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About C.S. Lewis
Clive Staples Lewis was born on November
29, 1898 in Belfast, Ireland. The son of a
lawyer, Lewis grew up surrounded by books,
which he read throughout his childhood
during "seemingly endless rainy afternoons."
His mother died when he was a child, and
Lewis spent most of his time in the company
of his older brother, Warnie — with whom he
played, explored and created imaginary lands
and characters.
Lewis attended school, but gained a greater
love of learning through a private tutor who
prepared him to study for Oxford. In 1917 he
took a Classical Scholarship to University
College. After serving briefly in World War I,
Lewis returned to Oxford, where he spent the
next 30 years as English Tutor at Magdalen
College. He was later a Professor of Medieval
and Renaissance English Literature at
Cambridge for almost ten years.
As a scholar, Lewis wrote widely published
essays and texts on a variety of subjects. His
greater claim to fame, however, came with the
publication of The Screwtape Letters, a
wry and insightful correspondence between
an old devil and a younger apprentice. A
series of radio broadcasts presenting a
"defence" of Christianity later became the
basis for his classic apologetic Mere
Christianity.
The seven Chronicles of Narnia were
released annually between 1950 and 1956
and instantly established themselves as
classics for both children and adults.
Lewis died in November 1963.
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