I always found it strange that "The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe" gets such amazing plaudits. For me, it's by some distance the weakest in the series. Not a patch on Dawn Treader or Silver Chair.
have watched the films, but not read the books,
having trouble just getting through my second reading of game of thrones, put it down because my eyes were going, and haven't picked it up lately.
The teacher read to us at primary school. At the time we weren't aware it was supposed to be some kind of Christian tale. Just a good old child pleasing fantasy yarn.
OG is spot on. The glory of the Narnia books is that the Christian imagery, while obvious as an adult, is completely irrelevant to a child. It's all about fantasy and adventure.
I remember reading and being totally enthralled by The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe as a young kid. Up until then, i had existed mainly on a diet of Famous Five, Secret Seven and Just William - all great children's books- but CS Lewis opened the door to a whole new genre for me. One which has lasted a lifetime. Hence my (still-growing) collection of books by Stephen King.
I haven't read any of these books or seen any of the films. Are they available to watch anywhere?
When I was young I read all the LOTR trilogy and The Hobbit. I watched Return of The King last weekend as well. Seen it so many times now but still love it.
I thought the best childrens books when I was young were all the 'Adventure' series by Enid Blyton. The Valley,Castle,Island,Sea of Adventure etc. I also enjoyed Jennings and Derbyshire and of course the Biggles series.
I read all of the above favourites mostly and one that is hardly mentioned now is Billy Bunter. Completely un pc now for various reasons,but the actual writing was very comical in a descriptive way. I've read a lot of John Grisham and he has the ability to make you laugh hard one minute and shake your head in sadness the next. Excellent descriptive writing.