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Lewis, an adult convert from atheism to Christianity, uses Out of the Silent Planet (along with the two successive novels in the trilogy, Perelandra and That Hideous Strength) to convey philosophical ideas with Biblical foundations: in this novel, the idea of an ancient world that never experienced a fall from grace, in contrast to the history of our own world. The races of Malacandra have lived in complete peace for millions of years in their own Garden of Eden and find Ransom's descriptions of life on Earth difficult to comprehend. Lewis's description of the planet Mars is not particularly accurate from a purely factual standpoint (Lewis himself said as much in his essay "On Science Fiction") but is an enchanting and poetic vision of what an innocent, unspoiled world might be like; and as a master of the English language, Lewis's writing is unique for its elegance, beauty and simplicity.
Ransom, the main character of the first two novels (he is a secondary character in That Hideous Strength), appears very similar to Lewis himself: university professor, expert in languages and medieval literature, unmarried (Lewis did not marry until his fifties), wounded in World War I and with no living relatives except for one sibling. Lewis, however, apparently intended for Ransom to be partially patterned after his friend and fellow Oxford professor J.R.R. Tolkien.