ompares the geography of Middle-earth, Narnia, and Oz, their inhabitants’ contrasting isolationist or exploratory attitudes, and the accessibility of these worlds to outsiders. Concludes by listing several factors that make Narnia unique among fantasy worlds, including the passage of time, the importance of humans from our own world in its history and prophecy, and the centrality of Aslan in all his implications
Notes how the names of people and things in Narnia are well-chosen to establish character and settin...
Three books, written about differing themes and released decades apart, still manage to work togethe...
A Book of Narnians: The Lion, the Witch, and the Others. C.S. Lewis. Reviewed by Nancy-Lou Patterso...
Part two is an overview of the geography of Narnia based on textual clues and maps. Speculates on th...
Reviews the chronology of the Narnia books, both the internal parts set in Narnia and those set on E...
Compares the physical and cosmological geography of the works of Tolkien, Lewis, and Williams, with ...
Reacting to a description of Narnia as analogous to Southern France, argues that “for Lewis, the way...
Bibliography: pages 156-164.In this thesis, the nature and function of Marvellous Secondary worlds a...
Proposes an intriguing solution to the question of Tolkien and Lewis’s estrangement in 1949: that it...
Discusses Plato’s allegory of the cave and theory of Forms in relation to the physical and mental pr...
Argues a possible derivation of the name Narnia from Old and Middle Irish sources; concludes Lewis w...
Scholar Guest of Honor speech, Mythcon 45. In his wide-ranging and conversational meditation on “Whe...
Addresses the perennial question of J.R.R. Tolkien’s dislike for C.S. Lewis’s Narnia books, carefull...
Reviews the chronology of the Narnia books, both the internal parts set in Narnia and those set on E...
Analyzes a number of explanations proposed by biographers and others for Tolkien’s antipathy to Lewi...
Notes how the names of people and things in Narnia are well-chosen to establish character and settin...
Three books, written about differing themes and released decades apart, still manage to work togethe...
A Book of Narnians: The Lion, the Witch, and the Others. C.S. Lewis. Reviewed by Nancy-Lou Patterso...
Part two is an overview of the geography of Narnia based on textual clues and maps. Speculates on th...
Reviews the chronology of the Narnia books, both the internal parts set in Narnia and those set on E...
Compares the physical and cosmological geography of the works of Tolkien, Lewis, and Williams, with ...
Reacting to a description of Narnia as analogous to Southern France, argues that “for Lewis, the way...
Bibliography: pages 156-164.In this thesis, the nature and function of Marvellous Secondary worlds a...
Proposes an intriguing solution to the question of Tolkien and Lewis’s estrangement in 1949: that it...
Discusses Plato’s allegory of the cave and theory of Forms in relation to the physical and mental pr...
Argues a possible derivation of the name Narnia from Old and Middle Irish sources; concludes Lewis w...
Scholar Guest of Honor speech, Mythcon 45. In his wide-ranging and conversational meditation on “Whe...
Addresses the perennial question of J.R.R. Tolkien’s dislike for C.S. Lewis’s Narnia books, carefull...
Reviews the chronology of the Narnia books, both the internal parts set in Narnia and those set on E...
Analyzes a number of explanations proposed by biographers and others for Tolkien’s antipathy to Lewi...
Notes how the names of people and things in Narnia are well-chosen to establish character and settin...
Three books, written about differing themes and released decades apart, still manage to work togethe...
A Book of Narnians: The Lion, the Witch, and the Others. C.S. Lewis. Reviewed by Nancy-Lou Patterso...