257. Till We Have Faces by C.S. Lewis
Dr Rowan Williams, theologian, poet and former Archbishop of Canterbury, joins Andy and John for a thoughtful and moving discussion of Till We Have Faces (1956), the last novel by C.S. Lewis. This episode was recorded in London in June 2025. Although not as well-reviewed as his previous work, C.S. Lewis believed Till We Have Faces to be "far and away my best book". Over the 70 years since publication, critical opinion has risen in line with the author's estimation. The book shows a more troubled, less dogmatic side to Lewis that that displayed in The Case for Christianity or, for that matter, The Chronicles of Narnia. The novel is a retelling of the myth of Cupid and Psyche, a story that haunted Lewis ever since he was an undergraduate. It is an endlessly fascinating text that cannot be pinned down easily, and we were very fortunate to be able to discuss it with Rowan Williams, who has a lifetime of experience reading Lewis, and this book in particular. We hope you get as much from the conversation, and from reading the novel, as we have.
Books mentioned:
C.S. Lewis - Till We Have Faces; A Grief Observed; A Preface to Paradise Lost; Mere Christianity; The Screwtape Letters; The Four Loves; Surprised by Joy; Collected Letters 1950 - 1963
Rowan Williams - The Lion’s World: A Journey into the Heart of Narnia; Collected Poems; The Book of Taliesin; Discovering Christianity
A.N. Wilson - C.S. Lewis: A Biography
Russell Hoban - Riddley Walker
Fyodor Dostoevsky - The Karamazov Brothers (trans Ignat Avsey)
Dante - Paradiso (trans Robin Kirkpatrick)
The Bible - King James Authorised Version (Oxford World’s Classics)
Other links:
C.S Lewis - Beyond Personality: The New Men (Mere Christianity - 1944 Broadcast)
