Fantastic Travelogue: Mark Twain and CS Lewis Talk Things Over in The Hereafter

Science Fiction & Fantasy, Science Fiction, Fiction & Literature, Literary
Cover of the book Fantastic Travelogue: Mark Twain and CS Lewis Talk Things Over in The Hereafter by S. Dorman, S. Dorman
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: S. Dorman ISBN: 9781465986955
Publisher: S. Dorman Publication: August 25, 2011
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: S. Dorman
ISBN: 9781465986955
Publisher: S. Dorman
Publication: August 25, 2011
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

Scrolling down this page will bring you to links for sampling various file-types of FANTASTIC TRAVELOGUE. Jack Lewis—here as a fictive character experiencing a state of phantasm—is not the great rhetorical craftsman out to convince through argument. In fact, he is discovering that argument is of little use in his limping hope to convert the old satiric storyteller and wounded Job-like public stand-in of his day.

Mark Twain as a character was easier to draw for the strength of his voice, the singleness of his spiritual dilemma, and the abundance of material in the public domain. Many are unaware that he wrote of hitching a ride on a comet, and gave an account of going to sea in a drop of water. In this story together they range, experiencing aspects of the astronomical; of terrestrial geography, biology, Western cultural history, and the fictive supernatural.

Two others take part in the conversation, the Renaissance astronomer Johannes Kepler and the Scots romanticist George MacDonald.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Scrolling down this page will bring you to links for sampling various file-types of FANTASTIC TRAVELOGUE. Jack Lewis—here as a fictive character experiencing a state of phantasm—is not the great rhetorical craftsman out to convince through argument. In fact, he is discovering that argument is of little use in his limping hope to convert the old satiric storyteller and wounded Job-like public stand-in of his day.

Mark Twain as a character was easier to draw for the strength of his voice, the singleness of his spiritual dilemma, and the abundance of material in the public domain. Many are unaware that he wrote of hitching a ride on a comet, and gave an account of going to sea in a drop of water. In this story together they range, experiencing aspects of the astronomical; of terrestrial geography, biology, Western cultural history, and the fictive supernatural.

Two others take part in the conversation, the Renaissance astronomer Johannes Kepler and the Scots romanticist George MacDonald.

More books from Literary

Cover of the book The man next door by S. Dorman
Cover of the book Tulum by S. Dorman
Cover of the book Jean de La Fontaine, un écrivain aux mille et une facettes by S. Dorman
Cover of the book Boccaccio indiscreto by S. Dorman
Cover of the book Prayers the Devil Answers by S. Dorman
Cover of the book An Essay On The Evils Of Popular Ignorance by S. Dorman
Cover of the book Scraps by S. Dorman
Cover of the book Exemplary Spenser by S. Dorman
Cover of the book Si j'ai bonne mémoire by S. Dorman
Cover of the book N.H., The Ladies Dictionary (1694) by S. Dorman
Cover of the book Kipling Abroad by S. Dorman
Cover of the book HEINE to go by S. Dorman
Cover of the book 暗行御史的崛起 C by S. Dorman
Cover of the book Coming Through Slaughter by S. Dorman
Cover of the book Walt Whitman's Diary by S. Dorman
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy