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Welcome - Michael Ward Michael Ward is an English literary critic and theologian He works at the University of Oxford where he is an associate member of the Faculty of Theology and Religion
Planet Narnia Reviews - Michael Ward “Michael Ward makes the seemingly preposterous claim that ‘Lewis secretly based the Chronicles of Narnia on the seven heavens of the medieval cosmos’ Does Ward pull it off? Against all odds, the emerging consensus seems to be yes
Essays - Michael Ward ed Robert MacSwain and Michael Ward (Cambridge University Press, 2010) ‘There Is So Much To Say’ in Mere Christians: Inspiring Stories of Encounters with C S Lewis
Contact - Michael Ward Michael Ward (Oxford University Press, 2008) Buy Now The Cambridge Companion to C S Lewis ed Robert MacSwain and Michael Ward (Cambridge University Press, 2010) Buy Now Search Submit THE OFFICIAL WEBSITE OF MICHAEL WARD, AUTHOR OF PLANET NARNIA • MICHAEL@MICHAELWARD NET
Audiobooks - Michael Ward I was honoured to be asked by Diana Pavlac Glyer to narrate the audiobook version of her Bandersnatch: C S Lewis, J R R Tolkien and the Creative Collaboration
Welcome to Planet Narnia - Michael Ward Michael Ward It’s fun laying out all my books as a cathedral Personally I’d make Miracles and the other “treatises” the cathedral school: my children’s stories are the real side-chapels, each with its own little altar
Speaking - Michael Ward In addition to my work at Oxford, at HBU, and my various projects as a writer, I frequently give talks to schools, colleges, universities, churches, conferences, and literary societies I’ve spoken and preached all round the world on Planet Narnia, C S Lewis, the Inklings, and theological imagination Venues have included Westminster Abbey, the Royal Observatory, and the Library of Congress
Poetry c - Michael Ward in Love, Remember: 40 Poems of Loss, Lament and Hope, ed Malcolm Guite (Canterbury Press, 2017)
Saturn - Michael Ward Saturn was known as Infortuna Majorto pre-Copernican astronomers He was the worst planet, the one whose influence could most easily go bad It was liable to cause sickness, old age, ugliness, disaster, melancholy, and death If received aright, however, this…
The Seven Heavens - Michael Ward The seven planets of the old cosmology included the Sun (Sol) and the Moon (Luna), which we now don’t regard as planets at all The other five were Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn This old, geocentric view of…