The Catholic Book Club discussion

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The Everlasting Man
The Everlasting Man (Oct 2019)
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Chesterton wrote The Everlasting Man as an answer to H.G. Wells best-seller The Outline of History, where he defends the myth of steady progress that C.S. Lewis also attacked in his essay The funeral of a great myth and his science fiction novels Out of the Silent Planet and Perelandra, using the same literary genre that that had made Wells famous. This Chesterton's book that we are reading (this is my fifth reading) influenced a lot C.S. Lewis, as we'll have occasion to point out in future comments.

As a Historian i can not give up praising The "Everlasting Man" this book should be a mandatory Reading in all spanish universities of Philosophy and Letters of Spain. I have ever been a big admirer of the historical focus of G.K. Chesterton, and Hilaire and Christopher Arthur Dawson. I also praised his story about England, and this that G.K. Chesterton is a jornalist although he has a sixth feeling to come into in the truth of History much more tan several ideologized historians.

Maybe just the decline in my rational abilities as I age.

For me Jill has defined the best qualities of G.K. Chesterton, that he was well known as the prince of paradoxes. His prose are beautiful images. He is an artista of the Word. Other thing that Jill said and i totally agree with her. It is that the reader when he read the Chesterton`s books feel that he is with a friend. Borges said about G.K. Chesterton that he had never written a page, which did not give a piece of happiness to the reader. The way of writting it is not neutral and in this case is really positive.

Jill wrote: "Even though I've read this before, I'm having a hard time plowing through it again. I think it's because GK is such a superb wordsmith that his elegant phraseology often obscures the meaning of wha..."
Or a decline in what is taught as a common standard for being educated?
Or a decline in what is taught as a common standard for being educated?
Books mentioned in this topic
The Everlasting Man (other topics)The Outline of History (other topics)
The Everlasting Man (other topics)
The Outline of History (other topics)
Out of the Silent Planet (other topics)
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I have drawn the questions from a mix of the generic nonfiction questions at Lit Lovers and the very specific questions included in the BookRags Study Guide, sometimes adapted. I don't completely trust the BookRags questions, so I reserve the right to revise the questions as I read the book. Feel completely free to criticize the questions if you think they misrepresent Chesterton's concepts.
I also reserve the right to add further questions as I read the book (again) and you should feel free to add questions of your own.