by Jeffrey W. Barbeau
A short, academic work on how the English Romanticism of the 19th Century. Like many academic works it is Barbeau’s writing on a subject, and then another scholars response. The sections are:
C. S. Lewis and the “Romantic Heresy,” with response from professor Sarah Borden,
C. S. Lewis and the Anxiety of Memory, with response from professor Matthew Lundin, and
C. S. Lewis and the Sacramental Imagination, with response from professor Keith L. Johnson.
Good conversations and food for thought on Lewis’ influences and how he used them in his writing and theology. I like it as a companion to Holly Ordway’s Tolkien’s Modern Reading: Middle-earth Beyond the Middle Ages. Two well researched and thought provoking works.
176 Pages
4.5/5