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C.S. Lewis – Timeless Works of Imagination, Faith & Reason

Discover the beloved classics and lesser-known gems from one of the most influential Christian thinkers and storytellers of the 20th century.

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About the Author

C.S. Lewis (1898–1963) was a professor of literature at Oxford and Cambridge, a renowned Christian apologist, and one of the most beloved storytellers of the modern era. His works range from imaginative fantasy worlds to profound reflections on theology, morality, and human experience.

Lewis united academic brilliance with storytelling magic.

Throughout his life, C.S. Lewis balanced the precision of a scholar with the imagination of a novelist. As a professor of literature at Oxford and later Cambridge, he devoted himself to understanding the great works that shaped Western thought. Yet beyond the lecture hall, Lewis brought those same intellectual passions into stories filled with wonder, symbolism, and moral clarity. His ability to weave profound ideas into accessible narratives—whether in children’s fantasy or adult fiction—set him apart as a writer whose work could speak to both the mind and the heart. This blend of rigorous thinking and creative expression remains one of the hallmarks of his enduring appeal.

His apologetics remain foundational in modern Christian thought.

Lewis is widely regarded as one of the most influential Christian thinkers of the 20th century. His apologetic writings—such as Mere Christianity, The Problem of Pain, and Miracles—were crafted not for scholars alone, but for everyday readers searching for clarity, hope, and reasoned faith. His approach combined logic with empathy, offering a thoughtful response to skepticism without dismissing the struggles and questions people carry. Even today, Christian leaders, theologians, and readers continue to look to Lewis’s works as approachable guides to faith, meaning, and morality in a complex world.

Narnia alone has sold over 100 million copies and inspired generations.

With a single series, Lewis transformed the landscape of fantasy literature. The world of Narnia—complete with its talking animals, mythical creatures, and spiritual allegories—remains one of the most beloved fictional realms ever created. Beyond Narnia, Lewis also built imaginative universes in works like The Space Trilogy, blending science fiction with philosophy and theological reflection. His gift for crafting immersive settings and unforgettable characters continues to inspire writers, filmmakers, and readers of all ages. For many, Lewis’s stories were their first doorway into the power of imagination—and that influence shows no sign of fading.

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For Beginners

The Screwtape Letters
The Screwtape Letters
A masterpiece of satire, this classic has entertained and enlightened readers the world over with its sly and ironic portrayal of human life and foibles from the vantage point of Screwtape, a highly placed assistant to 'Our Father Below'. At once wildly comic, deadly serious and strikingly original, C.S. Lewis gives us the correspondence of the worldly wise old devil to his nephew Wormwood, a novice demon in charge of securing the damnation of an ordinary young man.
$19.99

For Spirituality

Mere Christianity
Mere Christianity
Mere Christianity brings together Lewis's legendary broadcast talks of the war years, talks in which he set out simply to 'explain and defend the belief that has been common to nearly all Christians at all times.' Rejecting the boundaries that divide Christianity's many denominations, C.S. Lewis provides an unequalled opportunity for believers and nonbelievers alike to hear a powerful, rational case for the Christian faith. This scintillating collection confirms C.S. Lewis's reputation as one of the leading writers and thinkers of our age.
$19.99

To Grow Faith

The Abolition of Man
The Abolition of Man
This short but powerful treatise remains one of Lewis' most prophetic works. Lewis diagnoses the insidious potential of social and moral relativism - nothing less than the 'abolition' of humanity - and seeks to persuade his audience of the importance and relevance of universal values.
$36.99

Did You Know?

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A Reluctant Convert

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A Reluctant Convert

Lewis did not grow up as the outspoken Christian many know him to be. In fact, he spent much of his early adult life as an atheist. He described his conversion as being “dragged kicking and screaming into Christianity,” eventually coming to faith after long discussions with friends such as J.R.R. Tolkien. His journey from skepticism to belief is central to understanding the depth and honesty found in his theological works.

A Voice For Christianity

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A Voice For Christianity

Unlike many academic theologians, Lewis wrote for ordinary people who had questions about faith.Mere Christianity, first delivered as a series of BBC radio talks during World War II, explained the basics of Christian belief in a way that was accessible, clear, and deeply compassionate. These talks—and the book that followed—remain some of the most influential Christian writings of the modern era.

From Grief to Ministry

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From Grief to Ministry

After his wife Joy Davidman died, Lewis openly wrestled with sorrow inA Grief Observed. Instead of presenting a polished, theological response, Lewis wrote honestly about pain, doubt, and the struggle to reconcile loss with faith. This vulnerability has helped countless readers navigate their own grief, and the book continues to be used in pastoral care, counselling, and spiritual support.

