Dale Ahlquist is the greatest living expert on the life and literary legacy of G.K. Chesterton and both the longtime President of the Society of Gilbert Keith Chesterton and founder of the Chesterton Schools Network. Thus, it was perfectly appropriate for Word on Fire to select Ahlquist to guide readers through this new edition of The Everlasting Man, arguably Chesterton’s greatest book.
This edition’s subtitle, “A Guide to G. K. Chesterton’s Masterpiece,” is a little misleading as it suggests that it’s a book about the “masterpiece,” not the masterpiece itself. In fact, this is an annotated new edition of Chesterton’s book, with an introduction, notes and commentary by Ahlquist.
The Everlasting Man, published in 1925, was Chesterton’s contribution to the controversy surrounding the publication of H. G. Wells’ Outline of History (1920). Wells’ approach, animated by philosophical materialism and scientistic progressivism, was to show humanity’s history as an inexorable ascent from the primitive to the civilized, the latter predicated on the shedding of religious superstition in favor of scientific and technological progress. The Everlasting Man is Chesterton’s riposte of Wells’ history.
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