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C. S. Lewis was a British scholar, novelist, and Christian apologist best known for works like The Chronicles of Narnia and the space-trilogy. In 1942 he published The Screwtape Letters, a satirical epistolary novel that flips the usual moral perspective by letting readers eavesdrop on correspondence between two devils.
Lewis's Life in BriefThe Screwtape Letters unfolds as thirty-one letters from "Screwtape," a senior tempter in Hell's bureaucracy, to his nephew "Wormwood," guiding him in corrupting the soul of an unnamed British "Patient." Lewis dedicated the book to Tolkien; its installments first appeared in The Guardian during WWII, before being collected into a single volume in February 1942.
Structure and PlotLewis uses irony, understatement, and mock-bureaucratic language to:
Lewis conceived the idea after a Sunday service in Headington, imagining how easy it is to dramatize evil and how nearly impossible it would be to render genuine angelic discourse. He even planned a companion piece from a guardian-angel's point of view but abandoned it, noting that true "heavenly style" seemed beyond his reach.
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