The Inklings Audiobook By Humphrey Carpenter cover art

The Inklings

C. S. Lewis, J. R. R. Tolkien, Charles Williams, and Their Friends

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The Inklings

By: Humphrey Carpenter
Narrated by: Bernard Mayes
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During the 1930s at Oxford, C. S. Lewis, J. R. R. Tolkien, and Charles Williams - remarkable friends, writers, and scholars - met regularly to discuss philosophy and literature and to read aloud from their own works in progress. Calling themselves the Inklings, their circle grew. It was in this company that such classics as The Lord of the Rings, The Screwtape Letters, and The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe first found an audience.

Author Humphrey Carpenter was born in Oxford and was acquainted with Tolkien, Hugo Dyson, and several other Inklings. In this remarkable reconstruction of their meetings and momentous friendships, Carpenter brings to life those warm and enchanting evenings in Lewis' rooms at Magdalen College, when their imaginations ran wild. His account offers exciting insights into the influence these brilliant individuals had on each other's developing ideas and writing.

©1990 Humphrey Carpenter (P)1990 Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Biographies & Memoirs Art & Literature Authors Literary History & Criticism Thought-Provoking European World Literature Inspiring Celebrity Feel-Good
Insightful Content • Well-documented Information • Convincing Reading • Thorough Biographical Details • Intimate Portrayal

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Thank you for this wonderful work. So well researched and written. Warm. Engaging. Enlightening. And inspiring.

Best bio of Lewis and friends. A wonderful story. Showing God’s goodness.

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I did not enjoy the way the author had a slant against CS Lewis as being brash, a poser, impressionable, unoriginal, closed-minded, etc. Let’s see if that author can write anything that holds a candle to Lewis’ brilliance and impact. Come on! It felt like he was trying to cut him down with 80% of his comments. He seemed to “like” Tolkien and Williams much more, and it was obvious and I hate that. Other than that, I enjoyed hearing about this set and their lives.

Perspective of biographer unsympathetic

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So much I had never known before about this group of men, their friendships, and their writing. I appreciate the books I have read by these writers so much more deeply having listened to The Inklings. If you are a fan of Lewis and Tolkien, this is a wonderful listen!

Just wonderful!

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This biographical sketch begins and ends with Lewis and gives revealing insight to the man and the men that surrounded him.

Mostly about CS Lewis, the common link

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It is profound how one man sharpens another. I find it a necessary part of my life to have a group of similarly minded (but not necessarily similarly dispositioned) people in my life. Lo, in this day and age it is practically impossible to share the frequency of comradery these men had. I find Lewis a kindred spirit in this if not in common disciplines or hobbies. I bring men into fellowship and we share our ideas, life experiences, opinions, and observations for a few hours every other week or so. We also do not keep records of our discussions or any sort of formal structure.

I mourn the deaths of all these men in this book though all passed before I was born. I think myself below all of them, for they were geniuses each in his own right and form. Lewis in his simple writing style and masterful debate form. Tolkien in his imagination and staunch tenacity to develop logic and continuance through story and myth, as well as his linguistic aptitude. Williams’ thought and propensity to see the world in spiritual and physical capacities, though I disagree intensely with his theology. Warreny in his ability to hold his own in the company of such literary minds who would ascend to the status of legend and giants.

I miss all of them though I knew none of them. I miss the times when the world was simpler. I long for a return to something I never knew.

Wonderful writeup

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