
Joseph Lewis
Joseph Lewis was an American freethinker and atheist activist, publisher, and litigator. During the mid-twentieth century, he was one of America's most conspicuous public atheists, the other being Emanuel Haldeman-Julius. Born in Montgomery, Alabama to a Jewish family, he was forced by poverty to leave school at the age of nine to find employment. He read avidly, becoming self-educated. Lewis developed his ideas from reading, among others, Robert G. Ingersoll, whose published works made him aware of Thomas Paine. He was first impressed by atheism after having read a large volume of lectures of Ingersoll devoted to his idol Paine, which was brought to their house by his older brother. He later credited Paine's The Age of Reason with helping him abandon theism.

An Atheist Manifesto
Challenge everything you think you know and discover how religious myths can hold you back from a life based on reason, discovery, and genuine kindness.
By Joseph Lewis

The Tyranny of God
A daring call to free oneself from the chains of religious dogma, and embrace a world understood through reason in the face of a seemingly indifferent universe.
By Joseph Lewis