There are dates, dear reader, that the hoople-heads circle on their calendars because they have to – tax day, their cousin’s third wedding, that annual check-up where their doctor tries to convince them that kale is a food group. On my calendar, days like November 29th are circled because back in 1898, Belfast coughed up a baby named Clive Staples Lewis, and reality’s been a little weirder ever since.
You probably know C.S. Lewis as the dude who invented Aslan and traumatized generations of kids with the idea that a wardrobe wasn’t just for mothballs and shameful outfits. But it was never just about wardrobe doors and talking creatures. Lewis took on the big questions – faith, loyalty, sacrifice – even cosmic terror. He banged out science-fiction trilogies about demonic planets and the fate of humanity, then casually dropped Mere Christianity, which proceeds to smash through 20th-century theology like a methamphetaminic rhinoceros on a Sunday stroll. To call him “the kindly uncle of children’s lit” is like calling Attila the Hun a “fun guest at brunch.” He was an intellectual brawler who stashed fables like napalm in the minds of children everywhere, stories that get dragged out every time there’s a debate about books corrupting the youth or saving their souls.
So raise a ridiculously oversized mug of tea to C.S. Lewis – the apocalypse-dreamer and literary disruptor. Celebrate a life that refused to shut the wardrobe door, even after seeing all the dark and dangerous thing crawling around inside.
N.P.: “Kayra” – Ummet Ozcan
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