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Narnia's Mysterious Reading Orders Explained: The BEST way to read Chronicles of Narnia! 

Into the Wardrobe
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7 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 582   
@OlgaFyodorova
@OlgaFyodorova Год назад
Wow, I was just thinking about introducing The Chronicles of Narnia to my 9yo son, and I was thinking that starting it with The Magician's Nephew wouldn't work too well - and then I see this video of yours! Myself, I remember getting these books gradually, and I definitely read The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe first. Then I think I got the sequels to it. The "prequel" (The Magician's Nephew) and the "spin-off" (The Horse and His Boy) were harder for me to read and like. I missed the Pevensie children. But I was already enchanted by Narnia, so I read these too after all. The Last Battle was also hard for me, but as I grew, it became one of my most favorite ones. So yeah, I'm definitely giving my son the books in the publishing order - and maybe waite a little before The Magician's Nephew. Thanks. Liked and subscribed :)
@braydengraves4655
@braydengraves4655 Год назад
Everyone I know who read the Magician's Nephew first also stopped there. Kind of sad, really, that the number leads people to start there.
@marblemunkey
@marblemunkey Год назад
Surprised that he didn't mention it, but I remember discovering that "The Horse and his Boy" is literally the story told to one group of children around a camp fire in (I'm pretty sure) Prince Caspian.
@OlgaFyodorova
@OlgaFyodorova Год назад
@@marblemunkey Wow, I didn't know that.
@selenedm999
@selenedm999 Год назад
@@marblemunkey I think it's in the Silver Chair, but I'll have to check.
@maxzomick8733
@maxzomick8733 6 месяцев назад
If he doesn’t read the magicians nephew he won’t know how the wardrobe to Narnia the professor or any of it came to be . Start with magicians nephew - that is the first book in the series . Might as well start Harry Potter on book 2 Or starting the lord of the rings with the two towers . Yea still enjoyable - but no idea what is happening besides immediate story . Really what would be the point in that ?
@Alejandroigarabide
@Alejandroigarabide Год назад
I personally recomend reading the Narnia books the same way I recommend watching the MCU and Star Wars movies. Release order for the first time, and chronological for future marathons.
@Eric_1991
@Eric_1991 Год назад
Very logical. Enjoy the mystery first, then when you know what happens, enjoy it as a whole
@tytebben
@tytebben Год назад
I read magicians nephew first since I haven’t read any books but only seen the movies
@tytebben
@tytebben Год назад
And I’m on waredrobs now
@kennethlau8990
@kennethlau8990 Год назад
Jokes on you, I read it chronologically!
@Alejandroigarabide
@Alejandroigarabide Год назад
@@kennethlau8990 Which saga is IFT?
@limesquared
@limesquared Год назад
1) Lucy and Tumnus are meant to be our introduction to Narnia and it makes it more interesting if you don't know who Professor Kirke is. 2). The lamppost is less magical if you put it in chronological order.
@IntotheWardrobe
@IntotheWardrobe Год назад
Spot on.
@creativewritingcorner
@creativewritingcorner Год назад
Truth.
@anonymoussaga8723
@anonymoussaga8723 Год назад
And Lucy and Tumnus meeting again in Aslan’s Country is a far more satisfying ending if the story begins with them meeting under the lamppost.
@NarnianTerabithian
@NarnianTerabithian Год назад
@@anonymoussaga8723 Amen! 😃
@johnmcafee6140
@johnmcafee6140 Год назад
I couldn't agree more. The reveal of who Professor Kirke was in the Magician's Nephew blew my 12 year old mind. I can't imagine having that spoiled right from the start.
@kennethlau8990
@kennethlau8990 Год назад
Not really ... Just like how Bilbo Baggins is an old hobbit in LOTR
@trueedge2097
@trueedge2097 Год назад
Yeah it's not that big a deal. What you have when you read chronologically is a bigger perspective of the world and its players. Honestly, when I read publication order, Magician felt like a tacked on prequel. It didn't have to exist in my opinion. Chronologically order handled all of that
@Psychohistorian303
@Psychohistorian303 Год назад
That's a great reveal. But the real reveal of the book is that SPOILERS... Aslan IS actually Jesus Christ from the human world, not merely an extension or allegory. That is central to the entire series and the question really hinges on whether the reader would be better served learning that early and seeing the whole series in that light or having it revealed at the end.
@kennethlau8990
@kennethlau8990 Год назад
@@Psychohistorian303 Yes, I know, Mr Obvious.
@eliotreader8220
@eliotreader8220 Год назад
I read my Brother's copy of the Magician's Nephew during 2021 during a bad case of the Covid blues because I was missing the books that I had to leave with my dad back in 2019. this might sound a bit silly to the person reading this. I read the book again last year after my Grandma had passed away back during the Queen's 70th event. surprisingly the part where Digby helps his mum out with the apple that he brought back from Narnia felt very similar to how I helped my Grandma finish reading the new book that my brother had brought for her. by reading it aloud during her final sickness. she couldn't read it herself as there was no power left in her arms.
