During his youth, the boy who would become C. S. Lewis formed his most basic impressions and tastes regarding music, art, literature, religion, sports, friendship, imagination, education, war, and more. The issues young “Jack” Lewis wrestled with drove him toward the foundation on which his life would be built. His childhood interests, influences, longings, struggles, and even failures prepared him to engage his gifts as a writer, teacher, and friend.
Lewis expert Harry Lee Poe unfolds young Jack’s key relationships, hobbies, spiritual conflicts, decisions, desires, and dreams. Along the way, Poe points out where these themes reappear in Lewis’s later works—bringing to life the importance of his conversion and his surprising discovery of joy.
- Covers Lewis’s adolescent life during the years 1898–1917
- Includes a family tree and photographs of the places where young Lewis lived and studied
- Focuses on a period that is not well-covered in other biographies of Lewis
- Provides context for themes that appear in Lewis’s later writings, such as suffering, strife, and spiritual struggle
Did you find this review helpful?