The Life of C.S. Lewis

Explore the remarkable journey of one of the 20th century's most influential Christian writers

Clive Staples Lewis was born in Belfast, Ireland on 29 November 1898, the son of Albert James Lewis, a solicitor of Welsh ancestry. Lewis became known as ‘Jack’ as a young child after he adopted the name of his pet dog who was killed by a car. His mother Flora was the daughter of an Anglican priest, and died when Lewis was just ten. Lewis had one brother, Warren – known affectionately as Warnie – who was three years his senior. The two would remain close friends and creative collaborators throughout Lewis’ life. When children, they shared a fascination with humanised animal characters like Beatrix Potter’s, and wrote and illustrated stories of an imaginary world they called ‘Boxen’, run entirely by such fanciful beings.
Lewis’ childhood home was full of books, and he became a keen and intrepid reader at an early age. Until his mother’s death, Lewis was educated by private tutors, then moved on to a series of boarding schools in both Ireland and England. It was during his time at the last of these, aged 15, that Lewis gave up his childhood Christian faith and became an atheist. It was also at this time that he developed an intense love for ancient Norse legends and the natural world – an aesthetic complex which he called ‘Northernness’ and associated with the mysterious inner longing of ‘joy’. Under the influence of his tutor William Kirkpatrick, Lewis would go on to a deep involvement with ancient Greek literature. Lewis’ academic acumen won him a scholarship at Oxford in 1916, but shortly afterward his studies were interrupted by military service in World War I. Lewis was commissioned as a lieutenant in a light infantry regiment and sent to the Western Front in France, where he experienced the horrors of trench warfare, and was wounded by what would now be called ‘friendly fire’.

After the war, Lewis resumed his studies at Oxford, and in the years between 1920 and 1923 received firsts in Greek and Latin literature, philosophy, and English. By 1925 he was a Fellow and Tutor in English Literature at Magdalen College, Oxford - a position he would hold for nearly three decades. In 1954, Lewis transferred to Cambridge, where he had been awarded professorship in the new chair of Mediaeval and Renaissance Literature.

Lewis's education was interrupted by World War I, where he served in the British Army and was wounded in battle. These experiences profoundly influenced his later writings on suffering and faith.

His friend Tolkien’s devout Catholic faith decisively influenced Lewis’ return to Christianity between 1929 and 1931. The way was prepared also by Lewis’ love for the fantastical fiction of Scottish writer and Congregational pastor George MacDonald (1824-1905), as well as G K Chesterton’s apologetic work The Everlasting Man (1925). Lewis famously described himself as a stubbornly difficult convert in his spiritual autobiography Surprised By Joy (1955):
“In the Trinity Term of 1929 I gave in, and admitted that God was God, and knelt and prayed: perhaps, that night, the most dejected and reluctant convert in all England.”

As a Christian, Lewis maintained a commitment to the Anglican communion in which he was raised, though he tried to downplay sectarian differences in his apologetic writings, extolling instead the perennial essence of orthodox belief. It was the latter which Lewis presented in his popular work Mere Christianity, adapted from a series of radio talks he made for the BBC from 1942 to 1944, and which has become one of the most influential Christian books of modern times. Lewis’ theology was basically Anglican, with an ecumenical breadth shaped by the formative influences of Tolkien’s and Chesterton’s Catholicism, and the Christian universalism of MacDonald.

Lewis's conversion to Christianity in 1931 transformed his life and work. He became one of the most influential Christian apologists, writing classics like Mere Christianity and The Screwtape Letters.

Lewis married relatively late in his life at age 57, in unusual circumstances. He had befriended Joy Davidman Gresham – an American intellectual of Jewish background, and a convert, like Lewis, from atheism to Christianity. Joy was trying to remain in the UK with her two sons, having escaped an abusive marriage, and Lewis kindly agreed to a civil union to enable her to stay. Shortly afterward, Joy was diagnosed with terminal bone cancer. What had begun as a marriage of convenience between friends became much deeper, and Lewis and Joy obtained a full Christian marriage in 1957. As it turned out, Joy was the love of Lewis’ life, and when she died after three years of remission, Lewis experienced a shattering grief from which he never really emerged. Lewis related his profound loss in A Grief Observed, which he published under a pseudonym. The story of Lewis’ and Joy’s love became the subject of the film and stageplay Shadowlands.

Lewis died of renal failure in 1963, less than an hour before the assassination of John F Kennedy. Lewis is buried at Holy Trinity Church, Headington, the Oxford parish church with which he and his brother Warnie were actively involved from 1930.

C S Lewis

C.S. Lewis (1898 -1963) was one of the intellectual giants of the 20th century and arguably the most influential Christian writer of his day. This Irish-born Oxford and Cambridge academic wrote more than thirty books, allowing him to reach a vast audience, and his works continue to attract thousands of new readers every year. His most distinguished and popular writings include his seven-part fantasy series for children The Chronicles of Narnia (1956); the science fiction Space Trilogy (1938-1945); the apologetical The Problem of Pain (1940), Screwtape Letters (1942), Miracles (1947), Mere Christianity (1952), and The Four Loves (1960); and the autobiographical Surprised by Joy (1955) and A Grief Observed (1961).

