Toronto Star

He was more than a friend of C.S. Lewis

- MICHAEL COREN CONTRIBUTI­NG COLUMNIST

My dear friend Walter is dead. Kind, humble, clever Walter Hooper had entered a nursing home some months ago and recently fell victim to the dark devil of COVID-19.

He was 89 years old and right up until his last year, had been active and busy. As a young man, he had worked as secretary to the great C.S. Lewis, during the last year of Lewis’s life. As such, he had become one of the final conduits for the author of the Narnia books, “Mere Christiani­ty,” and so many others, whose life was dramatized in the play and movie “Shadowland­s.”

The last time I saw Walter in Oxford, England, he said he had a gift for me, a book. I asked him to sign it but he said almost apologetic­ally, “Michael, I can no longer write.” I asked him what he meant. “I can no longer hold the pen.” My heart broke.

The gift he had used for more than five decades, the written word, was now denied him.

He was born in North Carolina in 1931, studied in Britain, and had written to Lewis as an admirer. Lewis replied, the two developed a friendship, and Walter became his private secretary. After Lewis’s death in 1963, Walter went on to become a literary adviser to his estate, an editor of Lewis’s letters and papers, and a frequent speaker at conference­s on the legacy of perhaps the finest communicat­or of the Christian message in modern times.

Walter also knew J.R.R. Tolkien, who lived until 1973, and spoke and wrote of the friendship between Lewis and the author of “The Lord of the Rings.” Every time I went to see him, I’d ask for more anecdotes, like some glutton never full, and he wouldn’t refuse. He once said to me, “I know that when people visit me from America, Australia, Japan, anywhere, what they really want to know is what was Lewis like.” A pause. “And that’s OK, that’s OK.”

In other words, he was aware that he was a point of contact for one long gone, and sought after for someone else. But his invincible humility allowed that to flourish, and he embraced it as vocation. Yet I’ll always remember his delight when playing with our children, and I can’t help thinking it was partly because they had no motive other than fun, and they were with “Mr. Hooper” rather than a friend of another.

We spoke of Lewis’s fondness for beer and tea, his teasing of Walter over his use of American English, the decline he experience­d after the death of his wife Joy, his indifferen­ce to worldly success, and of course his faith.

“Not sure what he’d think of some of these modern Christians,” Walter once said over an evening meal at the Trout Inn in Oxford. “They sometimes quote him, but I’m not sure if they understand him.”

Then there was the story of Lewis attending his nearby Anglican church. He would always leave just as the final words were spoken, eager to avoid others. On one occasion he got to the old, heavy door to find it accidental­ly locked, and made such a noise trying to open it that the entire congregati­on turned in silence to look at him.

“He was red-faced most of the time” said Walter, “but that day shades of purple began to emerge.”

It’s painful when a friend departs, leaving an empty space in the familiar map of affection and community. It’s strange and jarring, and of course just sad. It reminds us of our own mortality, and of how relatively small is the slice of time we are given. But Walter made the world a better place, influenced countless people, and helped keep alight the flame of a man he revered, and who has also influenced me more than I can say.

No more journeys to that beautiful apartment in Woodstock Close, no more pub lunches, no more sparkling smiles as another story was told.

I’ll pray for him but most of all I’ll thank him, and I know I’ll be one of many. His legacy is the love we have, and that’s not bad at all. Cheers, my friend. Until we meet again.

 ??  ?? Michael Coren is a Torontobas­ed writer and contributi­ng columnist to the Star's Opinion section and iPolitics. Follow him on Twitter: @michaelcor­en
Michael Coren is a Torontobas­ed writer and contributi­ng columnist to the Star's Opinion section and iPolitics. Follow him on Twitter: @michaelcor­en

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