Darth Wong wrote:
Was the Wrinkle in Time book the one where the girl finds that the enemy is a giant brain and she literally defeats it with love? That was such stupid vomit-inducing bullshit. Evil = pure rational thought!
Makes me sort of glad I looked at the picture on the front, read the back, and put it back on the bookshelf. Then again... the teacher decided that "The Last of the Great Wangdoodles" was an appropriate substitute. Reading that book was sort of like an acid trip, as I recall...
Darth Wong wrote:
As for Narnia, I saw the movie and thought it was the dumbest ending ever, when it turned out that the big villain lost because she forgot to read the fine print on her magic spell. I've heard this is faithful to the book, which makes me think that the book must also be incredibly stupid. And from the sounds of it, preachy too.
Oddly enough, the only two books in the series that
didn't offend my sense of good literature were "The Lion The Witch and the Wardrobe" and "Prince Caspian". Coincidentally, they were also the only two books with an actual and clearly-defined antagonist I've never much understood whatever level of allegory is in both books because it could be ignored, something that definitely recommends the pair. The other five books are presently gathering dust somewhere because "Voyage of the Dawn Treader" did brain damage from sheer vapidity, "The Horse and His Boy" was confusing, "The Last Battle" dragged on agonizingly, "The Silver Chair" made me wish cruel and horrific fates upon the main characters, and "The Magician's Nephew" was only worth it if you read the last 1/3.
Ironically enough, C.S. Lewis was clearly a very good writer and talented with spinning interesting allegory to describe his view of Christianity; "Mere Christianity" and "The Screwtape Letters" are really quite good. And the quirk of yelling the last lines of his lectures while walking out the door and down the hall so the students couldn't bother him makes me forgive him a few of his errors.