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Possesses the ability to appeal to both sides of our brain, the analytical and the artistic.

Able to speak to both adults and children alike on complex matters such as religion and morality He was clever at finding what literary forms he should adopt for has work and was rich in analogies. His strong defense led him to be loathed by some of his contemporaries, notably among the modernist writers The Pilgrim's Regress, The Problem With Pain, Mere Christianity and Miracles are all explanations and defense of a faith that he only found while teaching in Oxford His writing style is very personal, and often conversational. Two recurring themes are Joy, those unattainable stabs of longing and The Tao; the natural law inherent in all persons. He often used Mythology as a way of teaching the reader an important lesson, for here was a writing style rich in symbolism.

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