![]() ![]() Lewis that ought to be much better known by readers of fantasy, the blandly-titled “On Stories,” in which, to oversimplify, Lewis extols the value of literary works that must necessarily deal with a sequence of events – something has to happen – but which are primarily concerned with some state of imagination that is more timeless. Perhaps The Green Round may be understood in the light of an essay by C. Having read it with enjoyment five times, I’m interested in how to account for the appeal of an old man’s book, written for money, so easily faulted for a thin plot, etc. ![]() Reiter sympathizes with the consensus that sees The Green Round as a failure. With regard to Machen’s last novel – so to call it because it is a prose fiction too long to be a novella – Dr. ![]()
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