Deborah Pickstone's Reviews > Prince Caspian
Prince Caspian (Chronicles of Narnia, #4)
by C.S. Lewis
by C.S. Lewis
Deborah Pickstone's review
bookshelves: all-time-faves, all-time-favourite-series, allegorical, anthropomorphic, archetypes, belief-and-anti-belief, childhood-magic-books, children-s-lit, fantasy-of-sorts, happiness-guarranteed, magical-fantasy, modern-classic, things-of-the-spirit, uk-fiction
Feb 27, 2017
bookshelves: all-time-faves, all-time-favourite-series, allegorical, anthropomorphic, archetypes, belief-and-anti-belief, childhood-magic-books, children-s-lit, fantasy-of-sorts, happiness-guarranteed, magical-fantasy, modern-classic, things-of-the-spirit, uk-fiction
read count: 1
My favourite of the Narnian tales, I think. A classic tale of good versus evil, the 'true' Narnians (Christians) are pushed underground, hiding in Aslan's How - and very reminiscent of the Roman catacombs - clearly telling Christians to follow Christ at all costs, even to the death. The characters are divided between believers and unbelievers, with a few turncoats along the way - in both directions. Lucy, the youngest, shows the most courage in going against the group to follow Aslan.
Of course, the star of the book is Reepicheep!
"Sire, my life is ever at your command, but my honour is my own."
―Reepicheep
Of course, the star of the book is Reepicheep!
"Sire, my life is ever at your command, but my honour is my own."
―Reepicheep
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Reading Progress
| 02/27 | marked as: | read | ||
