
Surprised by Love
Her Life and Marriage to C.S. Lewis
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Narrated by:
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Kate Reading
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By:
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Lyle W. Dorsett
About this listen
Joy was an American, a divorcee, an ex-communist, and a former atheist. Yet this extraordinary and fascinating woman made a great impact on Lewis and his writings in the short time they had together.
©2005 Lyle W. Dorsett (P)2008 christianaudio.com
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Wonderful Story
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Joy Davidman lived an extraordinarily life. She was born to two very driven second generation Jewish immigrants. Her father, a teacher and later principal, pushed Joy very hard (while virtually ignoring her slightly younger brother because he only had a 147 IQ and "would never amount to anything because he was so slow.") Joy was reading by 3, graduated from high school by 14, entered college at 15, started teaching middle school at 18 and started her masters at 19. By her early 20s she was the editor of a communist paper, had a Yale edition of her poetry published and a successful novel.
I won't give away the main story. I have seen the Hollywood version of the story (not the BBC version) and while it gets much of the basics right, there is so much more to the story. This is a book that I wish were twice as long. Dorsett is a wonderful writer and knows how to both capture the beauty and the spiritual vitality of his subjects without veering into inappropriate veneration of them.
A longer review is on my blog at bookwi.se
The real story can be even better than Hollywood
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A great aid in understanding C.S. Lewis
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The bio is written with obvious fondness for Davidman and well-narrated by Reading. The book makes a good companion to Alan Jacobs' brief bio of C.S. Lewis, The Narnian, in which a slightly different interpretation is given to some of Davidson's relationship with Lewis.
a clearer picture of Davidson
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The narrator’s smooth transition between British and American accents is fascinating.
A well told story
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