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 Post subject: New Narnia Books!?
PostPosted: November 7th, 2006, 6:42 pm 


It is absolutely true. Harper Books is going ahead with plans to publish a new series of Narnia Books for children. C.S. Lewis Company will be involved in the project. Here is the article published from the National Catholic Register:


De-Fanging C.S. Lewis: Will New Narnia Books Lose the Religion? JOE WOODWARD


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More than half a century after the original series was published, HarperCollins Publishers has announced its plans to create a new series of Narnia children's novels and picture books, using a stable of established children's fantasy writers. The publisher seems eager to give the kids what they want, but not necessarily their parents.
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More than half a century after the original series was published, HarperCollins Publishers has announced its plans to create a new series of Narnia children's novels and picture books, using a stable of established children's fantasy writers.
The publisher seems eager to give the kids what they want, but not necessarily their parents.

Children like the Narnia Chronicles because they evoke a fantasy wonderland populated by people like Digory, Polly, Lucy, Edmund and the great lion, Aslan. Catholic parents like them because they know Aslan is a Christ figure and the author, C.S. Lewis, wrote the books in part to evangelize readers.

C.S. Lewis Co. director Simon Adley, holding the Narnia copyright, assured Lewis fans this spring that his estate would play a role in the new series, to avoid "exploitation of the books."

Weeks later, however, a HarperCollins strategy memo was leaked to the media that was less reassuring.

"Obviously, this is a biggie as far as the estate and our publishing interests are concerned," wrote an involved HarperSan Francisco executive. "We'll need to be able to give emphatic assurances that no attempt will be made to correlate the stories to Christian imagery/theology."

With the leaking of that memo, the fat was in the fire. Catholic, Protestant and agnostic commentators alike denounced the memo.

"The Narnia books are classics just because of their overarching Christian moral structure," chided Ottawa Citizen editorialist John Robson. Seattle University professor John G. West, co-editor of the C.S. Lewis Readers' Encyclopedia, fumed that "they're turning Narnia into a British version of Mickey Mouse."

Another commentator quipped, "The series will be just another amputee pretending it still walks on both feet." And newspaper letter-writers were generally "repulsed by the greed and blatant ignorance of HarperCollins and C.S. Lewis's estate."

Not everyone has been so alarmed by the publisher's plans, however.

"It's just the Harry Potter thing, and after all, they're just trying to make money," said Toronto writer Michael Coren, author of the biography, C.S. Lewis: The Man Who Created Narnia. "They'll have a hell of a job de-Christianizing Lewis, because his Christianity is so implicit — and so frequent. So what if they do? Anybody who likes the spin-offs will read Lewis himself. Anybody who likes the abridged version will go back to the original."

He cited the movie Shadowlands, starring Anthony Hopkins, which he said was another "de-Christianized version of Lewis."

"But so what?" he asked. "It didn't hurt anything, and it got more people reading him."

THE AUTHOR'S VIEW

When Lewis first began publishing his Narnia books in 1950, he apparently made no attempt to advertise their Christian motifs. Yet, in a 1954 letter, he wrote that the Narnia Chronicles began with the premise of the Son of God becoming incarnate as a lion in a different reality — a world with a "doorway" to 20th century Britain through a wardrobe in the attic of a London home.

Narnia's Christianity may be only implicit, but it is pervasive. In Volume 1, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, the Christ-lion Aslan gives up his own life to save a child who's turned traitor —- Aslan then returns to life.

In another volume, a boy turns himself into a dragon by dwelling on his resentments. When he then wishes to regain his friendship with the other children, Aslan leads him to a pool of water — baptism — where he painfully rips off his scales and frees the boy within.

And in the final volume, The Last Battle, the children take part in an Apocalypse — the End-time for the world of Narnia — mirroring the Bible's Book of Revelation.

Until the Harry Potter revolution in juvenile literature, the seven volumes of Lewis' Narnia series were the most influential children's books in the world, voted so by successive polls of parents, librarians and teachers, and by their sales: 65 million copies in 30 languages over 50 years.

In the last four years, however, British writer J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter books have sold 100 million in 42 languages.

The Potter books haven't cut into Narnia's market. They've greatly expanded it. HarperCollins' decision to extend the Narnia series was reportedly sparked by the fact that, once Pottermania really took off, Narnia sales rose 20%.

In a formal June 4 statement on its C.S. Lewis Publishing Program, the publisher says its goal is "to publish the works of C.S. Lewis to the broadest possible audience, and leave any interpretation of the works to the reader."

