Image, a journal of art and literature with a religious slant which also has an online site, has published a list of "100 Writers of Faith."
There are some surprises on the list, but a few familiar names as well.
They explain:
"In selecting books for this list, we decided to list an author only once, so that we would end up with 100 different writers. Moreover, only creative writing was considered: fiction, poetry, drama, and creative nonfiction. The works selected had to manifest a genuine engagement with the Judeo-Christian heritage of faith, rather than merely use religion as background or subject matter.
G.K. Chesterton is there for The Man Who Was Thursday.
C.S. Lewis made the list with Till We Have Faces (a book I've always liked, but which seems to be overlooked by so many readers).
Dorothy Sayers is on it with The Mind of the Maker (which I must admit I've never read).
Some other writer I like who made the list are J.R.R. Tolkien (The Lord of the Rings - no surprise!); Charles Williams (All Hallows' Eve); Robert Bolt (A Man for All Seasons); Graham Greene (The Power and the Glory); and Ray Bradbury (!) (Something Wicked This Way Comes).
There are some works that some folks might argue about - Nikos Kazantzakis' The Last Temptation of Christ, for example. And there might be some writers who have been left off.
Go see if your favorite writer is there - or not.
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