terry Pratchett, The Last Hero (2001) |
144 | Aug 18 | Harold Bloom, How to Read and Why (2000) |
145 | Aug 21 | Oscar Wilde, “The Decay of Lying: An Observation” (1891) |
146 | Aug 24 | Gary Thorne, “Baptized but not Sanctified: George MacDonald and the Fantastic Baptism of the Imagination of C.S. Lewis” (2015) |
147 | Aug 24 | David C. Downing on Lewis & Phantastes (1992, 2002, 2005) |
148 | Aug 24 | George MacDonald, “The Fantastic Imagination” (1895) |
149 | Aug 24 | Claire Connors, Literary Theory: A Beginner’s Guide (2010) |
150 | Aug 24 | Owen Barfield, Christopher Mitchell (ed), Amy Vail (trans) Jane Hipolito (ed), “Death” (1930; 2008) |
151 | Aug 25 | CSL, Spirits in Bondage (1919) |
152 | Aug 29 | A.A. Milne, Winnie-the-Pooh (1926) |
153 | Aug 30 | George MacDonald, “The Fantastic Imagination” (1895) |
September | ||
154 | Sep 04 | Signum Faculty, Research Methods (2017) |
155 | Sep 05 | Jorge Luis Borges, Călin-Andrei Mihăilescu (Editor), This Craft of Verse (1976; 2002) |
156 | Sep 13 | Stephen King, IT (1986) |
157 | Sep 17 | John Stott, The Cross of Christ (1986) |
158 | Sep 18 | Lois More Overbeck, “Researching Literary Manuscripts: A Scholar’s Perspective” (1993) |
159 | Sep 18 | Jorge Luis Borges, “The Library of Babel” (1940) |
160 | Sep 21 | Michel Foucault, “What is an Author?” (1969) |
161 | Sep 24 | Frederick Buechner, The Sacred Journey (1982) |
162 | Sep 25 | Percy Bysshe Shelley, “A Defence of Poetry” (1821) |
163 | Sep 25 | Roland Barthes, Mythologies (1957; 2013) |
164 | Sep 25 | Philip Sidney, “An Apologie for Poetrie” (1593) |
165 | Sep 28 | Thérèse of Lisieux, The Story of a Soul (1895-7) |
166 | Sep 30 | Stephen King, Gunslinger (The Dark Tower I; 1982) |
167 | Sep 30 | Michel Foucault, The History of Sexuality: Vol 1 (1976) |
October | ||
168 | Oct 05 | Peters Singer, Marx: A Very Short Introduction (2001) |
169 | Oct 05 | T.S. Eliot, “The Wasteland” (1922) |
170 | Oct 07 | W.K. Wimsatt, Jr. and Monroe C. Beardsley, “The Intentional Fallacy” (1954) |
171 | Oct 07 | John Keats, “Ode on a Grecian Urn” (1819) |
172 | Oct 09 | Charles Taylor, “History, Secularity, and the Nova Effect” (2001) |
173 | Oct 09 | Frederick C. Crewes, The Pooh Perplex (1963) |
174 | Oct 10 | Cleanth Brooks, selection from “The Well Wrought Urn” (1947) |
175 | Oct 11 | Robert A. Heinlein, Stranger in a Strange Land (1961) |
176 | Oct 12 | Catherine Belsey, Poststructuralism: A Very Short Introduction (2002) |
177 | Oct 20 | A.A. Milne, The Collected Stories of Winnie-the-Pooh (2006) |
178 | Oct 23 | Virginia Woolf, Jacob’s Room (1921) |
179 | Oct 25 | Bill Goldstein, The World Broke in Two: Virginia Woolf, T.S. Eliot, D.H. Lawrence, E.M. Forster and the Year That Changed Literature (2017) |
180 | Oct 27 | Virginia Woolf, A Room of One’s Own (1929) |
181 | Oct 30 | Terry Eagleton, Literary Theory (1983) |
182 | Oct 30 | Virginia Woolf, A Room of One’s Own (1929) |
183 | Oct 31 | Frederick C. Crewes, The Postmodern Pooh (2001) |
November | ||
184 | Nov 01 | Alan Jacobs, The Book of Common Prayer: A Biography (2013) |
185 | Nov 03 | Paul Fry, “Eng 300: Introduction to the Theory of Literature” class at Yale University (2007) |
186 | Nov 03 | Leonard Neidorf, “R.D. Fulk and the Progress of Philology” (2016) |
