G. K. Chesterton: The Collection of Complete Works (Annotated) : Collection Includes The Innocence of Father Brown, Wisdom of Father Brown, The Man Who Knew Too Much, The Man Who Was Thursday, & More
Gilbert Keith Chesterton KC*SG was an English writer, philosopher, lay theologian, and literary and art critic. He has been referred to as the "prince of paradox".
40 Complete Works of G. K. Chesterton
A Miscellany of Men A Short History of England Alarms and Discursions All Things Considered Appreciations and Criticisms of the Works of Charles Dickens Eugenics and Other Evils George Bernard Shaw Greybeards at Play Heretics Lord Kitchener Magic Manalive Orthodoxy Poems Robert Browning Robert Louis Stevenson The Appetite of Tyranny The Ball and The Cross The Ballad of St. Barbara The Ballad of the White Horse The Barbarism of Berlin The Club of Queer Trades The Crimes of England The Defendant The Innocence of Father Brown The Man Who Knew Too Much The Man Who Was Thursday The Napoleon of Notting Hill The New Jerusalem The Trees of Pride The Victorian Age in Literature The Wild Knight and Other Poems Tremendous Trifles Twelve Types Utopia of Usurers Varied Types What I Saw in America What's Wrong With The World Wine Water and Song Wisdom of Father Brown
Gilbert Keith Chesterton was an English writer, philosopher, lay theologian, and literary and art critic.
He was educated at St. Paul’s, and went to art school at University College London. In 1900, he was asked to contribute a few magazine articles on art criticism, and went on to become one of the most prolific writers of all time. He wrote a hundred books, contributions to 200 more, hundreds of poems, including the epic Ballad of the White Horse, five plays, five novels, and some two hundred short stories, including a popular series featuring the priest-detective, Father Brown. In spite of his literary accomplishments, he considered himself primarily a journalist. He wrote over 4000 newspaper essays, including 30 years worth of weekly columns for the Illustrated London News, and 13 years of weekly columns for the Daily News. He also edited his own newspaper, G.K.’s Weekly.
Chesterton was equally at ease with literary and social criticism, history, politics, economics, philosophy, and theology.
I kind of want to read all of Chesterton before I die, but I doubt that will happen. Anyway, here's where you can see the little progress I've made. Biographies omitted. Works in bold are those I am prioritizing reading soonest.
☐ Greybeards at Play 🗹 The Wild Knight and Other Poems ☐ The Defendant ☐ Twelve Types 🗹 The Napoleon of Notting Hill ☐ The Club of Queer Trades 🗹 Heretics 🗹 The Man Who Was Thursday: A Nightmare 🗹 Orthodoxy ☐ All Things Considered ☐ Tremendous Trifles 🗹 The Ball and the Cross ☐ Alarms and Discursions ☐ What's Wrong With the World 🗹 The Ballad of the White Horse ☐ The Innocence of Father Brown 🗹 Manalive ☐ A Miscellany of Men ☐ Simplicity and Tolstoy ☐ Magic (play) ☐ The Victorian Age in Literature ☐ The Flying Inn (novel) ☐ The Wisdom of Father Brown ☐ Trial of John Jasper, Lay Precentor of Cloisterham Cathedral in the County of Kent, for the Murder of Edwin Drood. ☐ London ☐ The Barbarism of Berlin ☐ Poems (1915) ☐ Wine, Water and Song ☐ The Appetite of Tyranny ☐ The Crimes of England ☐ Divorce vs. Democracy ☐ The Book of Job ☐ A Shilling for My Thoughts ☐ Temperance and The Great Alliance ☐ Utopia of Usurers ☐ Lord Kitchener ☐ A Short History of England ☐ How to Help Annexation ☐ Irish Impressions ☐ The Superstition of Divorce ☐ The Uses of Diversity ☐ The New Jerusalem ☐ The Ballad of St. Barbara and Other Poems ☐ The Man Who Knew Too Much ☐ Eugenics and other Evils ☐ What I Saw in America ☐ Poems (1923) ☐ Fancies Versus Fads ☐ The End of the Roman Road ☐ Tales of the Long Bow ☐ The Superstitions of the Sceptic ☐ The Everlasting Man ☐ The Queen of Seven Swords ☐ The Outline of Sanity ☐ The Incredulity of Father Brown ☐ The Catholic Church and Conversion ☐ The Secret of Father Brown ☐ The Return of Don Quixote ☐ The Judgment of Dr. Johnson ☐ Gloria in Profundis ☐ Culture and the Coming Peril ☐ Social Reform vs. Birth Control ☐ Generally Speaking ☐ The Sword of Wood ☐ The Thing: Why I am a Catholic ☐ The Poet and the Lunatics ☐ Ubi Ecclesia ☐ Christmas Poems ☐ Four Faultless Felons ☐ The Turkey and the Turk ☐ The Grave of Arthur ☐ Come to Think of It ☐ The Resurrection of Rome ☐ All is Grist ☐ New Poems (1932) ☐ Christendom in Dublin ☐ Sidelights of New London and Newer York ☐ The Well and the Shallows ☐ The Way of the Cross ☐ The Scandal of Father Brown (stories) ☐ Stories, Essays And Poems (1935) ☐ Autobiography ☐ As I Was Saying ☐ The Paradoxes of Mr. Pond. ☐ The Coloured Lands ☐ The End of the Armistice ☐ The Common Man ☐ The Hound of Heaven and Other Poems ☐ Daylight and Nightmare ☐ Illustrated London News, 1905–1907 ☐ Illustrated London News, 1908–1910. ☐ Collected Nonsense and Light Verse ☐ Illustrated London News, 1911–1913 ☐ Illustrated London News, 1914–1916 ☐ Illustrated London News, 1917–1919 ☐ Illustrated London News, 1920–1922. ☐ Seven Suspects ☐ Brave New Family ☐ Illustrated London News, 1923–1925 ☐ Illustrated London News, 1926–1928 ☐ Illustrated London News, 1929–1931 ☐ The Mask of Midas ☐ On Lying in Bed and Other Essays