Episode 67: Til We Have Faces, Ch. 16-21

Published: Oct. 6, 2020, 5 a.m.

Welcome back to The Literary Life Podcast! This week, our hosts are covering chapters 16-21 of C. S. Lewis\u2019 masterpiece Til We Have Faces. Also, to celebrate Cindy\u2019s re-release of her book Hallelujah: Cultivating Advent Traditions with Handel\u2019s Messiah, she is doing a social media giveaway over the next four weeks. To enter to win a copy, post about the book release with hashtag #hallelujahadvent.

They begin the conversation about Til We Have Faces with an examination of Lewis\u2019 personal journey and its similarity to Orual\u2019s own in this story. This opens up a discussion of education, Lewis\u2019s schooling, and Charlotte Mason\u2019s philosophy. Angelina then goes on to talk about the three types of veils worn by Orual, and Cindy and Thomas explore the idea of veils and their role in relationship and power. Orual\u2019s friendships with Bardia and the Fox further highlight her continued blindness to her own disordered affections.

Join us next week for the last installment in our series on Til We Have Faces. The following episode will be a special interview with Wendi Capehart on her literary life!

Commonplace Quotes:

Hundreds of people can talk for one who can think, but thousands can think for one who can see. To see clearly is poetry, prophesy, and religion. All is one.

John Ruskin

Since then I have always been addicted to something or other, usually something there\u2019s no support group for. Semicolons, for instance, I can never give up for more than two hundred words at a time.

Hilary Mantel

The two hemispheres of my mind were in the sharpest contrast. On the one side, a many-islanded sea of poetry and myth; on the other, a glib and shallow \u201crationalism.\u201d Nearly all that I loved, I believed to be imaginary. Nearly all that I believed to be real, I thought grim and meaningless.

C. S. Lewis
Moonlight

by Walter de la Mare

The far moon maketh lovers wise
In her pale beauty trembling down,
Lending curved cheeks, dark lips, dark eyes,
A strangeness not their own.
And, though they shut their lids to kiss,
In starless darkness peace to win,
Even on that secret world from this
Her twilight enters in.

Book List:

(Amazon affiliate links are used in this content.)

Hallelujah by Cindy Rollins

Sesame and Lilies by John Ruskin

Giving Up the Ghost: A Memoire by Hilary Mantel

The Narnian: The Life and Imagination of C. S. Lewis by Alan Jacobs

A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens

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Connect with Us:

You can find Angelina and Thomas at HouseofHumaneLetters.com, on Instagram @angelinastanford,\xa0and on Facebook at\xa0https://www.facebook.com/ANGStanford/

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