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Loading... C. S. Lewis, My Godfather: Letters, Photos and Recollections (2007)by Laurence Harwood
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. This is a short memoir of Laurence Harwood's experience with C. S. Lewis. Laurence's father had attended Oxford with Lewis and Owen Barfield and they became lifelong friends. Laurence was lucky to have Lewis as his godfather. The book contains a number of photographs and images of various letters written by Lewis to Laurence and other members of his family. A very interesting read, provided insights into a completely different side of Lewis than I've seen before. He pitched his letters to the perfect level for Laurence as a child and young man. He even wrote in a child-like hand and included illustrations. Later in life Lewis asked Laurence for advice on the future prospects for his step-son Douglas, after Joy's death. A nice quick read, where Lewis' heartfelt friendship and love of the Harwood family is easy to see. I enjoyed seeing the letters, and found the quotations in Latin and Greek to be an asset to the book. Though I don't read either language it showed that Lewis' academic nature was always present. He and his friends composed poems and stories in multiple languages, simply for the joy of the challenge. The only reason I'm giving it a 4 is because I was unsatisfied with the photograph citations. They were listed at the back of the book like end-notes and I had to keep flipping back and forth. I think simple captions would have made it easier to read. Other than that I really enjoyed the book. NCLA Review - Lewis wrote in one letter: "What I am enjoying is fame. Fame = spending all your spare time answering letters." Faithful to answer all correspondence, he wrote an average of seven handwritten letters every day which could amount to more than 100,000 in his lifetime. His practice was to destroy a letter after it was answered, but his answers to friends have been preserved. This book is the result. The most interesting letters are those written to his godson and other children. The time spent making these letters interesting to the young person is remarkable, considering the academic world in which he lived. The book is difficult to read: lightly colored paper and small print, too many footnotes necessary to explain the Latin and Greek comments as well as circumstances prompting the letters, plus identification of photos at the end of the book took too much time to keep one's interest. Rating: 1 —CRP no reviews | add a review
Justice isn't blind anymore.True Destiny, Book 2Travis Yardley-Rudiger deliberately stayed away from Jamie Grimm, desperate not to pull her into the petty war of wills between him and her grandfather, Oliver Grimm. Unfortunately the reemergence of Baldur and Loki and their claiming of Jamie's sister Jordan put her squarely in Grimm's sights. Her torture at Grimm's hands left Travis determined to claim and protect the woman he's loved for years-but first he has to find a way to break the news that Travis is actually Tyr.Jamie keeps seeing the weirdest things. Flames in her sister's eyes, for instance...even Travis's entire body glowing. Then there are the recurring nightmares she just can't shake. One thing is certain: Travis's usual standoffish attitude has done an abrupt one-eighty. He's even gone so far as to move with her into her sister's condo while she convalesces. And when he reveals who-and "what"-he is, Jamie is left to wonder what the Norse God of Justice could possibly want with a crazy redhead with severe family issues.As far as he's concerned, it will be Travis's pleasure to show her...Warning: This book contains explicit sex, graphic language, a real blond god and a woman with reasons to have trust issues. No library descriptions found.
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)823.912Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction 1900- 1901-1999 1901-1945LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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The author's parents, particularly his father, were friends with C.S. Lewis and asked him to be the godfather to the author. I was impressed that Lewis wrote at levels appropriate for the child as he grew.
I was going to complain that the included photos had no captions, but later found that there is an index at the back of the book that lists who it is and whatever other information is there. By that point, I didn't feel like going back through the book to match photos up with the descriptions.
I least liked the long passages of poetry quoted--mostly because after a stanza or two I struggled to remain interested in deciphering the tortured language that most poetry requires in order to figure out what the meaning is. If you like doing things like that, you will probably get more out of those sections than I did. ( )