C.S. Lewis: A Life by Alister McGrath

In this new (2013) biography of well-known the Medieval scholar and Christian apologist, C.S. Lewis, Alister McGrath states his purpose in the preface to the book: “This book aims to tell the story of the shaping and expressing of Lewis’s mind, focussing on his writings . . . exploring the complex and fascinating connections between Lewis’s external and internal worlds.” McGrath says his book will be “firmly grounded in earlier studies, yet able to go beyond them.”

Well. I did glean several tidbits of information from Mr. McGrath’s biography, information about Lewis and his work that either was new or new to me. I’ve read Surprised by Joy, Lewis’s own account of his early life and his conversion to Christianity. I’ve also read The Narnia Code by Michael Ward, Jack: A Life of C.S. Lewis by George Sayer, The Narnian by Alan Jacobs, and various other sketches, articles and most of Lewis’s writings, too. So I come to this biography with some background in the subject, although I’m certainly no C.S. Lewis scholar.

First, the (random) things I learned:

Lewis thought writing was a cure-all for depression.
“As he once advised his confidant Arthur Greeves: ‘Whenever you are fed up with life, start writing: ink is the great cure for all human ills, as I have found out long ago.'”
I tend to agree. I think better when I write down my thoughts, and I feel better afterwards, too.

C.S. Lewis not only had trouble typing accurately because of having only one joint in his thumbs, but he also chose not to type.
“This mechanical mode of writing, he believe, interfered with the creative process in that the incessant clacking of the typewriter keys dulled the writer’s appreciation of the rhythms and cadences of the English language.”
Maybe that’s why I can’t write decent poetry.

Tolkien said that he would never have finished The Lord of the Rings without C.S. Lewis’s encouragement.
“The unpayable debt I owe to [Lewis] was not ‘influence’ as it is ordinarily understood, but sheer encouragement. He was for long my only audience. Only from him did I ever get the idea that my ‘stuff’ could be more than a private hobby. But for his interest and unceasing eagerness for more I should never have brought The L. of the R. to a conclusion.”
And the world would have been much impoverished by the lack of that book and all that stemmed from it.

Lewis heavily annotated his books and may have thereby gained a depth of knowledge that most of us don’t even understand.
“Nobody who has worked through Lewis’s heavily annotated personal library can doubt the intensity or quality of his engagement with the texts he studied. . . . Lewis increasingly seems to witness to a lost age of scholarly methods, above all the mental inhabitation of primary sources, which does not appear to have survived his generation.”
Wouldn’t I love to have Lewis’s copy of one of my favorite pieces of medieval or ancient literature with his annotations to guide me and pique my interest and make me think of things I wouldn’t think of on my own? Joy.

So those are the passages I marked with sticky notes. I noticed, too, however, that Mr. McGrath and I do not agree on some basics. He is rather dismissive of Lewis’s attempts at apologetics, saying that most “critics” and “academic theologians” are able to poke holes in Lewis’s arguments quite easily. All I can say is that Lewis not only convinces me, most of the time, but he’s also influenced and convinced quite a few people who are probably much more erudite and learned than I (Chuck Colson, Peter Kreeft, John Piper, Randy Alcorn, Joseph Pearce, Anne Rice, Francis Collins, Phillip Yancey, and many, many more).

Then there are things that Mr. McGrath glosses or skips over completely. Charles Williams, Owen Barfield, G.K. Chesterton, and George Macdonald, to mention a few of the major influences on Lewis’s writing, are all mentioned only very briefly. Tolkien is, on the other hand, given center stage. Now, as I said above, I love Tolkien, but I consider that in a book about influences on C.S. Lewis’s life and thought, Tolkien is only one of the people who should be featured or emphasized.

And in another example of misplaced emphasis, McGrath writes about the Narnia books in excruciating details while speeding by the Space trilogy and The Great Divorce with indecent haste. These books constitute some of Lewis’s best writing in my estimation. The balance just feels off, but what there is there is interesting and informative.

For a more extensive and scholarly review of C.S. Lewis: A Life, see this article by Arend Smilde in The Journal of Inkling Studies.

By the way, I went with Eldest Daughter this past weekend to an academic conference on Walker Percy, the Southern author best known for his novel The Moviegoer, and my thoughts about Mr. Percy and his works became entangled with my thoughts about Lewis, to some benefit perhaps. More on Percy and Lewis and the intersection thereof in a later post.

9 thoughts on “C.S. Lewis: A Life by Alister McGrath

  1. Pingback: C.S. Lewis: A Life by Alister McGrath | ChristianBookBarn.com

  2. I really enjoyed reading this review, especially since I’ve just lately found myself in a discussion about how books should be read, and about the need to study as well as consume them. That quotation from the bio about Lewis’ annotation methods is fascinating.

  3. I think I’d enjoy reading this book although I just read a review by another Lewis scholar (can’t remember which at the moment).

    He vehemently disagreed on the section about Lewis’ wife. He said from everything he had studied, she and Lewis were very happy together. I guess there was a quote from where she said she was going to Europe to get Lewis to marry her. This other scholar said it was noted by her son that this was a joke her mother had told friends before leaving America and not her original intent.

    I guess we often have the battle of the scholars. But I do usually like McGrath’s writing.

  4. This book does sound like uneven treatment of him, especially his writing and influences. I haven’t read The Narnian yet and would probably pick up that one before this one.

    I’m reading A Severe Mercy just now, and the author’s friendship with Lewis is discussed quite a bit. It has been interesting seeing him in that like and reading some of his notes. I’d love to see his annotations. And I agree, his reasoning is convincing to me, too!

  5. Barbara, A Severe Mercy is one of my favorite Lewis-related books. I recommended it to someone else who found it too sentimental and emo, I think. But I think it’s fascinating to read about the relationship between Mr. Van Auken and his Davy, and how Christ changed both of them.

  6. Brenda, I’m OK with the idea that Joy Davidman was half in love with Lewis before she went to England and probably wanted to get his attention at least. I find that mixed motives are common in this world, and the older I get the less sure I am of the purity of my own motives in anything I do.

  7. Pingback: Echoes of Eden: C.S. Lewis | Trinity Fellowship

  8. Pingback: Sunday Salon: Books Read in October, 2013 | Semicolon

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