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An author I love, C. S. Lewis, gets somewhat pilloried for his heavy handed allegory. Now, personally, I find no problem with allegory, heavy handed or otherwise. To paraphrase G. K. Chesterton, it is the unsuccessful allegorist who consoles himself on his subtlety.
Though I loved Lewis's fiction growing up, it's his essays and more philosophical work that I go back to as an adult. Mere Christianity changed my life, and reading The Abolition of Man is like finding light in the darkness; so, usually, when someone asks for recommendations, I point to one of these.
The only bit of his fiction I regularly direct adults to is Till We Have Faces. Now, forgive me if these stories are apocryphal; I hate digging into biography myself, so I'm just going off of what I heard: C. S. Lewis based this novel off of his favorite myth, novelizing the short story of Eros and Psyche into a full 300 or so pages, and he did this because he loved the story.
It is well worth the read, or so says a C. S. Lewis fanboy. But I brought it up to ask you all:
* What are some of your favorite myths, fairytales, and legends?
* Are there any myths etc. you'd like to retell in a novel?
* Who are some of your favorite authors?