| Wednesday, November 19, 2008 | |||||
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Till We Have Faces and the Meaning of Myth
This may be explained by the stylistic distinctiveness of the book. The story for Till We Have Faces is based upon the Greek myth of Cupid and Psyche. Thus this work is, as Lewis himself noted, a “reinterpretation of an old story.” In this Conversation, Ken Myers talks with literary critic Thomas Howard, an expert on Lewis’s work and author of C. S. Lewis: Man of Letters (Ignatius, 1990), in order to learn about this text in particular and the importance of myth in Lewis’s work in general.
CON-14-T Cassette $7.00 [Add to cart] ** Note: MP3 downloads may be burned to a conventional CD, and come with burning instructions as well as templates for printing labels and jewel case tray labels. This is one of a series of Conversations produced by MARS HILL AUDIO. Two other titles examine C. S. Lewis's thought and writing: The Heav'ns and All the Powers Therein: The Medieval Cosmos and the World of Narnia, a conversation with Michael Ward, and Alan Jacobs on The Narnian. We have also produced an Anthology entitled The Christian Mind of C. S. Lewis, which features interviews with Clyde Kilby, Gilbert Meilaender, Michael Aeschliman, and others. You may purchase the "C. S. Lewis Collection" of all three Conversations and the Anthology in one convenient, discounted package. To see a list of other available recordings, see our online catalog. If you like, you may download an free demonstration issue (ZIP, 33.5MB, containing MP3 files) of the MARS HILL AUDIO Journal, our bimonthly audio magazine. |
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