Showing posts with label Owen Barfield. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Owen Barfield. Show all posts

Monday, January 20, 2025

“A Rumour of Adventure” by Kees Paling


It’s May 1938. Four friends embark upon a spring walk, something various members of their group usually do. This time, since the tradition is England, they choose Somerset. This walk is different from its predecessors; the threat of Germany is hanging over Czechoslovakia, and at least two members of the group still have strong memories of the horrors of the Great War.  

The four are members of the Inklings, a group of Oxford dons and various friends who usually meet twice a week at The Eagle and Child pub in in one of the member’s rooms in Magdalen College. The four are C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, Owen Barfield, and Charles Williams. A Rumour of Adventure by Kees Paling is the fictional account of such a walk, which never occurred in that year with those participants (Williams wouldn’t become associated with the Inklings until more than a year later). But this is fiction, a novella or short novel, in fact, so it’s okay to invent.

 

It's a charming and engaging story, true to the teachings, beliefs, and personalities of the four. Paling has done a considerable amount of reading and study to get this as right as he does. And that includes works they wrote and biographies and accounts about them.

 

Kees Paling

Of course, the four don’t just walk; they stop at pubs and drink a lot of beer (and hey drink a lot of beer, except for Williams, who drinks a lot of tea). And they talk. Oh, how they talk. 

Their conversations about literature, writing, the growing threat in Europe, imagination, the faerie folk, and more is the heart of the story, and this is what makes the account so true to the real people. And while Tolkien in particular likes his adventures in oral and written stories only, the four will experience an adventure or two along the way. While it’s tempting to compare, the adventures bear almost no similarity to that of the four hobbits in The Lord of the Rings. Note that I said “almost.”

 

Paling has published several books in Dutch on subject ranging from the fall of Prussia and culture on the eve of the new millennium to learning problems in children. He’s contributed to several books on communication and published a rather vast number of newspaper articles. He received a degree in sociology from Utrecht University, served as a lieutenant and counsellor at the Dutch Royal Military Academy, and worked at the Dutch Ministry of Culture and Netherlands Institute for Social Research. He serves as a communication consultant for the Dutch government.

 

A Rumour of Adventure is a delightful story of four men who were good friends and companions in writing (it was Lewis who so strongly encouraged Tolkien to writ The Hobbit and the work that Tolkien called “The New Hobbit”). As the story makes clear, they were also teachers, great conversationalists, and beer drinkers (lots of beer). 

 

Some Monday Readings

 

Does America Still Do Federalism? – Tony Woodlief at Law & Liberty.

 

Cui Bono? – Alan Jacob at The Homebound Symphony.

 

Notes on the Great Vibe Shift – Ian Leslie at The Ruffian.

 

Is Atlas Shrugged the New Vibe? – Henry Oliver at The Common Reader.

 

Shrouded Veterans: The Untold Struggles of an Iowa Colonel’s Widow – Frank Jastrzembski at Emerging Civil War.

Monday, December 14, 2015

“The Fellowship” by Philip Zaleski and Carol Zaleski


They didn’t achieve the literary fame of some of their contemporaries – James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, Vladimir Nabokov, Jorge Luis Borges or T.S. Eliot. They sat in rooms at Magdalen College and The Eagle & Child pub in Oxford and debated, discussed, reads works in progress to each other, critiqued each other, argued, laughed and drank. They were academics and they were Christians, although some had professional lives outside the university and not all of them had what we might call orthodox Christian faith.

But their influence was huge, even in their lifetimes, and it has only grown since their deaths.

In The Fellowship: The Literary Lives of the Inklings, Philip Zaleski and Carol Zaleski tell the literary story of the four men who were the main Inklings – C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, Charles Williams and Owen Barfield. The work is filled with their biographical information, but it is more about their thought and ideas, their books, their lectures and influences. And their faith, and not only what they believed but how they believed.

I don’t think I’ve ever used an exclamation point in a book review, but I am now. What a marvelous book this is!

The Zaleskis have undertaken an enormous amount of research and closely read all of Inklings works, major and minor. Their gift is how well they tell this story, deeply sustaining interest for more than 500 pages (and add 73 pages of notes and a 23-page bibliography). The idea for this book, they write, started in the 1980s, with phone calls and letters from the last of four alive, Owen Barfield, to a young writer named Philip Zaleski.

We learn not only about the impact of the writings most familiar today – Tolkien’s The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings trilogy and C.S. Lewis’s The Chronicles of Narnia and his Christian apologetic works like The Screwtape Letters – but also how each made major contributions in their academic disciplines. We see the long decades of struggle that Barfield experienced – with most of his career spent as an attorney while his heart was in literary studies. And we understand the contribution of Charles Williams, best known for a book about the Holy Spirit (The Descent of the Dove) but also the author of seven of the strangest novels you are ever likely to read. Williams also had a major impact on the writings of C.S. Lewis.

What’s particularly powerful is how the Zelskis consider each of the four Inklings – and the reader gets warts and all. These were men, men with Christian faith to be sure but also men with human frailties. By giving us a complete picture, we are better able to grasp the impact each of the four had.

Bonus: The Fellowship contains one of the best analyses of The Lord of the Rings I’ve ever come across.

Carol Zaleski and Philip Zaleski
Philip Zaleski and Carol Zaleski are co-authors of Prayer: A History (2006) and co-editors of The Book of Heaven (2000). He is also co-author of Gifts of the Spirit (2009) and editor of the annual editions of the Best Spiritual Writing and Best American Spiritual Writing. Carol is the author of Other World Journeys (1988) and The Life of the World to Come (1996) and a professor of World Religions at Smith College and a columnist for The Christian Century.

If you’re interested in Tolkien or C.S. Lewis, The Fellowship is a wonderful guide to their writings. If you’ve ever wondered where the Harry Potter books came from or why The Game of Thrones made it to television this book will help provide an explanation.

Or if you simply want to know who were some of the major Christian thinkers of the 20th century, who thought about Christianity in the context of learning, academics, history, philology, literary studies, and life, then The Fellowship will serve as a fine introduction.


Top photograph (composite of, clockwise from upper left, J.R.R. Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, Charles Williams and Owen Barfield) – aslanchristianbooks.co.uk.