This seventh volume fo the Collected Works of G.K. Chesterton brings together three of his most acclaimed works of fiction, with introduction and notes by Chesterton scholar Iain Benson. A must for serious fans of Chesterton, this features the same quality and sturdy binding as the other volumes in this series.
This volume contains Chesterton's commentaries and reflections on what he saw on his travels in America and Rome, plus an appendix on how America saw Chesterton.
Everybody who knows any history , knows that the French and English understood each other far better when they fought each other at Crecy and Agincourt , than when they fought side by side at Mons or the Marne .
It was also a religion of human sacrifice , of hideous idols , of horrible shapes of death , of deities who were demons , and demons whose very names sound as ugly and unnatural as their natures . 64 THE ILLUSTRATED LONDON NEWS.
The Collected Works of G.K. Chesterton
All of these books date from about 1920, except Christendom in Ireland, which concerns the 1932 Dublin Eucharistic Congress, which Chesterton attended.
The Collected Works of G.K. Chesterton
In this volume's studies in literary criticism and biography, Chesterton exhibits his congenital perception of character and motive which makes all of his biographies shine.
The Collected Works of G. K. Chesterton: 1
The Illustrated London News: 1920-1922
This volume contains all of G.K. Chesterton's columns in The Illustrated London News from 1932 to 1934. Most of the weekly articles have never been printed in book form until Ignatius Press undertook to do the collected works.