Pages: 192 (Paperback) Editor: Cliff Nielsen ISBN: 0007115563 Pub: Collins Pub date: 2001-05-08 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 37142
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Editorial Review:Peter, Susan, Edmund and Lucy are mysteriously transported back to Narnia where they discover that it has been hundred's of years since their reign as Kings and Queens of the land ended. Cair Paravel, the castle where they lived, is in ruins and the evil King Miraz has taken charge. Along with their old friend Prince Caspian they race to overthrow the King, calling on the help of Aslan and his trusty follower, Reepicheep the mouse. Once again we are taken back to the magical lands of Narnia in the clever, ironic and fantastical Prince Caspian, the fourth book in the Chronicles of Narnia. This edition, published in celebration of the centenary of CS Lewis, is a highly collectible addition to any treasured Narnia library. With hand-coloured illustrations by Pauline Baynes exquisitely capturing the pure essence of Narnia, this edition of Prince Caspian will live long in the memory and on the bookshelf. --Susan Harrison Reader Reviews:Caspian - king of Narnia (9/9 people found this helpful)At the start of the book, we are with the four Pevensie children, Peter, Susan, Edmund and Lucy, who are waiting for connecting trains at a railway station in the course of their journey back to their respective boarding schools when they feel the pull of the magic and are drawn into Narnia and find that more than a thousand years have passed since they reigned there as kings and queens. In this book there are some new characters: Prince Caspian is the true king of Narnia, whose evil uncle, King Miraz, has snatched the throne. Caspian gathers an army of the Old Narnians and fights for his crown. Miraz is also a Telmarine like Caspian but is cruel and harsh. He tolerates Caspian as the next king but when his wife gives birth to a son, he wants to kill Caspian so his son can be the future ruler. Doctor Cornelius is Caspian's tutor. He tells Caspian in secret that the stories of old Narnia are true and that he is half-Dwarf. He helps Caspian to escape the castle and later returns to his aid in the forest to help the creatures of Narnia defeat Miraz. Trumpkin is a red-Dwarf who helps Caspian defeat Miraz. When he is captured by Miraz's soldiers and taken to Cair Paravel in exile, he meets the Pevensie children and leads them to Caspian. Nikabrik is a black-Dwarf in Caspian's army. He wants to fight Miraz by calling up the White Witch, with the black magic of a hag and a werewolf. However, he, the hag and the werewolf are killed. Trufflehunter is a badger who aids Caspian in his struggle. He helps Caspian and saves him from the storm in the forest by taking him in to his den. The Return to Narnia (0/0 people found this helpful)"Prince Caspian" is chronologically the fourth book in the Narnia series but the second written by CS Lewis. It sees the return of the four Pevensie children - Peter, Susan, Edmund and Lucy - who first entered the enchanted land of Narnia in "The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe".
Yeats for children? (0/0 people found this helpful)The basic plot of the book is that of Hamlet: the wicked uncle who murders the rightful sovereign and steals the kingdom from the true heir. However, this usurpation is embedded within a larger usurpation, in which the mythic wonders of old Narnia are suppressed by the grey regimentation imposed by invaders from Telmar. The hero Caspian, helped by the four Pevensey children, vindicates the right in both the smaller and the larger dispute.
THERE ARE OLD NARNIANS, AND BOLD NARNIANS, BUT NO OLD BOLD NARNIANS (0/0 people found this helpful)It is a bleak time for the Narnians of old. The talking animals are all in hiding and men who call themselves Telmarines are ruling the land. The men of Telmar are afraid of and hostile to talking animals, the dryads and hamadryads, the naiads, centaurs, dwarves, and satyrs. They fear them and have tried to destroy them. The woods are silent and the dryads sleep, dreaming of a free Narnia and better times. But the memories of old, free Narnia are alive and are passed on in secret. The nurse of Prince Caspian is just one who knows the exciting secrets of old, and there are many others. And so it happens that the young prince comes to love the old that is hidden more than the new that he will rule. But although the stories of old may feed the soul, they are dangerous to know. And that is the start of the prince's dangers and adventures. He may call on those free creatures who are in hiding, they may rally to his call, but will they be strong enough to overthrow their oppressors? He has one more magical link with the past, and he will use it at the moment of greatest need - the magical horn of Queen Susan bringing unknown help to those who use it, which has been preserved as a relic by the faithful.
