I noticed both of these details at the bottom of the page this morning as I did my daily read from A Year With C.S. Lewis: Daily Readings From His Classic Works. I gave the book to myself about this time last year and started the schedule on January 1. It's almost a sad feeling to realize that I'm nearly finished. The book consists of daily, one page (often only a paragraph or two) excerpts from Lewis's impressive body of work, mainly from Mere Christianity, The Great Divorce, The Problem of Pain, A Grief Observed, The Weight of Glory and The Screwtape Letters and others. Often several days in a row would center around a common theme. It's been a fascinating and thought-provoking experience as I've come to see new things in works that I already thought I "knew." Some of the excerpts from A Grief Observed and The Problem of Pain have been especially timely and comforting over the past several months as my father's health worsened (funny how I "just happened" to get this book when I did). Little biographical details related to each day are also featured, and it's been kind of a Tarantino-like experience to track the events in Lewis's life in this manner when the days are in sequence but the years are not.
This book would be a great gift for the reader and thinker in your family who is often pressed for time. I will echo one of Lewis's warnings, however:
"A young man who wishes to remain a sound atheist cannot be too careful of his reading."


Me: The Night Writer, John Stewart; 50 years old and smart enough to have married my trophy wife first.