What if wisdom required slowness—and modern life simply forgot how? In C. S. Lewis, G. K. Chesterton, Theology, and the Lost Art of Pipe Smoking , George Le Savant offers a witty, humane, and quietly subversive meditation on faith, attention, joy, and the habits that once made thinking possible. Drawing on the essays, letters, and theological reflections of C. S. Lewis and G. K. Chesterton , this book is not about tobacco—but about time . About the forgotten disciplines of patience, silence, friendship, and embodied thought in an age addicted to speed. Personal, philosophical, and gently humorous—Le Savant explores why modern debates are so loud, why joy refuses to be rushed, why attention is a moral act, and why theology collapses when it is detached from daily life. Through anecdotes, cultural critique, and close engagement with Lewis and Chesterton’s actual writings, the book argues that wisdom once flourished not in outrage cycles, but in pubs, common rooms, long walks, and unhurried conversations. Pipe smoking serves as a metaphor: a symbol of slowness in a hurried world, of thought that matures rather than reacts, of belief practiced with humility rather than volume. This is a book for readers who: Love Lewis and Chesterton but want them applied to modern life - Feel intellectually overstimulated and spiritually undernourished - Suspect that speed has cost us something we can no longer name - Want theology that is intelligent, embodied, and humane Not a manifesto. Not nostalgia. A recovery of attention, joy, and the lost art of thinking slowly.