The War of Deliverance (4/7 people found this helpful)PRINCE CASPIAN begins a year after the events of THE LION, THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE; the Pevensies' years in Narnia having taken only a few moments of our world's time. As they sit together waiting to catch trains to their respective boarding schools, without warning they're pulled into another world that they don't recognize - a deserted island dominated by a ruined castle. This presents a very serious problem, as between them they have only two bag lunches and the clothes they stand up in - very thin supplies for being stranded for an unknown length of time in strange country. (Lewis' own wartime experiences and peacetime hiking expeditions enabled him to write about such things very realistically.) Only gradually do they realize that this country is the familiar made strange. It is their own capital of Cair Paravel, after untold centuries have washed over it - enough to turn the peninsula on which it once stood into an island. As they walk through the royal treasury and remember what once happened - from years of chess games with fauns to the talking moles who planted the now-wild orchard grown up to the castle gates - there's a compelling mixture of fascinating nostalgia and heartbreak, remembering all the splendour of the years of restoring Narnia to a free and happy country now reduced to crumbling ruins, where even the magical gifts from the first breaking of the hundred years' winter have been abandoned to dust and silence. When the first humans the Pevensies have seen in this sadly transformed Narnia appear, they have come to murder a dwarf by drowning him in the sea. Rescuing him, the Pevensies learn that Trumpkin represents the survivors of old Narnia, while the humans represent the worst of the new Narnia, the Telmarines who invaded the leaderless country centuries ago and silenced its magic however they could. However, the new Narnians are people, not monsters - in the generations since the conquest, many have never learned of Narnia's true history, such as Prince Caspian, whose story Trumpkin relates to the Pevensies. Caspian, the only son of the previous king, loved the tales of the old Narnia he was told as a child by the nurse who was the only person who loved him (his childless uncle Miraz merely tolerated Caspian as an heir of his own blood). When his nurse was dismissed for teaching him such stories, Caspian expected only misery from his new tutor - only to learn to his terror and delight that Doctor Cornelius was part dwarf, and that the old Narnia slumbered under its oppression but had not been destroyed. This is particularly well handled, and is characteristic of the difference between PRINCE CASPIAN and its illustrious predecessor. In THE LION, THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE, Narnia was a magical country oppressed by a magical enemy, and the Pevensies were isolated non-magical elements. Here is Narnia is a disenchanted land where magic has been smothered, and the humans have done almost as much damage to themselves, with lies to explain why they fear the sea from which Aslan always entered his kingdom and the forests which once gave battle. Cornelius' hope was that when Caspian came to the throne he would not only be a good lord to the Telmarines but might unite the old and the new Narnia, waking the slumbering spirits of the trees and the waters and restoring the rights of Narnia in hiding. Their hopes have had to be prematurely put into action, however, as Miraz' queen has given birth to a son, marking the end of his tolerance for the boy who has a better claim to the throne than the man who sits on it. In helping Caspian to flee Miraz' castle, Cornelius gave Caspian Susan's magical horn and unwittingly sent Caspian straight into the hands of the old Narnians. Deciding this is their best chance, they have begun gathering for war to gain Caspian his throne and the old Narnians their ancient rights, and Susan's horn was sounded because of its magical properties of bringing strange help to whoever uses it - although the return of ancient kings and queens once more in childhood was something even stranger than Cornelius might have dreamed of. The War of Deliverance and the reawakening of Narnia do not follow the same pattern as the war against the White Witch, and may come as a surprise to first-time readers in terms of what does happen. PRINCE CASPIAN also has rather more complicated relationships on both sides than were seen in THE LION, THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE, as both sides are divided as to their goals and how best to achieve them. The vicious politics of Miraz' court are something from which Caspian has been sheltered, but become more apparently later in the story - the Telmarines are far from being a united people under his rule, and several lords who helped put him on the throne are not blind to the fact that they could act as kingmakers once again. As for the Narnians, some have given up any hope of Aslan and have little use for humans, and have despaired to the point of allying with darker forces. Final points worthy of note: Similar ProductsThe Horse and His Boy: Complete & Unabridged, Adult ("The Chronicles of Narnia") The Voyage of the "Dawn Treader" (Chronicles of Narnia) The Last Battle (Chronicles of Narnia) The Silver Chair (Chronicles of Narnia) The Silver Chair: Complete & Unabridged, Adult (Chronicles of Narnia) CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
Books -> Subjects -> Science Fiction & Fantasy -> Authors, A-Z -> L -> Lewis, C.S.
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