In a brief interview with the Register, June 12, HarperCollins executive Lisa Herling would first refer only to the June 4 statement: "The works of C.S. Lewis will continue to be published by HarperCollins as written by the author with no alteration."

Then when pressed to confirm whether there would be new Narnia books, written by new authors, she did say, "It is expected that there will be future books."

CREATING NEW CLASSICS?

Focus on the Family writer Paul McCusker, producing the Narnia books as radio plays, said, "I've been fascinated by the reaction to the news of the new Narnia books. I've gotten dozens e-mails from people wondering what's happening."

McCusker sees no problem in a publisher downplaying the Christianity in Lewis' own books, since Lewis himself "never made a big deal of it. … He was amused that kids picked up the biblical imagery quicker than adults."

And if downplaying it improves the marketability and broadens the books' exposure, so much the better, he said.

But writing new stories, shorn of his Christianity, is another matter. "Lewis's Christianity was integral to his worldview," he said. "How true could the new books be to Narnia, if they take that out? Could you trust any writer who'd do it?"

What can't be anticipated is the effect on the HarperCollins writers themselves, from immersion in the original, McCusker said. "You can pray there'll be something redemptive in the process of writing them."

Christopher Mitchell is director of the Marion E. Wade Center in Wheaton (Ill.) College, home of the Lewis archives. He said the new books will likely be, not sequels to the old plot line, but rather stories stuck in the gaps of the existing tales.

"Clearly, they're facing a great challenge," he said. "The minimum they'll have to achieve, to stay true to Lewis's intention, is to make good attractive, while not making the bad any less bad. It's always easy to create believable evil characters. Making goodness believable and attractive is hard. And the new books will be judged from the perspective of the classics."

Boston College philosophy professor Peter Kreeft said that the providential order, "the benign concern of a hidden God," distinguishes Christian fantasy from the pagan alternatives, like Harry Potter. The fantasy universe differs in detail, but not in principle.

"Good and evil, justice and injustice, loyalty and betrayal, life and death, these remain the same, no matter how different the fantasy world," Kreeft said.

Christian fantasy serves at least three purposes, Kreeft said: Human beings inevitably see the world through moral categories. The moral imagination, the lens of these perceptions, is inevitably shaped by stories, tales and myths. "False myths," where falsehood triumphs and evil brings happiness, are intellectual pornography, actively corrupting the young, said Kreeft.

The Harry Potter books are largely innocuous, Kreeft thought. If they have a problem, it lies not in the fact that their magic is demonic, but rather that it is so pedestrian and technological — concerned with things like baking cakes, traveling and playing pranks.

"Real" magic, the magic of Narnia and J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings, is "a beauty that can't be controlled," something that "we enter into," rather than simply use.

DAD'S VIEW

Catholic father-of-eight Paul Moroney said that he was first exposed to the Narnia books as a boy, read them again in college, and has read them aloud to his kids — when the books could be dug out of the bedrooms of the older kids.

"If the new books don't have a Christian message," Moroney said, "I couldn't see us going past the first one."

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

Joe Woodward. "De-Fanging C.S. Lewis: Will New Narnia Books Lose the Religion?" National Catholic Register. (July, 2001).

This article is reprinted with permission from National Catholic Register. To subscribe to the National Catholic Register call 1-800-421-3230.

THE AUTHOR

Joe Woodward is a Register correspondent. He writes from Calgary, Alberta.

http://www.catholiceducation.org/ar...rts/al0103.html

:explode:


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PostPosted: November 7th, 2006, 7:05 pm 
Istari
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that's hideous. there is (almost) nothing worse than other authors trying to write spin-offs, sequels or prequels of classics - they never ever get it right (the prequel to peter pan, for example, completely ignored a major part of hook's character). people should learn to leave well alone and cut out the blatant profiteering. grrr!

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PostPosted: November 7th, 2006, 7:34 pm 


It does not seem so much as a rumour. I am deeply mad about this article.


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PostPosted: November 7th, 2006, 8:09 pm 
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That's just stupid... you know it's things like these that really make me angry. That is someone else's work! Wanna write a fanfic for ur own enjoyment? Go ahead! But publishing?! That's NOT RIGHT. That is C.S. Lewis' work! I would it if someone stole my characters!!! *huggles Brendon, her alter-ego*

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PostPosted: November 7th, 2006, 9:38 pm 
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Why oh why oh why? I don't doubt that the authors they lined up are very talented, but are they C.S. Lewis? No they are not, therefore their efforts will not be Narnia.

