Titre : | The Last Battle |
Titre de série : | The Chronicles of Narnia, 7 |
Auteurs : | Clive Staples Lewis, Auteur |
Type de document : | texte imprimé |
Editeur : | HarperCollins, 1984 |
ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-0-06-447108-4 |
Format : | 228 p. |
Langues: | Anglais |
Langues originales: | Anglais |
Index. décimale : | 8-3 (Roman littéraire) |
Tags : | saga |
Résumé : |
When evil comes to Narnia, Jill and Eustace help fight the great last battle and Aslan leads his people to a glorious new paradise A little lie, told by a petty grifter, who is willing to betray his friends and neighbors for a few small pleasures, leads to another lie, and then another, and finally to the unraveling of the ties that bind us together. As the old camp song goes, it only takes a spark to get a fire going. It can all happen in what seems like the blink of an eye, as C.S. Lewis, the Christian apologist and beloved children’s author, warns in “The Last Battle,” the flawed final chapter of the Chronicles of Narnia, which I found myself rereading as 2020 dwindled down to its last days. Often overlooked if not dismissed for its colonialist racism, “The Last Battle” won the 1956 Carnegie Prize, Britain’s top literary award for children’s books. According to Lewis, the end of Narnia — a land of talking beasts and magical creatures that the Oxford don invented at the beginning of World War II — begins in a time of peace and leisure. All is well in the land. Until it’s not. Things begin to fall apart after a talking ape named Shift stumbles across the skin of a lion floating in a pool beneath a waterfall. Shift, who is filled with petty ambition — he can never find enough bananas or oranges at the local market and is always getting his best friend, Puzzle the donkey, to do all the dirty work — decides to turn the lion skin into a costume. He then convinces Puzzle to impersonate Aslan, the Jesus-like leonine eminence of Lewis’ allegory, who has long been absent from the land. With Puzzle’s false Aslan by his side, Shift begins to order his fellow Narnians around. First, he tells them — in Aslan’s name — to gather the nuts that he loves. Then, as the fake news of Aslan’s return spreads, he orders the sacred trees of the forest to be cut down and shipped to merchants from Calormen, the empire to the south, whose leaders have long coveted Narnia’s prosperity. Finally, Shift exiles his fellow Narnians to serve as indentured servants. |
Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres | Cote | Support | Localisation | Section | Disponibilité |
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GEN005475 | 8-3 LEW C7 | Livre | Bibliothèque principale | Romans Enfants 6-11ans | Disponible |