




HarperCollins Surprised by Joy : Lewis, C. S.: desertcart.ae: Books Review: Good - Came in good condition Review: USED BOOK. CANNOT BE GIVEN AS A GIFT DUE TO SCRACTHES. - USED BOOK. CANNOT BE GIVEN AS A GIFT DUE TO SCRACTHES.
| ASIN | 0007461275 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #14,892 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #8 in Fantasy Anthologies #17 in Biographies of Religious Leaders & Figures #25 in Biographies of Authors |
| Customer reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (417) |
| Dimensions | 13 x 1.83 x 19.71 cm |
| Edition | First Edition |
| ISBN-10 | 9780007461271 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0007461271 |
| Item weight | 294 g |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 288 pages |
| Publication date | 28 January 2016 |
| Publisher | William Collins |
T**Y
Good
Came in good condition
A**A
USED BOOK. CANNOT BE GIVEN AS A GIFT DUE TO SCRACTHES.
USED BOOK. CANNOT BE GIVEN AS A GIFT DUE TO SCRACTHES.
J**S
First book I've read of C.S Lewis and I can honestly say everything I've heard about his influence on the world and is precise. Looking forward to reading his other works on what I know will be an enriching journey. Thank you Lewis.
C**A
Maybe the problem was my expectations, but I ended the book feeling a lacking. The last chapters seem to go too fast and not deep enough. Still a very measurable read.
S**R
"In the Trinity Term of 1929 I gave in, and admitted that God was God..." "I was driven to Whipsnade one sunny morning. When we set out I did not believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, and when we reached the zoo I did...it was...like when a man, after long sleep, still lying motionless in bed, becomes aware that he is now awake." For a long time I've been fascinated by the person, C.S. Lewis. What caused him to be the way he is? ...to write the Chronicles of Narnia, a best-selling children's fantasy; The Screw-tape Letters, a dialogue; Mere Christianity, a layman's apologetic; The Space Trilogy, a science-fiction; The Abolition of Man, a short treatise; Till We Have Faces, a mythology; Reflections on the Psalms, a commentary; The Pilgrim's Regress, an allegory; The Great Divorce, a novella; and now--Surprised by Joy, an autobiography! Can you say "prolific"? I haven't even scratched the surface. If we complied C.S. Lewis' diary, letters, poems, and essays, not to mention his scholarly work on Medieval Renaissance literature, and his reflections on love, evil, pain, and theology than we've got a truck load of sheer writing masterpieces. Few Christian authors are more well read than C.S. Lewis. Thus, I'd almost forgotten that C.S. Lewis at one time in his life, was not a Christian, and for a long duration he even professed to be--yes--an atheist. Not an atheist like the New Atheists of today, but like an Old Atheist. The difference is that the Old Atheist simply believed Theism was false, but the New Atheist, today, believes that Theism is not only false, but evil, even supremely the cause of evil. He respectfully denied God's existence. While reading Surprised By Joy I was, needless to say--surprised. C.S. Lewis' life was rather simple, even common. He was terrible at sports, read a great deal, and thought many of the same things I have thought in my child-hood. He went to a "normal" preparatory school, went to a common College, and joined the army to fight in WWI. Most of our great grandfather's have done that. The one thing that sets C.S. Lewis apart from the common character is that he was, more than any person I've heard of--extensively well-read. He read books like a 3-week starved lion in front of a freshly killed antelope. He devoured them. Not Christian books. In fact, some notable influences in his life were Norse Myths like Thor, Odin, and Loki, fantasy tales, ancient literature from the likes of Virgil, Euripides, Dante, Homer... He read basically the entire western canon, and was influenced by agnostics like George Orwell (author of 1984), other famous authors like Faust, Wordsworth, Shelley... And in all honesty, if you were to mention a notable book from history, everything from Voltaire's Candide, to Darwin's Origin of Species, to the Wizard of Oz, he read it. And from the man who has read, been exposed too, dabbled in, and even believed for a short time, most ideas and human philosophies man has come up with, said this about his own reading: "A young man who wishes to remain a sound Atheist cannot be too careful of his reading." In short, it was C.S. Lewis' reading of books that pushed him from Atheism to Theism and then from Theism to Christianity. We as Christians, for the past how ever many decades have been afraid of reading books that ought not to make us afraid. It is not the Christian that ought to be afraid of reading the Great Books of the past, it is the Atheist. The overwhelming testimony of the greatest of human philosophies give testament to the book that stands above them all--the Bible. Like a truth that rings so loudly on the hearts of men and women throughout history, you would have to plug your ears, and ignore your reason, selectively choose your literature, and shut your eyes to human experience to retain a sound belief against a truth that so tugs on each of our hearts. After reading the books confirming his Atheism for most of his higher education, C.S. Lewis interestingly makes the comment that it was not that the books and philosophies he began suddenly seemed so blatantly wrong, he remarked that they we simply boring, "Christians are wrong, but all the rest are bores." Atheism was boring. In short, he maintains that he was unsatisfied with the explanation of Atheism. Somewhere he calls Atheism, "too simple". It does not provide to complex explanation for the world we live in; pain, evil, love, joy, hardship, friendship, beauty... You cannot maintain any of those fundamental human experiences with a consistent belief that the Universe was an accident of evolutionary processes. Notably, as the title is called Surprised by Joy, it was when C.S. Lewis realized joy was much more than an "aesthetic experience" that he began to search for a truth that was comprehensive enough to fit the human experience. He found that in a person--Jesus Christ. Surprised by Joy was an excellent read! It is not like Augustine's Confessions, with beautiful confessions of sin and testimony of struggle, or like John Bunyan's Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners with an astonishing pilgrimage to repentance. It is a book of pure honesty to how C.S. Lewis lived his early child-hood and what shaped his testimony of conversion. I highly recommend reading Surprised by Joy by C.S. Lewis! It's one of the best autobiographies I've ever read, and even though I've not read many, it is probably better than many other autobiographies I'll read in the future.
C**J
Super indico essa autobiografia de C.S. Lewis. O acabamento do livro é muito bom também.
M**O
A spiritual autobiography which remains a bit superficial. However, it is interesting to understand the atmosphere among the scholars of that period which led many of them to become catholics.
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