@zanyzander
@zanyzander Год назад
I was randomly gifted Prince Caspian for a birthday as a child, not knowing anything of Narnia, so that was my first entry. I then read LW&W. I really enjoyed that order as Narnian history was even more of a mystery, and the book opens with Prince Caspian being told tales and myths about the "old Narnia". So I was prepped to discover more. And though the Pevensies had been there before, this was now a different Narnia centuries later so they too were pining for the old Narnia. It made it all beautifully nostalgic. And I discovered Narnia through Prince Caspian's eyes, as he discovers the true Narnia. The ending where all the trees come alive and Aslan appears and the jubilant romp through the streets was so beautifully impactful.
@EloSportsTalk
@EloSportsTalk Год назад
This sounds SO COOL
@IntotheWardrobe
@IntotheWardrobe Год назад
Yes, I can see how this would be a wonderful read.
@leimikaelson
@leimikaelson Год назад
It was the same for me!
@zanyzander
@zanyzander Год назад
@@leimikaelson oh wow!
@tomhollis2685
@tomhollis2685 Год назад
I read them in publication order and stand strongly by that. The wonder of Narnia opened up before me, in a way that the chronological order can't duplicate.
@kennethlau8990
@kennethlau8990 Год назад
Nah! It literally stated that Professor Lewis prefers chronological.
@liljade53
@liljade53 Год назад
@@kennethlau8990 but, wasn't order of publication the way they were presented to readers in the first place, and doesn't it make sense that they all have a special attachment to the way in which Narnia was revealed to them?
@kennethlau8990
@kennethlau8990 Год назад
@@liljade53 Depend on what you mean by "special attachment": 'cause some folks like me do chronologically.
@richardkenan2891
@richardkenan2891 Год назад
I think the argument is kind of silly, honestly. There are probably "wrong" reading orders for the Narnia novels, but neither publication order nor chronological order is that. They're both great ways to experience Narnia.
@IntotheWardrobe
@IntotheWardrobe Год назад
Did you watch the video? That's why I said the "BEST way to experience Narnia for the first time.". I do believe one is better than the other in this case.
@Julibeansreads
@Julibeansreads Год назад
Having seen the Narnia movies so many times as a child, I read the books for the first time last year in chronological order and I felt like it was perfect that way for someone who already “knew” the story!🦁
@michaelkelleypoetry
@michaelkelleypoetry Год назад
Having already read the story is one thing. This isn't about re-reading, but first time reading. I read LWW first when I was a kid, and then Magician's Nephew second, and then from that point chronologically. I think the only reading list should be Lion first, and then any order one chooses after that. Reading Magician first messes with the experience because of Lion easter eggs Lewis puts in at the end of Magician. But the other books don't really have the same kind of connections. In fact, if one has already read The Horse and His Boy before one gets to The Silver Chair, it's a better experience. Even though Lewis wrote Chair first, he puts in a line, 'If you have read a book called 'The Horse and His Boy'" and if one has it gives one a good feeling.
@Julibeansreads
@Julibeansreads Год назад
@@michaelkelleypoetry I see that. This was my first time reading the books, I had only seen the movies. Maybe I’ll try reading them again this year in publication order
@magra453
@magra453 Год назад
I first read the books in publication order. Years later I read them in the order of timeline. I really prefer the publication order. There’s a satisfaction of revisiting Jadis after The Silver Chair. Also, the pleasure of seeing the beginning of Narnia, right before the ending of the Narnia that we thought we knew.
@roberthofmann8403
@roberthofmann8403 Год назад
Some people think the Lady of the Green Kirtle is Jadis but I don't think that's what you are referring to. You meant The Lion, The Witch And The Wardrobe, not The Silver Chair, didn't you?
@magra453
@magra453 Год назад
@@roberthofmann8403 I did mean The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. Rather, I meant that following after The Silver Chair, it was great to revisit Jadis. The Lady of the Green Kirtle is a fantastic villain, but she still doesn’t compare to the White Witch.
@braydengraves4655
@braydengraves4655 Год назад
The Lady of the Green Kirtle is Jadis's decendant... I think. I can't remember her backstory very well, if I'm not just making it up in my head, that is. Either way, Jadis is the White Witch.
@selenedm999
@selenedm999 Год назад
@@braydengraves4655 There's not much back story given for the Lady of the Green Kirtle, except that she's a "Northern witch," and she k!lled Rilian's mother, then when he went looking for revenge, she bewitched and kidnapped him. There is a lot of speculation that she's related to Jadis, and the fan theory is that she's some kind of water spirit gone bad (because of her proximity to water), but there's not a lot of canon back story about her.
@braydengraves4655
@braydengraves4655 Год назад
@@selenedm999 That would explain why I don't remember much.
