Shelfari: The Site for Books & Readers
join now
|
sign in
|
help
Home
More
Books
Most Popular
Recent Edits
Subjects
Tags
Authors
More
Community
Members
Most Active
Groups
Most Active
Group Categories
Shelfari Blog
advanced search
Search
Books
Search:
Books/Authors
Members
Groups
Discussions
plan to read
reading now
I’ve read it
favorite
want to own
own it
remove book
Rated 0 stars
Choose your cover
Recommend this book
Should I read this?
Add/Remove from my group
Purchase
($11.70)
Tales Before Narnia: The Roots of Modern Fantasy and Science Fiction
(edit title)
Details
Readers
(14)
& Reviews
Discussions
Editions
(3)
Readers & Reviews
›
Editorial Review
In his acclaimed collection Tales Before Tolkien, Douglas A. Anderson illuminated the sources, inspirations, and influences that fired J.R.R. Tolkien’s genius. Now Anderson turns his attention to Tolkien’s colleague and friend C. S. Lewis, whose influence on modern fantasy, through his beloved Narnia books, is second only to Tolkien’s own.
In many ways, Lewis’s influence has been even wider than Tolkien’s. For in addition to the Narnia series, Lewis wrote groundbreaking works of science fiction, urban fantasy, and religious allegory, and he came to be regarded as among the most important Christian writers of the twentieth century. It will come as no surprise, then, that such a wide-ranging talent drew inspiration from a variety of sources. Here are twenty of the tributaries that fed Lewis’s unique talent, among them:
“The Wood That Time Forgot: The Enchanted Wood,” taken from a never-before-published fantasy by Lewis’s biographer and friend, Roger Lancelyn Green, that directly inspired The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe; E. Nesbit’s charming “The Aunt and Amabel,” in which a young girl enters another world by means of a wardrobe; “The Snow Queen,” by Hans Christian Andersen, featuring the abduction of a young boy by a woman as cruel as she is beautiful; and many more, including works by Charles Dickens, Kenneth Grahame, G. K. Chesterton, and George MacDonald, of whom Lewis would write, “I have never concealed the fact that I regarded him as my master.”
Full of fascinating insights into Lewis’s life and fiction, Tales Before Narnia is the kind of book that will be treasured by children and adults alike and passed down lovingly from generation to generation.
My Status
My Review
My Edition
My Tags
More to Do