Here we
are. Even though, having read the series
before, I don’t mind going through it within-the-story chronologically instead
of as-written chronologically, I feel it’s still a little trickier to talk
about in that order. The other books
have plenty to recommend them, and in general, I wouldn’t say The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe is
necessarily my favorite of the series, but in terms of talking about them, it
really is easiest when you can use this book as a foundation upon which the
others are built.
Peter,
Susan, Edmund, and Lucy are four siblings evacuated from London during World
War II. Sent to live in the country with
an odd but kindly professor, the children are shaken from what they expect to
be a dreary, rather lonely stay when Lucy makes an unbelievable discovery: the ornate wardrobe in the spare room serves
as a gateway to another world. In the
land of Narnia, she (and later her siblings) learn that they may in fact be the
very saviors prophesied to rid Narnia of the tyrannical White Witch, who has
cursed the land with an eternal winter.
They are aided by the friends they meet there in the Narnian resistance,
who, in addition to having waited many years for the prophecy to come to pass,
have also pinned their hopes on the long-awaited return of Aslan, the Great
Lion.
A big
part of the story’s appeal, I’d say, is in the charm of its details. Entering another world through a wardrobe, an
English lamppost in a fantasy land (shades of the TARDIS in Doctor Who, which followed a little over
ten years later,) a fully-furnished beaver dam with Mrs. Beaver fretting about
how they can’t bring the sewing machine with them on the run from the White
Witch. These little moments do a lot to
flesh out both Narnia and the narrative at large, making you more forgiving of
some of the story’s more obvious elements (i.e., these four English schoolkids
who showed up like three days ago are destined to be the saviors of all Narnia
in a ludicrously-timely fashion.) But,
hey – Aslan! The White Witch! Mr. Tumnus!
Narnians turned to stone and a Father Christmas who gives swords as
presents! It’s all good, right?
I kid, I
kid. No, it’s not perfect, but it does
create something fairly special that’s become an iconic part of Britain’s
children’s literature. The four children
are drawn lightly but pretty well, the White Witch is a great villain in this,
her first actual rodeo, and the legend of Aslan nicely precedes the reality of
him. As far as the Christian allegory is
concerned, it’s very pointed, but since it was written for children, that’s
understandable, and some of the parallels are quite well-written. (I also like that the professor, in
discussing whether or not Narnia could be real, uses the same “lie, delusion,
or truth” argument that Lewis uses in reference to Jesus’s divinity. Had Lewis already used it at this time, or
did it originate here? I know – what do they teach them at these schools, am
I right?)
Warnings
Scary
moments for kids, violence, and thematic elements.
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