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Includes the names: Diana Glyer, Diana Pavlac Glyer

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Works by Diana Glyer

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9 reviews
This proved an unexpectedly timely read after a family member's passing; they were also missionaries, so I felt a strong connection to Biggs and appreciated her story that much more. So much overlap into my own experience with my family member, which aided in the grief and appreciation of their story--not to mention that this was just an amazing story itself! I loved that we actually have all of Lewis's and Biggs's letters; truly unique and definitely not the norm. They covered so much show more ground and depth; I did actually lose sleep several nights because i stayed up late reading to find out what would happen next! So, so good. show less
I'm on a kick of Tolkien and Tolkien-adjacent stuff these days. This is an exploration, geared toward a lay audience, of the specific ways the Inklings influenced one another in their work. A nice listen on audio, but I understand that Glyer did a more academic version of this work and I think I may need to put my hands on a print copy of that. Because natch. Recommended if you're interested in Tolkien or Lewis or the Inklings as a whole.
As a teenager, Diana Pavlac Glyer became fascinated by the Inklings, and how this group of accomplished writers may have influenced each other's work. Unfortunately, she found a great deal about the Inklings generally and as individuals, and almost nothing about how the Inklings may have engaged in mutual criticism and collaboration. Reading every published work about the group and its members brought her no closer, and at last she plunged into the primary sources--the letters, journals, and show more other papers left behind by the Inklings.

Few writing groups become famous, and the Inklings are among the most famous. Aside from writing and residence in or around Oxford, the Inklings were a diverse group, of varied professions, backgrounds, and interests. As Glyer lays it out, this very diversity is one of the reasons for their success: They each had something to learn and something to teach; they challenged each other, and reacted to challenges from the others; they had sparked new ideas and new directions from encounters with new ideas and perspectives.

Each chapter examines one aspect of how the Inklings worked together and contributed to each other's success. Mutual encouragement, criticism, editing, collaboration, and providing mutual accountability with their weekly meetings and readings of works in progress all played a role. In addition, they met frequently outside those formal meetings, informally, in twos and threes, taking walking tours, and other activities. Tolkien's first audience was the youngest and last of the Inklings, his own son Christopher, who became a formal member of the Inklings at age twenty.

This is a fascinating look at this important literary group, aimed at reaching a popular audience and at extracting from the Inklings' experience lessons that may help nascent writers' groups become useful to and supportive of their members. For all the practical lessons to be found, though, it's also just an absorbing look at some of the most important and interesting figures in 20th century fantasy literature.

Recommended.

I received a free copy of this book from the author in exchange for an honest review.
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I looooved this book! I had the privilege of attending a conference earlier this year with Glyer as the keynote, and she spoke at length about the material covered in the book. Truly a joy to then read it!

So much insight and food for thought here, and a book I'll revisit for sure.

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Works
12
Members
488
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Rating
½ 4.5
Reviews
9
ISBNs
13

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