Zinta's review
The Great Divorce by C.S. Lewis
With each and every book I read by C.S. Lewis, I become an ever more admiring fan. While I cannot say this is my favorite of his works (for that spot, I reserve "Mere Christianity," followed by "A Grief Observed"), it is as fascinating and insightful a ride as any of his. C. S. Lewis is exceptional in his ability to take the most complicated human issues and make them understandable.
Blending into a queu awaiting a bus ride without fully understanding to where or why (how many of us blend sheepishly with the masses this way?), the narrator, George, takes a fantastical ride through heaven and hell. Just two possible end points on this trip, and with that, Lewis makes it clear: as much as we try to rationalize and wiggle, there is no gray area in life, or, in this case, the after life. You choose. Black or white, good or evil.
With a cast of colorful characters, ghostly figures and helpful angels who only wish to give the undecided one final chance to decide, ...more
Blending into a queu awaiting a bus ride without fully understanding to where or why (how many of us blend sheepishly with the masses this way?), the narrator, George, takes a fantastical ride through heaven and hell. Just two possible end points on this trip, and with that, Lewis makes it clear: as much as we try to rationalize and wiggle, there is no gray area in life, or, in this case, the after life. You choose. Black or white, good or evil.
With a cast of colorful characters, ghostly figures and helpful angels who only wish to give the undecided one final chance to decide, ...more
George Orwell thought the decision was not between "black or white, good or evil" but in between this world and the next. Most people, he believed, if they understood the full ramifications, would choose this world over the next. And most, he said, do.People, he said, like to enjoy "life"----
eating, laughing, sex, etc,...
the problem for Orwell is that when your life is dependent on the next world you cannot properly enjoy this world... and Orwell believed this world is the only world....
i guess, as always, it boils down to whether you believe,...
Then again, if you read Lewis's work, especially "Mere Christianity," which I just finished, too, the misconception that we are not supposed to enjoy the pleasures of this life - sex, money, etc. - does not come from God, but from man. These are not the root of evil, as people so often say. It is in their misuse that the evil begins. Not what you do, but how you do it. Sure, there are a few rules, but overindulgence in any pleasure always leads to a hangover. We were intended to enjoy this life, too. I certainly intend to!
