That Hideous Strength C S Lewis 9780007157174 Books

That Hideous Strength C S Lewis 9780007157174 Books
In "That Hideous Strength", C.S. Lewis brings his SciFi trilogy back to Earth and takes it in a different direction. The first book, "Out of the Silent Planet", and the second, "Perelandra" use space travel and encounters with inhabitants of Mars and Venus respectively as vehicles for Lewis' spiritual allegory. "That Hideous Strength" leaves space travel behind and feels more like a horror story in which the forces of evil conspire against goodness on Earth. Of the three books, this one is the least fun, but it is the one with the most memorable depiction of the means by which the dark side manipulates human perceptions to destroy impulses toward goodness, hope, and love.I first read this book in the 1970's. Frequently over the years since, while looking at paintings in museums, Lewis' words in "That Hideous Strength" have come back to me as an alternate angle for assessment of the art in front of me.

Tags : That Hideous Strength [C S Lewis] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. The third novel in the science-fiction trilogy by C.S. Lewis. This final story is set on Earth, and tells of a terrifying conspiracy against humanity. The story surrounds Mark and Jane Studdock,C S Lewis,That Hideous Strength,Gardners Books,0007157177,Classic fiction,Science fiction
That Hideous Strength C S Lewis 9780007157174 Books Reviews
This is the third and best book of C.S. Lewis' trilogy about Dr. Ransom. Though aspects of the other two stories are mentioned, it isn't necessary to have read them to enjoy this book, which holds its own. In this one Dr. Ransom has returned from his space travels, but he is a minor character this time, though his character does influence key events. The main characters are Mark and Jane Studdock, a young married couple with typical modern ideas. Mark craves to be part of the "inner circle" at his university, and Jane is already tired of her marriage, especially since it's clear Mark's professional goals have top priority by a long margin.
The story startled me with its very clear portrayal of how an evil organization manipulates its members and, through them, public support of its goals. This part of the story in particular is extremely relevant today. In one chapter, Mark is persuaded to submit several articles to different newspapers that intentionally mislead, manipulate and divide the local population. Several chapters later, Mark is astonished at the results --- as larger and larger numbers of people are forced out of their homes or summarily imprisoned, either for not supporting the organization's increasingly militaristic strategies for control or just because they are in the way, their former friends and neighbors are apathetic, saying they "obviously deserved it" because they were "in the way of progress".
This alone makes the book well worth reading. I believe similar strategies are being used in the media today.
C.S. Lewis was a prolific Christian writer. This and the two other books of the trilogy have a strong Christian theme underlying the science fiction stories. For readers looking for books similar to the Chronicles of Narnia, this may be a little too different and adult-themed to satisfy (as one who has re-read the Narnia books until they fell apart, I could never really love this trilogy). Also, the science fiction is interesting, but I'm not really a science fiction fan and the whole interplanetary backstory for Elwin Ransom as well as the bizarre interpretation of the character of Merlin from Arthurian Legend didn't grab me.
However, the examination of how intelligent propaganda deliberately turns neighbors against each other and clears the way for an evil group of people to replace government was fascinating and very well done. C.S. Lewis was certainly paying attention to propaganda strategies during WWII. I think that's how this part of the story so clearly emerged.
I just finished reading all three of CS Lewis' Space Trilogy back-to-back (published in 1938, 1943, and 1945) over the past few weeks. First caution, don't start with the 3rd book in the trilogy. The trilogy is a masterpiece, but jumping into the 3rd book will seriously shortchange what you will understand if you read all three in order. Second caution, don't start with the 2nd book in the trilogy. The series geometrically builds the cast, plot, and stakes book-by-book. A shortcut only shortchanges you. That said, this magnificent trilogy builds a fictional setting of interlocking stories that That Hideous Strength (Space Trilogy, Book Three) (The Space Trilogy 3)culminate, in the third, by illustrating that hideous strength which Lewis later describes in the tiny prose book The Abolition of Man (1947). My interest in reading the trilogy after reading The Abolition of Man was piqued by the first of the seven (highest-quality HD) video lecture series on C. S. Lewis, all of which are presented free and streaming just google "Hillsdale College C. S. Lewis lecture one" and enjoy this incredibly generous series. For the purpose of this book review, and for your greatest enjoyment, don't go past video lecture one and its Q&A session, but go from there to read The Abolition of Man (one-hour read), then the space trilogy in order. After you're done, return to the free lecture series 2 through 7. In this order, you'll maximize enjoyment of this banquet, without any spoilers.
In "That Hideous Strength", C.S. Lewis brings his SciFi trilogy back to Earth and takes it in a different direction. The first book, "Out of the Silent Planet", and the second, "Perelandra" use space travel and encounters with inhabitants of Mars and Venus respectively as vehicles for Lewis' spiritual allegory. "That Hideous Strength" leaves space travel behind and feels more like a horror story in which the forces of evil conspire against goodness on Earth. Of the three books, this one is the least fun, but it is the one with the most memorable depiction of the means by which the dark side manipulates human perceptions to destroy impulses toward goodness, hope, and love.
I first read this book in the 1970's. Frequently over the years since, while looking at paintings in museums, Lewis' words in "That Hideous Strength" have come back to me as an alternate angle for assessment of the art in front of me.

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