"The books included in this collection are: Heretics, Orthodoxy, What's Wrong with the World, Eugenics and Other Evils, The Appetite of Tyranny: The Barbarism of Berlin, and Letters to an Old Garibaldian.
G. K. Chesterton: A Collection of Poems
The story of Shaw offensively attacking Chesterton for converting a year later in the house of a mutual friend in Chelsea, which is recounted by Hesketh Pearson in 'G.B.S. v. G.K.C.', Adelphi Magazine (Sept.
The revelation comes to him simultaneously with the dawn; and in the now 'blank white light', Quin agrees. The two join together and go off to meet the world. The explanation of the differing positions of Quin and Wayne is placed ...
The same was true, though to a lesser extent, of Forster's Life of Dickens, where the biographer's triumph was 'to draw Dickens out' just as it had been 'the genius of Dickens to draw everybody out'. Yet this 'drawing out' was not 'of ...
G. K. Chesterton is remembered as a brilliant creator of nonsense and satirical verse, author of the Father Brown stories and the innovative novel, The Man who was Thursday, and yet today he is not counted among the major English novelists ...
A collection of critical essays on G.K. Chesterton's work.
But regardless of the topic, each of the essays in "All Things Considered" is the usual Chesterton masterpiece, tempting the reader to track down even more of the 4,000 newspaper columns penned by Chesterton during his career.