(urth) Religious writers and audiences
Gerry Quinn
gerryq at indigo.ie
Mon Jun 7 05:48:17 PDT 2010
I had a similar experience in Ireland at a similar age. I had enjoyed the Narnia books until I got to the _The Last Battle_ where the Christian allegory was hammered home. I felt betrayed, not just by the message, but by its totalitarian import - the expected future lives of the children on Earth were not just aborted but rendered insignificant by the religious context.
Maybe it was especially unsettling as I was a child myself.
I don't think I've had the same feeling about any other novel/series - but then again I probably wouldn't have it about the Narnia books if I encountered them now.
- Gerry Quinn
----- Original Message -----
From: Jerry Friedman
I'm one who felt betrayed by /TLtW&tW/, and as David Stockhoff said, timing was important. I read all the Narnia books eagerly when I was seven. When I was maybe 10 or 12, I learned the story of Jesus' redemptive sacrifice, and at some point I connected that with Aslan (and the end of /TVotDT/). So Lewis had tried to trick me! These books I was attached to were a covert attempt to advertise that religion that besieged me and my family, that continually tried to blandish and harangue and peer-press and maybe, under the surface, even threaten me into submission. It was an unpleasant moment.
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