The Man Who Was Chesterton
- Product Code: tmwwc
- Pages: TBD
- Size: 5.5 x 8.5
$16.95
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This is an attractive biography because Chesterton is an attractive figure. He was a journalist and always kept up his passion for politics and history, literature and philosophy, Christianity and family.
Gilbert lived from 1874 to 1936. His was the London of the Victorian era and World War I, Bernard Shaw and H.G. Wells, socialism and capitalism, the theories of Marx and Malthus, Freud and Nietzsche, Comte and Darwin.
He dearly loved controversy and debate, and with his dazzling gifts for speech and writing he was a bull in the china-shop of his time. But he only made friends, for his kindness and sense of humor were as great as his corpulence and his appetite.
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It's always a joy to revisit the life of Chesterton as it is always a joy to revisit his books. This new biography does both. It revisits the key moments in Chesterton's life and revisits the key ideas to be found in his books. It serves as a great introduction to the life and work of a truly great man.
—Joseph Pearce, author of Wisdom and Innocence: A Life of G.K. ChestertonYou weren’t expecting this! A lucent new biography of Chesterton, originally written in Spanish, then translated into English! This splendid and succinct overview of the life and work of GKC provides more evidence that Chesterton is as universal as we have been insisting all along.
—Dale Ahlquist, President, Society of Gilbert Keith Chesterton; Author of I Also Had My Hour — The Alternative Autobiography of G.K. ChestertonA view of our beloved GKC from the Spanish-speaking world, where he has long been read and loved. Succinct but full of the facts of Chesterton's life and career. Another volume to add to the shelves of all admirers of Gilbert Keith Chesterton.
—Thomas Storck, author, most recently of Economics, an Alternative Introduction, and host of the WCAT radio/TV program, The Open DoorChristendom's last knight died in 1936. Nevertheless, G.K. Chesterton lives on in Ayllón's short work—a biography beautifully embellished with the cast of characters who shaped “the apostle of common sense”, the friendships that informed his worldview; some prickly, others joyous, and still others marked by war, love, and loss. As expected, Chesterton’s charity, wit, and laughter is all in there. But this book is more than the account of a man. It is a compelling story about the man and his extraordinary family.
—Richard Alemán i Ferrer, co-founder and editor-in-chief of The Distributist Review
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