On to Empire Games by Charles Stross. Liked the previous ones in the series and this is good so far.
So says the author of "Make Believe."Caspian is a really weird book, and that's saying a lot because Narnia is a really weird series. It has that odd structure -- the parallel narratives, the huge flashback -- and then everyone ends up in the same place, and POP! it's over.
BIRDS OF PREY: PERFECT PITCH by Gail Simone et al
There are about a dozen artists here, though it’s only Paulo Siquiera and Robin Riggs who get cover credits, as the main artists.
This collection comprises two stories, which originally came out in issues either side of Crisis On Infinite Earths.
You mean Infinite Crisis. The stories in the collection came out in 2005-6. I was confused, since Barbara Gordon didn't become Oracle until 1989, a few years after CoIE.
This reminds me of a thought I had earlier.So says the author of "Make Believe."
Remember, Narnia was written as children's literature. It's not in the same category as David Gerrold's When HARLIE Was One (wherein the sex scenes, not to mention the legal, commercialized marijuana, shocked my no-more-than-15-year-old ass across the room, when I read it for a book report in my freshman or sophomore year of high school). It's not in the same category as TrekLit, or ADF, written for an adult audience but mostly suitable for older children (but consider Ensign Sara George in Spock: Messiah). It's not in the same category of The Lord of the Rings, or Sherlock Holmes, or Dickens, written for an adult audience but perfectly suitable for children. It's not even in the same category as Madeleine L'Engle's Murry/O'Keefe canon, that runs a gamut from science fiction to a retelling of Genesis, Chapters 5-9, to a near-molestation and what is arguably consensual statutory rape, yet is still found in the children's section of Barnes & Noble.
Narnia is children's literature the same way Baum's Oz is children's literature. Surreal fantasy is very popular with children. And what is a primary object of children's play? What is it that so many children long to do? To take on the privileges and prerogatives of adulthood, and go on adventures, while still coming home safe in the end! Why else would it be that Disney's Autopia and similar attractions at non-Disney theme parks remain perennially popular theme park rides? Why else would dress-up clothes, little-girl make-up, and toy shaving paraphernalia remain popular in toy stores? Why, if children didn't yearn for what they perceive as adult privilege, could R.J. Reynolds Tobacco run a whole ad campaign in the 1990s, "Let's Clear the Air on Smoking," that phrased a denial that its marketing (and "Joe Camel" in particular) were intended to appeal to children, in a way ("Adult Custom") that was itself intended to appeal to children?
I'm absolutely certain I've seen those lines quoted, verbatim or very nearly so, near the end of a Star Trek novel, possibly DD's The Wounded Sky (much of which has other parallels with Dawn Treader).. . . Lucy could only say, "It would break your heart." "Why," said I, "was it so sad?" "Sad!! No," said Lucy
Dawn Treader is my favorite of them. I know you are an Oz fan; it feels the most Ozzian of them with its travel narrative, and Eustace is my favorite Narnia protagonist.Just, only a few minutes ago, finished The Voyage of the Dawn Treader.
And only a few pages before the end (bottom of 265, in the 1994 Harper TPB), I found very familiar lines:
I'm absolutely certain I've seen those lines quoted, verbatim or very nearly so, near the end of a Star Trek novel, possibly DD's The Wounded Sky (much of which has other parallels with Dawn Treader).
I will also note that I chose Narnia because I was looking for religious allegory for Eastertide, and was well aware that Aslan was, for all intents and purposes, Jesus as a lion. But just over two pages later, I found it very explicitly, with the Pevensies and Eustace being served a breakfast of broiled fish, by a lamb who morphed into Aslan.
Not to mention the most Star-Trek-like, and the most Humanx-Commonwealth-like, and the most Hobbit/LotR-like.Dawn Treader is my favorite of them. I know you are an Oz fan; it feels the most Ozzian of them with its travel narrative, . . .
For a time. Tolkien didn't like Narnia -- he thought it was a derivative mess and stole from some of his Middle-earth ideas -- and they grew apart over a number of things, like Lewis' conversion from atheism to Anglicanism (which bitterly disappointed the Catholic Tolkien), Lewis' fame in the 1940s and beyond, and Edith Tolkien's resentment of Lewis.Then again Lewis and Tolkien were friends.
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