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Narnia author C.S. Lewis to get stone in Poets' Corner

C.S. Lewis, writer of the popular children's novel series The Chronicles of Narnia, is to be commemorated with a stone in Poets' Corner in Westminster Abbey in London.
Charles Dickens is commemorated in Poets' Corner in Westminister Abbey. C.S. Lewis will be added to Poet's Corner in 2013. (Finbarr O'Reilly/Reuters)

C.S. Lewis, writer of the popular children’s novel series The Chronicles of Narnia, is to be commemorated with a stone in Poets' Corner in Westminster Abbey in London.

Lewis joins such greats as John Keats, William Blake, Charles Dickens and T.S. Eliot in a tradition going back 600 years.

Former poet laureate Ted Hughes was the most recent writer to be commemorated at the Abbey with a posthumous memorial stone.

Lewis’ The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe was published in 1950 and has been enormously influential on a generation of writers as well as beloved by young readers.

Vernon White, Canon Theologian at Westminster Abbey, said Lewis was also "able to convey the Christian faith in a way that made it both credible and attractive to a wide range of people."

He was also a scholar and adult novelist of books such as The Screwtape Letters and The Space Trilogy.

A stone will be added in Westminster Abbey during a service Nov. 22, 2013 to mark the 50th anniversary of Lewis’ death.