Who's your favorite character?

Who's your favorite?

  • Peter

    Votes: 67 15.1%
  • Susan

    Votes: 30 6.7%
  • Edmund

    Votes: 76 17.1%
  • Lucy

    Votes: 100 22.5%
  • Mr. Tumnus

    Votes: 30 6.7%
  • Aslan

    Votes: 122 27.4%
  • White Witch

    Votes: 20 4.5%

  • Total voters
    445
I voted for Susan because I think that she is a lot like me. We both like to think about things before we act. Besides that I think that Anna Popplewell is so cool! I have the Illustrated movie companion for the LWW and I love reading everything about Anna! She is so kind and thoughtful to everyone around her.:)
 
definitely lucy...
first of all, she's this cute and curious little girl at the beginning, but she became strong and brave ... i love her character =)
 
Favorite character: good question

I like them all in their own ways and I don't really have a favorite. But I voted for Aslan cause he's all powerful and without him no one would know the wonders of Narnia. :)
 
Favourite character

I prefer Lucy, because she is has the strongest feeling for Narnia (actually I don't know if "for" was the right preposition...there are too many English phrasal verbs...)
 
Edmund!

Because he has the hardest time out of the lot in narnia, and also because he has the most character development and is ( I think) more relatable than the others.
 
As a matter of fact, the character of Puddleglum should be studied by some Christians who are overly obsessed with "being positive." They are so frantic to keep everybody talking happy talk, that they DENY the existence of problems. The problems thus go undealt with. Puddleglum could show them that having an expectation of bad earthly events happening is NOT the same thing as having no faith for eternity.
 
Of course Puddleglum is not an ideal character across the board. He would benefit by becoming less pessimistic. But the message of his character is that even WITH the flaw of pessimism, a person may be more true to God than the "positive thinking" addicts will give him credit for.
 
Puddleglum 4ever!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! he is the koolest!!!! :cool:
I think mainly my least fav character is Susan because she is shallow especially by the seventh book and also she became like so many teenage girls i know who only think about how they look and what boys think of them which is really annoying when that's all they talk about. C.S Lewis did a realistic job on her but he could of done better.
 
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There's a seldom-seen short story Mr. Lewis wrote, called "The Shoddy Lands." It has nothing to do with Narnia, but it does cast light on what Mr. Lewis was trying to show us in the deterioration of Susan Pevensie. Politically-correct modern literary critics hate this story, because it dares to suggest that a woman might actually have faults, whereas political correctness insists that men and only men are to blame for all evil and stupidity in the world.


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Watch for Evening Star's new story, "SWEPT AWAY"--nothing to do with the Goldie Hawn movie by that name.
 
Evening Star is supposed to be posting his story sometime today. This is the fifteenth, isn't it?

And yeah, female superiority was THE theme of the overrated "Christian" movie "FIREPROOF." The wife in that story, which belonged on the Lifetime For Women cable channel, was given a free ride on purposely planning to leave her husband for another man, and never even had to apologize for it! Just watch the supposedly wonderful reconciliation scene: she DOES NOT admit to ANY actual wrongdoing on her part, but in her imperial superiority she "graciously forgives him."
 
As a matter of fact, the character of Puddleglum should be studied by some Christians who are overly obsessed with "being positive." They are so frantic to keep everybody talking happy talk, that they DENY the existence of problems. The problems thus go undealt with. Puddleglum could show them that having an expectation of bad earthly events happening is NOT the same thing as having no faith for eternity.

Excellant point, Copperfox. That's what I love about Lewis's best work, "A Greif Osberved."
 
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