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The last battle lewis
The last battle lewis







the last battle lewis

(Please note: I'm not a expert in Christian/Lewis in particular's theology this is my impression primarily from the text of the book.) Lewis's comments on her being in a particularly silly phase of life? Or was Peter merely unaware of Susan's current mental state when he stated that she's no longer a friend of Narnia (given that he couldn't exactly visit earth to see how she was handling the whole thing)? But, if that's the case, how do we account for C. Why did she apparently persist in that even after the death of all of her siblings on the same day? Why didn't that make her reconsider, and why doesn't the book note her reaction to the event? This seems like a highly abnormal reaction to that kind of a personal tragedy at a minimum. The fact that the book refers to that in the present tense implies that Susan still felt that way (even after the train crash). The book merely mentions that she was no longer a friend of Narnia, and that she was in a particularly silly phase of life where she only cared about parties. In The Last Battle, several of Susan's close relatives (including all of her siblings) were killed on the same day in a train crash.









The last battle lewis