«Monika B. Hilder’s carefully reasoned treatment of C. S. Lewis and women is the book for which the scholarly world has been waiting. It towers above other writing on the subject by virtue of the thoroughness of its scholarship, the breadth of context into which the question of Lewis and gender is placed, and the superior abundance of close reading of Lewis texts.» (Leland Ryken, Professor of English, Wheaton College)«In Monika B. Hilder’s ‘Surprised by the Feminine: A Rereading of C. S. Lewis and Gender’ we find a thoughtful, nuanced, scholarly, and penetrating exploration of the increasingly popular discussion of Lewis’s understanding of gender. Hilder’s exciting new contribution to the debate is her argument that Lewis consistently affirms values associated with the feminine. Lewis’s ‘theological feminism’, according to Hilder, elevates spiritual heroism (characterized by imagination, passivity, care, submission, truthfulness, and humility) over the predominant Western notion of classical heroism (characterized by reason, autonomy, activity, aggression, conquest, deceit, and pride). In her study of Lewis’s theological feminism Hilder primarily addresses his fiction, although she does not overlook his non-fiction and poetry. ‘Surprised by the Feminine’ is a major new contribution to Lewis studies.» (Don W. King, Professor of English, Montreat College; Editor, Christian Scholar’s Review)