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  1. The Great Divorce is a novel by the British author C. S. Lewis, published in 1945, based on a theological dream vision of his in which he reflects on the Christian conceptions of Heaven and Hell. The working title was Who Goes Home? but the final name was changed at the publisher's insistence.

  2. 2 de jun. de 2009 · The Great Divorce. C. S. Lewis. Harper Collins, Jun 2, 2009 - Religion - 160 pages. The Timeless Novel About a Bus Ride from Hell to Heaven. In The Great Divorce, C.S. Lewis again employs his...

  3. The Great Divorce 1. I SEEMED to be standing in a bus queue by the side of a long, mean street. Evening was just closing in and it was raining. I had been wandering for hours in similar mean streets, always in the rain and always in evening twilight. Time seemed to have paused on that dismal moment when

  4. 3 de mar. de 2009 · What if anyone in Hell could take a bus trip to Heaven and stay there forever if they wanted to? In The Great Divorce C. S. Lewis again employs his formidable talent for fable and allegory.

    • reprint
    • C. S. Lewis
    • Harper Collins, 2009
  5. 16 de ago. de 2022 · In 'The Great Divorce', Lewis crafts a profound allegorical tale exploring the concepts of heaven, hell, and human choice through the lens of Christian theology,...

  6. C.S. Lewis’ The Great Divorce is a classic Christian allegorical tale about a bus ride from hell to heaven. An extraordinary meditation upon good and evil, grace and judgment, Lewis’s revolutionary idea in the The Great Divorce is that the gates of Hell are locked from the inside.

  7. The Great Divorce Summary. An unnamed Narrator finds himself in a Grey Town, waiting for a bus. He boards the bus, along with a small number of other people, and the bus proceeds to fly over the grey town. The Narrator then talks with some of the other people on the bus, some of whom remember dying in various ways.