What Parents Should Know
Parents need to know that there is some violence here, with
battles and beheadings with swords.
Families can talk about the symbolism of the story. What is the author trying to say about humans and government? About animals and nature? About the environment?
Common Sense Media Review
Once again Lucy is the heroine of heart and spirit, while
Peter is the hero of the sword. Edmund has learned his lessons
well, and is stalwart and kind, while Susan -- well, Susan
mostly grumbles, and one can see Lewis already setting up her
fall from grace, which occurs in the last book. The novel is
structured as two parallel, and eventually intersecting,
stories: one of Caspian escaping from, and rebelling against,
his evil uncle; the other of the Pevensies rediscovering a
Narnia that has changed a great deal in the centuries since
their last visit.
Second in the series, though fourth chronologically, PRINCE CASPIAN is an altogether simpler and more straightforward adventure tale than its predecessor, and far simpler than most modern fantasies. Gone, for the most part, is the heavy dose of Christian symbolism, replaced by a hodgepodge of mythological elements, including Bacchus and his Maenads, nature spirits, and a river god. The plain but very literary writing and simplicity of storytelling, combined exciting adventures and a moderate length make this book well-suited to middle-grade readers.
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