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PostPosted: November 8th, 2006, 1:18 am 
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-I have a feeling that their attempt is not to replace Lewis' work, but to add to it in a way that is satisfying and true to the source material, but distinctly different. I have multiple books that are authorized companions to other classics, and they are quite good. Once again, I think they are going for a companion series, not sequels or prequels.

-How is this any different from the abridged versions, the color storybook versions, the free-in-your-cheerios versions that came out with the movie? No one is up in arms about them, and they are other authors summarizing and tweaking Lewis.

-I also have no objections to a less religious Narnia. You need to remember that these will be new books for a new generation, and our generation is much less religious that that of the 50's. The publisher probably thinks that fewer kids would buy the books if they were being touted as religious, which isn’t cool.

Besides, there is NO WAY they could remove all of the christian symbolism, there's just too much.

Wow, I sound rather evil. :lol: If they do get published I won't buy them, if only because I didn't really love the originals.

You're not all going to stab me to death, right? :blink:


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PostPosted: November 8th, 2006, 2:10 am 
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timtimtimtim wrote:
-How is this any different from the abridged versions, the color storybook versions, the free-in-your-cheerios versions that came out with the movie? No one is up in arms about them, and they are other authors summarizing and tweaking Lewis.


I didn't like those either. Yes, I'm a purist.

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Last edited by Firiel on November 9th, 2006, 4:01 pm, edited 2 times in total.

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PostPosted: November 8th, 2006, 2:36 am 
Istari
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^ i don't like the abridgements etc either. and i don't see why being religious should hinder a book in this day and age anyway. shadowmancer is even more blatantly religious than narnia if you ask me, and that did alright for itself.

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PostPosted: November 8th, 2006, 8:21 am 
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That's horrifying. That's all I have to say.

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PostPosted: November 8th, 2006, 12:22 pm 


I just dont want more Narnia books-just the plain old oringinal 7 ones.....


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PostPosted: November 9th, 2006, 1:51 pm 
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timtimtimtim wrote:
-I have a feeling that their attempt is not to replace Lewis' work, but to add to it in a way that is satisfying and true to the source material, but distinctly different. I have multiple books that are authorized companions to other classics, and they are quite good. Once again, I think they are going for a companion series, not sequels or prequels.

-How is this any different from the abridged versions, the color storybook versions, the free-in-your-cheerios versions that came out with the movie? No one is up in arms about them, and they are other authors summarizing and tweaking Lewis.

-I also have no objections to a less religious Narnia. You need to remember that these will be new books for a new generation, and our generation is much less religious that that of the 50's. The publisher probably thinks that fewer kids would buy the books if they were being touted as religious, which isn’t cool.

Besides, there is NO WAY they could remove all of the christian symbolism, there's just too much.

Wow, I sound rather evil. :lol: If they do get published I won't buy them, if only because I didn't really love the originals.

You're not all going to stab me to death, right? :blink:


Arrgh! :lightsabre: *stab, stab*

:P

Just teasing, you are complete entitled to your own opinion timx4.

As for me... no way Hosea. I'm not going to read them, and I don't care how good the authors are at imitating Lewis. It won't be the same; and I'm still too much in love with the old ones to be so easily taken aside.

As to the religious dilemma... Hear my laughter! I’ve got to say, that is the most insane debate, because if they took out EVERYTHING religious then there wouldn’t even be a Narnia. Narnia not only has many Christian-based theme’s; it also has MANY mythological hints in it. So... why take out only that which is Christian? What idiocy.

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PostPosted: November 9th, 2006, 4:24 pm 
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That is incredibly stupid! Who dare do such a thing! Does the world no longer have any respect for Lewis?!?! This is insanity I tell you! INSANITY!! :explode:

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PostPosted: November 9th, 2006, 4:36 pm 


Well...Im not sure if they are supposed to be 'offical novels' just little stories like, Susan and Lucy's adventures, Edmund falling in love and such like that. Abd adventures during King Frank's time. So...maybe..we shouldn't critise these books already.


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PostPosted: November 9th, 2006, 10:44 pm 
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Edmund falling in LOVE?!?!

Noooooooo... okay, now I'm not going to touch those books with a ten-foot pole!

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PostPosted: November 9th, 2006, 11:13 pm 


It cant be that bad..But Im praying and crossing my fingers that new ones or sequels will not be published.


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PostPosted: November 10th, 2006, 8:33 am 
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It's just a serious disrespect to the author. The way they are abusing his literature is what bothers me the most.

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