Reposting this 2013 review because the Kindle Edition in on sale for $4.50
Summary: A classic book of apologetics.
I know it is near heretical in some Evangelical circles, but I have never read Mere Christianity before. As you are reading this I should by Kayaking around a small island in Georgian Bay of Lake Huron. This is my 20th trip with my guy friends from College.
For the past couple years I have conned them into reading a book prior to the trip to give us something to discuss. Since I have some influence and there are two pastor’s kids, a missionary, and a hebrew professor in the group we read theology. We have read Scripture and the Authority of God and The Lost World of Genesis One (which sparked online discussions of The Bible Made Impossible and Incarnation and Inspiration).
This year we decided to read Mere Christianity. I think only one of us had previously read it. Prior to the trip I listened to it on audiobook and then re-read it on kindle on the plane ride.
I understand somewhat why it is a classic. In part, because huge sections of the first part (the more general apologetics section) I have heard in one form or another. So Lewis’ arguments are either standard arguments about God or those that are original have been repeated so much over the past 60 years that they sound standard.
Summary: A suburban housewife and her two friends find out that their neighborhood struggles (PTA, school year books, crazy neighbors, etc) all might be connected to a much deeper problem than they could have expected.
Summary: It is ignorance, not knowledge that really drives science.
Summary: A surprisingly prepared 17 year old gets sent back into time to 14th Century Italy.
This is out of place in my normal book blogging. But over the past several months I have been thinking about the John Yoder problem (or to a lesser extent the AW Tozer problem that I discussed on my review of Tozer’s biography.) What prompted me to write this post was a 
Summary: Did you read Good Omens by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett? Well this is basically the same plot.
Takeaway: An American Classic.