I'm not reading anything right now - except for an old copy of "how to win friends and influence people' I keep in the can for divination purposes.
A lot of those old classics are- I got about 1/3 the way through "Main Street" by Sinclair Lewis, I got about 1/3 the way through one by Herman Melville..................same sh*t every chapter. I did manage to get through one by William Faulkner, which started out good and went downhill from there. I did read a good one by Ernie Hemingway, but very sad ending. I think Gulliver's travel is a satire about the conditions of the times- which is probably meaningless in this day and age.
I've read a few of his books. Not a fan of apologetics but enjoyed them at that time. Read an article in time magazine years ago while in a hospital waiting room about an interview the writer had with Mr. Lewis. I found it interesting that he had wished he had led a more interactive and social life rather than the reclusive life he chose. Good writer.The Abolition of Man by C.S. Lewis. A startling and prophetic work as to the state of Western civilization in the 21st Century, written in 1943. Virtually all of the pillars of post modern culture, especially the rise of moral relativism and the collapse of science into a political expedient is alluded to... in 128 pages.
Starting with a deceptively simple observation - that modern (now postmodern) philosophy tends to reduce all statements of value to mere statements of subjective feeling - Lewis goes on to demonstrate the corrosive and ultimately fatal effect of this line of thinking on any civilized culture
I just started this book this morning and I am over halfway through. I couldn't put it down.
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