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Book Review - Prince Caspian: The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis

My Rating - 1 out of 5 stars

Publisher - Harper Collins
Genre - Children's Fiction/Classic Fantasy
Publishing year - 1951
Language - English
ISBN - 978-0-00736367-4
Pages - 240


My Review - 

Oh boy! Finally, I finish reading this Book after considered quitting it; at least four to five times. C.S. Lewis's second book in the publication order and the fourth in chronological order, Prince Caspian is not at all engaging. 

The whole time I had only two thoughts - first, why it's not finished yet, and second, the movie was fantastic, but this book is utter trash. The plot revolves around Termarines (humans) and how they rule Narnia. Their prince was betrayed by his uncle and decided to call the old Kings and Queens, i.e., Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy. Caspian wants revenge and rules the Narnia; the four siblings and Narnians help him achieve his dream.

Now, let's start with the problems that I have with this book - 

1. The narration is boring and dull.
2. Characters are irritable and have no growth whatsoever. 
3. The siblings show no maturity, even though they grew old in Narnia in the first book, chronologically wise. 
4. Aslan's character seems out of the place because there is no solid reason for his coming or going on different occasions. 
5. The author needlessly stretched the story with useless descriptions. 
6. Final nail in the coffin is these lines written by C.S. Lewis -

  • Then she saw the Lion, screamed and fled, and with her fled her class, who were mostly dumpy, prim little girls with fat legs.
  • Maenads whirled her around in a merry dance and helped her take off some of the unnecessary and uncomfortable clothes she was wearing.

In both the sentence the C.S. Lewis talked about the teenage school girls. The way he represents the story seems outrageous. First, he did body shaming, and second, when Ivy (a human girl) decides to join Aslan's army, he mentions that they remove her clothes. There is no mention that Ivy asks them to that or if she had any problems with her clothing. But it definitely portrays the author's sick mind. 

I also didn't like the previous book, The Horse and His Boy, and I hoped that this one was different because I watched the movie and loved it. But I was wrong, and I decide not to read the following three books in the series, at least for now. Maybe I'll pick them in the future, maybe not. My advice to those who only watched the movies and did not read the books, please stick to the films in this case. C.S. Lewis's book will ruin your memories of Narnia. 

If you still want to read, grab your copy from - Amazon IN Amazon US





This post first appeared on Books Charming, please read the originial post: here

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Book Review - Prince Caspian: The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis

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