187 | Nov 03 | Tom Shippey, “Fighting the Long Defeat: Philology in Tolkien’s Life and Fiction” (2007) |
188 | Nov 04 | Calvert Watkins, “What is Philology?” (1990) |
189 | Nov 04 | Hans Henrich Hock, Introduction to Principles of Historical Linguistics (1991) |
190 | Nov 06 | Signum Faculty, Research Methods (2017) |
191 | Nov 07 | Henry Jenkins, III, “Star Trek Rerun, Reread, Rewritten: Fan Writing as Textual Poaching” (1986) |
192 | Nov 08 | Nola Hopkinson, Brown Girl in the Ring (1998) |
193 | Nov 09 | David C. Downing, The Most Reluctant Convert: C. S. Lewis’s Journey to Faith (2002) |
194 | Nov 11 | J.R.R. Tolkien, “On Fairy-stories” (1947) |
195 | Nov 11 | C.S. Lewis, “On the Reading of Old Books” (1943) |
196 | Nov 11 | Kathryn Kerby-Fulton, “‘Something Fearful’: Medievalist Scholars on the Religious Turn” (2010) |
197 | Nov 11 | Stanley Fish, “One University Under God?” (2005) |
198 | Nov 11 | C.S. Lewis, “On Stories” (1947) |
199 | Nov 12 | CSL, The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe (1949) |
200 | Nov 13 | Art Lindsley and Chris Mitchell, “Narnia & C.S. Lewis: Imagination, Reason, and You” (2006) |
201 | Nov 13 | CSL, The Pilgrim’s Regress (1932) |
202 | Nov 13 | CSL, “Religion and Science” (1945) |
203 | Nov 13 | CSL, “Work and Prayer” (1945) |
204 | Nov 13 | Charles Williams, “The English Poetic Mind” (1932) |
205 | Nov 20 | David J. Peterson, The Art of Language Invention: From Horse-Lords to Dark Elves, the Words Behind World-Building (2015) |
206 | Nov 20 | CSL, Prince Caspian (1950) |
207 | Nov 22 | George Sayer, Jack: A Life of C.S. Lewis (1988) |
208 | Nov 24 | Charles Williams, The Figure of Beatrice (1942) |
209 | Nov 27 | Eric S. Rabkin, “Science Fiction: The Literature of Technological Imagination” (1998) |
210 | Nov 27 | CSL, “Meditation in a Toolshed” (1945) |
211 | Nov 27 | CSL, Surprised by Joy (1954) |
212 | Nov 28 | CSL, Voyage of the Dawn Treader (1950) |
December | ||
213 | Dec 04 | Alexander Pope, “Eloisa to Abelard” (1717) |
214 | Dec 05 | CSL, The Silver Chair (1951) |
215 | Dec 06 | CSL, The Horse and His Boy (1953) |
216 | Dec 08 | CSL, The Magician’s Nephew (1953) |
217 | Dec 12 | CSL, “Meditation in a Toolshed” (1945) |
218 | Dec 12 | CSL, The Last Battle (1953) |
219 | Dec 12 | Samuel Taylor Coleridge, “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” (1798) |
220 | Dec 13 | CSL, The Great Divorce (1944-45) |
221 | Dec 15 | Stephanie Derrick, “Christmas and Cricket: Rediscovering Two Lost C. S. Lewis Articles After 70 Years” (2017) |
222 | Dec 15 | CSL, Out of the Silent Planet (1937) |
223 | Dec 18 | CSL, The Screwtape Letters with “Screwtape Proposes a Toast” (1941) |
224 | Dec 20 | CSL, Perelandra (1943) |
225 | Dec 21 | CSL, selections on David Lindsay from OHEL (1954) |
226 | Dec 22 | CSL?, “Cricketer’s Progress” (1946) |
227 | Dec 22 | CSL, “A Christmas Sermon for Pagans” (1946) |
228 | Dec 26 | CSL, That Hideous Strength (1945) |
229 | Dec 27 | Rob Gosselin, “Tolkien’s sub-creative vision: Exploring the broad applicability in Tolkien’s concept of sub-creation” (2017) |
230 | Dec 27 | J.R.R. Tolkien, “Leaf by Niggle” (1945) |
231 | Dec 31 | Frederick Buechner, The Book of Bebb (1979) |