Notes on Till We Have Faces

It was written during 1955 and ready in typescript by beginning of February, 1956, and was originally entitled Bareface.

Lewis said: "In one sense the author has worked on this book most of his life, for this re-interpretation of an old story (readers need not know which when they begin) had lived with him and pestered him to make it ever since he was an undergraduate. Suddenly, last Spring [1955], the form presented itself. All came into focus: and had drawn into it many sympathies that had found no vehicle in earlier books--for the ugly woman, the barbarous idolator, the humane sceptic, and (above all) the friends and lovers of those who have a vocation or even a faith."

Lewis' own thoughts on what the book "means":

An author doesn't necessarily understand the meaning of his own story better than anyone else, so I give my account of Till we have Faces simply for what it is worth. The 'levels' I am conscious of are these:

(letter to Clyde Kilby, February 10, 1957; in LL, 273-74).

Characters

Themes

  1. Human attitudes toward God or the gods; according to Orual, the gods are unknowable, whimical, cruel, capricous, nasty, mean-spirited, not turstworthy, demanding, and so on.
  2. The role of storge love; what is the hold that affectionate love has on humans? At what point does this kind of love cease to be love and becomes instead a demon?
  3. Self-knowledge; what does it take for some humans to come to a real knowledge of self? At what point does Orual come into a knowledge of who she is and what she is willing to do to assure her survival? How does she handle the truth--about herself, Psyche, the gods, and so on?

Here is a very comprehensive bibliography on Till We Have Faces.