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  • This is a story about Peter, Susan, Edmond, and Lucy, siblings who live in England during

  • World War II. They discover a wardrobe and by entering it, they are transported to a

  • magical world called Narnia.

  • Narnia is ruled by the White Witch, an evil sorceress who keeps the world in eternal winter.

  • However, a prophecy tells that four humans will take down the Witch. Knowing this, the

  • White Witch convinces Edmond to bring his siblings to her.

  • The group is taken in by beavers and learns that Aslan, a mighty and powerful lion, is

  • back in Narnia, ready to restore order. Scared, Edmond runs away from everyone and decides

  • to visit the White Witch. When he gets there, he is punished for not bringing his brother

  • and sisters.

  • Peter, Susan, and Lucy eventually meet Aslan and an army is summoned.

  • Edmond is rescued from the White Witch, but because he is a traitor, he technically belongs

  • to the White Witch. Aslan and the White Witch make a deal so that Edmond can stay if Aslan

  • is sacrificed.

  • The White Witch kills Aslan and she takes her army to finish off Aslan's forces. Aslan

  • comes back to life and revives the stone statues at the White Witch's castle.

  • The White Witch and her forces are defeated in battle and Aslan appoints Peter, Susan,

  • Edmond, and Lucy as the kings and queens of Narnia.

  • In the end, after years of living in Narnia, the group stumbles back into trees and reenters

  • the normal world as they were as children.

  • While the previous book in the Narnia series focused more on the allegory of Creationism,

  • this story focuses heavily on the allegory of Christ and the cruxifiction. It's Aslan,

  • the innocent, who must die for the life of Edmond, the guilty.

  • As Aslan is approaching the Stone Table where the White Witch waits, the tone in his voice

  • is similar to that of Christ in the garden of Gethsemane. He is reserved and nervous,

  • not quite the lion that readers have known him to be. However, since Aslan knows that

  • no innocent blood can be spilled on the table, he is confident that he will be resurrected.

  • One of the interesting aspects of the story is how time works in Narnia compared to the

  • real world. In Narnia, the children grow up to be kings and queens, living a good numbers

  • of years into their adulthood. Yet, when they are drawn back through the wardrobe and reenter

  • the real world, they appear as children, as if time had never moved forward.

  • This speaks highly of how children view time. Because of a child's limited life experience,

  • time seems longer than it really is. This is probably why a five minute timeout can

  • seem like an eternity for misbehaved children, and a few seconds in a wardrobe can feel like

  • a lifetime in another world.

  • The story is also a study into forgiveness in the context of family. Edmond betrays the

  • others early in the story, yet they are willing to forgive him. This shows that even though

  • an individual within a family acts selfish and prideful, there is always an opportunity

  • for forgiveness if both parties are willing to work things out. It takes courage to forgive,

  • both from the receiving and giving party.

This is a story about Peter, Susan, Edmond, and Lucy, siblings who live in England during

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