CupofJoe
Myth Weaver
Sorry if I gave offense
Myth WeaverSorry if I gave offense
IstarI don't think you did, Joe.
Myth WeaverI have fond memories of our third grade teacher reading the first Narnia book to us in class, but now there's one thing about the whole franchise that I find disturbing: prepubescent children obtaining lethal weapons and fighting in presumably bloody wars like grown-ups. I'm surprised this hasn't already inspired an outrage, especially since we feel sorry for child soldiers in the real world.
Maester
IstarAs a non-Christian, this might surprise some of the people who jumped into this thread on the last page: I absolutely love C. S. Lewis and the Chronicles of Narnia. Even his explicitly religious stuff, like the Screwtape Letters, sit among my favorite books of all time. The man was just awesome, as far as writing and story-telling goes. The Magician's Nephew has one of the most powerful scenes (in my opinion, of course) in fantasy.
If you can't read a book without being offended by it having a view-point different from your own, it's not the the book's problem.
Maester
Istar
AurorAs a non-Christian, this might surprise some of the people who jumped into this thread on the last page: I absolutely love C. S. Lewis and the Chronicles of Narnia. Even his explicitly religious stuff, like the Screwtape Letters, sit among my favorite books of all time. The man was just awesome, as far as writing and story-telling goes. The Magician's Nephew has one of the most powerful scenes (in my opinion, of course) in fantasy.
If you can't read a book without being offended by it having a view-point different from your own, it's not the the book's problem.
Maester
SageI'm not at all offended by the Chronicles; I kept hearing that it was a Really Obvious Christian Allegory but as I was reading it I saw very little that seemed overtly Christian (sure, there's Aslan's resurrection, but even that is markedly different from the story of Jesus). I just didn't enjoy them very much.
IstarI wholeheartedly agree. They're much too like a faerietale, marinated in religious allegories. I don't feel fantasy and religion should intermingle much... which is somewhat hypocritical as I love His Dark Materials.
I have every intention on reading The Screwtape Letters, and have contemplated The Great Divorce. I think I'll like his writing style much better.
Also, did you know Lewis didn't edit his writing at all? It drove Tolkien bats, it did.
Acolyte