Countless Christian writers, pastors, thinkers and artists have credited C S Lewis as a key influence on their faith journey, and his Narnia books have become classics of children’s literature.

Clive Staples Lewis was born in Belfast, Ireland on 29 November 1898, the son of Albert James Lewis, a solicitor of Welsh ancestry. Lewis became known as ‘Jack’ as a young child after he adopted the name of his pet dog who was killed by a car. His mother Flora was the daughter of an Anglican priest, and died when Lewis was just ten. Lewis had one brother, Warren – known affectionately as Warnie – who was three years his senior. The two would remain close friends and creative collaborators throughout Lewis’ life. When children, they shared a fascination with humanised animal characters like Beatrix Potter’s, and wrote and illustrated stories of an imaginary world they called ‘Boxen’, run entirely by such fanciful beings.

Lewis’ childhood home was full of books, and he became a keen and intrepid reader at an early age. Until his mother’s death, Lewis was educated by private tutors, then moved on to a series of boarding schools in both Ireland and England. It was during his time at the last of these, aged 15, that Lewis gave up his childhood Christian faith and became an atheist. It was also at this time that he developed an intense love for ancient Norse legends and the natural world – an aesthetic complex which he called ‘Northernness’ and associated with the mysterious inner longing of ‘joy’. Under the influence of his tutor William Kirkpatrick, Lewis would go on to a deep involvement with ancient Greek literature. Lewis’ academic acumen won him a scholarship at Oxford in 1916, but shortly afterward his studies were interrupted by military service in World War I. Lewis was commissioned as a lieutenant in a light infantry regiment and sent to the Western Front in France, where he experienced the horrors of trench warfare, and was wounded by what would now be called ‘friendly fire’.

After the war, Lewis resumed his studies at Oxford, and in the years between 1920 and 1923 received firsts in Greek and Latin literature, philosophy, and English. By 1925 he was a Fellow and Tutor in English Literature at Magdalen College, Oxford - a position he would hold for nearly three decades. In 1954, Lewis transferred to Cambridge, where he had been awarded professorship in the new chair of Mediaeval and Renaissance Literature.

In the late 1920s, Lewis’s circle of literary friends at Oxford coalesced into a discussion group known as The Inklings, which would meet regularly over about two decades. Members shared an enthusiasm for narrative tales, myths, legends – particularly Norse, Celtic, folkloric and medieval material - and fantasy fiction. They would read aloud their own works-in-progress and receive suggestions and criticism from their fellows. Members included J R R Tolkien, Hugo Dyson, Owen Barfield, Charles Williams, and Warnie Lewis. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings and Lewis’ science fiction novel Out of the Silent Planet were among the material ‘workshopped’ with The Inklings.

His friend Tolkien’s devout Catholic faith decisively influenced Lewis’ return to Christianity between 1929 and 1931. The way was prepared also by Lewis’ love for the fantastical fiction of Scottish writer and Congregational pastor George MacDonald (1824-1905), as well as G K Chesterton’s apologetic work The Everlasting Man (1925). Lewis famously described himself as a stubbornly difficult convert in his spiritual autobiography Surprised By Joy (1955):
“In the Trinity Term of 1929 I gave in, and admitted that God was God, and knelt and prayed: perhaps, that night, the most dejected and reluctant convert in all England.”

As a Christian, Lewis maintained a commitment to the Anglican communion in which he was raised, though he tried to downplay sectarian differences in his apologetic writings, extolling instead the perennial essence of orthodox belief. It was the latter which Lewis presented in his popular work Mere Christianity, adapted from a series of radio talks he made for the BBC from 1942 to 1944, and which has become one of the most influential Christian books of modern times. Lewis’ theology was basically Anglican, with an ecumenical breadth shaped by the formative influences of Tolkien’s and Chesterton’s Catholicism, and the Christian universalism of MacDonald.

Lewis married relatively late in his life at age 57, in unusual circumstances. He had befriended Joy Davidman Gresham – an American intellectual of Jewish background, and a convert, like Lewis, from atheism to Christianity. Joy was trying to remain in the UK with her two sons, having escaped an abusive marriage, and Lewis kindly agreed to a civil union to enable her to stay. Shortly afterward, Joy was diagnosed with terminal bone cancer. What had begun as a marriage of convenience between friends became much deeper, and Lewis and Joy obtained a full Christian marriage in 1957. As it turned out, Joy was the love of Lewis’ life, and when she died after three years of remission, Lewis experienced a shattering grief from which he never really emerged. Lewis related his profound loss in A Grief Observed, which he published under a pseudonym. The story of Lewis’ and Joy’s love became the subject of the film and stageplay Shadowlands.

Lewis died of renal failure in 1963, less than an hour before the assassination of John F Kennedy. Lewis is buried at Holy Trinity Church, Headington, the Oxford parish church with which he and his brother Warnie were actively involved from 1930.