Selected works •
Knox Bible, a translation of the
Latin Vulgate •
Some Loose Stones: Being a Consideration of Certain Tendencies in Modern Theology Illustrated by Reference to the Book Called "Foundations" (1913) •
Absolute and Abitofhell (1913). A satire in the manner of
Dryden on the
latitudinarianism of the authors of
Foundations (including
William Temple, later
Archbishop of Canterbury). •
The Church in Bondage (1914). Sermons •
Reunion All Round (1914). A satire on the readiness of certain Anglicans to sink doctrinal differences with the
Nonconformist sects in the interests of Christian good fellowship. •
Bread or Stone (1915). Four addresses on impetrative or
petitionary prayer. •
A Spiritual Aeneid: Being an Account of a Journey to the Catholic Faith (1918) •
Meditations on the Psalms (1919) •
Patrick Shaw-Stewart (1920). Biography of
Patrick Shaw-Stewart, who died on active service in the
First World War. •
Memories of the Future: Being Memories of the Years 1915–1972, Written in the Year of Grace 1988 by Opal, Lady Porstock (1923). Combines a
parody of the current autobiographies of women of fashion with a gentle satire on current whims—educational, medical, political and theological. •
Sanctions: A Frivolity (1924). A fiction in which the guests at a country-house party find all their conversations turning towards the question, what are the ultimate sanctions, social, intellectual, supernatural, which determine human behaviour and destiny? •
Other Eyes Than Ours (1926). A satirical tale about a hoax played on a circle of
spiritualists. •
An Open-Air Pulpit (1926). Essays. •
The Belief of Catholics (1927). His survey of Catholic belief, considered a classic of
apologetics and a Catholic equivalent to
C. S. Lewis's
Mere Christianity. Authorized new edition published in 2022 (Providence, RI: Cluny Media). •
Essays in Satire (1928). Contains his Anglican humorous writings, with some subsequent literary essays." •
The Mystery of the Kingdom and Other Sermons (1928). •
The Church on Earth (1929). •
On Getting There (1929). Essays. •
Caliban in Grub Street (1930). A satire on the religious opinions of some of the chief popular writers of the day (including
Arnold Bennett and Sir
Arthur Conan Doyle). •
Broadcast Minds (1932). A criticism of the religious opinions of some of the leading scientific publicists of the time (including
Julian Huxley and
Bertrand Russell). •
Difficulties: Being a Correspondence About the Catholic Religion, with
Arnold Lunn (1932). An exchange of letters with Lunn about the Catholic Church. Lunn later converted. •
Heaven and Charing Cross: Sermons on the Holy Eucharist (1935) •
Barchester Pilgrimage (1935). A sequel to the
Chronicles of Barsetshire written in the style of
Trollope. It follows the fortunes of the children and grandchildren of Trollope's characters up to the time of writing, with some gentle satire on the social, political and religious changes of the 20th century. It was reprinted in 1990 by the Trollope Society. •
Let Dons Delight (1939). One of Knox's most famous works, though currently out of print. Taking as its subject the history of Oxford from the
Reformation to shortly before World War II, it traces the disintegration of a common culture through the conversations of the dons of Simon Magus, a fictional college, first in 1588, and then by fifty-year intervals until 1938. •
Captive Flames (1940). Twenty-one homilies on some of Knox's favourite saints, including
St Cecilia,
St Dominic, St
Joan of Arc and St
Ignatius of Loyola. Authorized new edition published in 2022 (Providence, RI: Cluny Media). •
In Soft Garments (1942). Addresses to Oxford students on faith in the modern world. •
God and the Atom (1945). An ethical and philosophical analysis of the shock of the
atomic bomb, its use against
Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the moral questions arising therefrom. •
The Mass in Slow Motion (1948). A book of talks for schoolgirls which, with its two successors, became the most popular of all Knox's writings. Authorized new edition published in 2022 (Providence, RI: Cluny Media). •
The Creed in Slow Motion (1949). The second book of his talks for schoolgirls. Authorized new edition published in 2022 (Providence, RI: Cluny Media). •
On Englishing the Bible (1949). Book of 8 essays about re-translating the Bible from the Latin Vulgate, with Hebrew/Greek sources. •
The Gospel in Slow Motion (1950). The final book of his talks for schoolgirls. Authorized new edition published in 2022 (Providence, RI: Cluny Media). • ''St Paul's Gospel'' (1950). A series of
Lenten sermons preached that year by Knox in Westminster Cathedral. •
Enthusiasm: A Chapter in the History of Religion with Special Reference to the XVII and XVIII Centuries (1950). Knox's own favourite book, it is a study of the various movements of Christian men and women who have tried to live a less worldly life than other Christians, claiming the direct guidance of the
Holy Spirit, and eventually splitting off into separate sects.
Quietism and
Jansenism seemed to be the primary foci. •
Stimuli (1951). A selection of his monthly contributions to
The Sunday Times. •
The Hidden Stream: Mysteries of the Christian Faith (1952). Addresses to Oxford students in which Knox evaluates fundamental
dogmas and stumbling blocks of Catholicism. •
Off the Record (1953). A selection of fifty-one letters addressed to individual inquirers on religious topics of general interest. •
In Soft Garments: A Collection of Oxford Conferences (1953). •
The Window in the Wall and Other Sermons on the Holy Eucharist (1956) •
Bridegroom and Bride (1957). Wedding addresses. •
Literary Distractions (1958). Essays on writers, Trollope's Barsetshire etc. •
Lightning Meditations (1959). Short sermons.
Detective fiction Miles Bredon mysteries •
The Three Taps (1927, novel) •
The Footsteps at the Lock (1928, novel) – Serialised, Westminster Gazette, 1928 • "Solved by Inspection" (1931, short story) •
The Body in the Silo (1933, novel) •
Still Dead (1934, novel) •
Double Cross Purposes (1937, novel)
Novels •
The Viaduct Murder (1925)
Short stories • "The Motive" (1937) • "The Adventure of the First Class Carriage" (1947) – a
Sherlock Holmes pastiche.
Collaborative works by the Detection Club •
Behind the Screen (1930) (six contributors including Knox) •
The Floating Admiral (1931) (fourteen contributors including Knox) •
Six Against the Yard (1936) (six contributors including Knox) ==See also==