@MollyOKami
@MollyOKami Год назад
I prefer to read them chronologically, but I _ALWAYS_ recommend new readers start with *The Lion, The Witch, & the Wardrobe* until they feel comfortable reading the other stories. Then, I suggest they go back and read them chronologically. It's like when I introduce people to video games, books, anime, movies, or music. As much as I want to get them into the classics, I want them to enjoy them on a "surface level," first, things they're more likely to enjoy,, so it's more welcoming to those not familiar with the medium. If you START with the really "geeky" stuff, newcomers are either bored or intimidated.
@kotadawndragon
@kotadawndragon Год назад
For first time readers, yes the reading order matters. Since I've read the entire series dozens of times, the reading order doesn't matter much to me. I read whichever book I'm in the mood for. However, if I'm talking to someone who has never read the books, I always recommend starting with The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe, then Prince Caspian, The Dawn Treader, and The Silver Chair. Then only read the other three if they are interested in more of the series.
@user-bs9hm8zw9n
@user-bs9hm8zw9n Год назад
The 7 stories are all compiled in one, thick book for me. As a kid I couldn't even think of cheating with the reading order. I agree The Magician Nephew should be read near the end since it reveals who Jadis, Aslan and the professor are, and introduces us not only to the creation of Narnia but also to the existence of other worlds. I discovered Chronicles of Narnia with The Lion, The Witch And The Wardrobe first so thankfully I wasn't spoiled.
@Laura.K.
@Laura.K. Год назад
I fell in love with them, reading them for the first time in the chronological order. Honestly Magician's nephew is my favorite, I actually cried whilst reading it.
@IntotheWardrobe
@IntotheWardrobe Год назад
That's beautiful. You might appreciate my video on the life of Digory! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-4fSAoydlFJs.html
@DamonNomad82
@DamonNomad82 Год назад
I was blessed to be old enough to read the books in publication order. The big change to the order came when I was 12 years old, so I already had a boxed set of the books that numbered them in that order. The set shown at 3:08 look exactly like the ones I had. Sadly, paperbacks don't last forever, especially when owned by a young kid who reads and rereads them constantly, as I did, so that set fell apart before I finished high school. My current copy is a single-volume, omnibus edition that is unfortunately ordered in the "new" way. That said, I have my own reading order: I start with "The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe", then read "The Magician's Nephew", "Prince Caspian", "The Voyage of the 'Dawn Treader'", and the beginning of "The Silver Chair" until the point that Jill and Eustace, as guests at Caer Paravel, hear the tale told of "The Horse and his Boy", switch to that book and read it all the way through, go back and finish the rest of "The Silver Chair", and finish off with "The Last Battle".
@jacquicoder7160
@jacquicoder7160 Год назад
I bought the books as a set and they are in chronological order. I became aware of the controversy shortly after I bought them and created a list of the published order so I would know how to read them. It made sense to start that way but now it really doesn't matter to me. My husband read the series in chronological order and prefers it that way. To each his own, I guess. Thanks for sharing your thoughts with us, always appreciate your insight.
@TheBeginningOfWisdom
@TheBeginningOfWisdom Год назад
Couldn’t agree more. Just finished reading the series to my children, in publication order, and they were blown away by all the reveals in Magicians Nephew.
@johnnzboy
@johnnzboy Год назад
I'm glad I'm not the only middle-aged man who still loves hearing about these books. Great channel!
@roberthofmann8403
@roberthofmann8403 Год назад
The Lion, The Witch And The Wardrobe Prince Caspian The Voyage Of The Dawn Treader The Silver Chair The Horse And His Boy The Magician's Nephew The Last Battle That's the order they were published and that's the way I read them for the first time 31 years ago. I think that was before someone put them in chronological order. I always figured he just wrote them in the order he thought of them.
@kennethlau8990
@kennethlau8990 Год назад
The Magician's Nephew The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe The Horse and His Boy Prince Caspian The Voyage Of The Dawn Treader The Silver Chair The Last battle
@tomklock568
@tomklock568 Год назад
Great video...I would agree that the publication order is the best way to go. But the Magician's Nephew is a great way to go back and start over with. It really ties so much together. Thank you for the video!
@jonathanbrewer7072
@jonathanbrewer7072 Год назад
Highly impressive. Arguably the definitive study of the much debated reading order. This is my order : LWW MN LWW HB PC DT SC and LB. ( Yes, LWW twice so we don't miss the magical moment when Lucy steps through the wardrobe into Narnia - one of the greatest moments in literature.) Congratulations to Stuart and the team.
@veronicaclarke7499
@veronicaclarke7499 Год назад
I first read them as a kid in publishing order (the 70s) and when I started giving them to my nephew I kept to the same order. I honestly hadn't given much thought to which way is 'better' but you've made some very good points.
@floridawoman
@floridawoman 11 месяцев назад
I agree that publication order is the best way to read the books. Although it was over 40 years ago, I still remember how exciting and magical it was to discover the origins of a world I had already fallen in love with.
@proanimali
@proanimali Год назад
Thank you! I have been debating the order in my head, but what you said makes perfect sense, so I will continue to read the books in the "right" order as I did the first time 50 years ago.
@kennethlau8990
@kennethlau8990 Год назад
The right order is chronological.
@HJohn-xn9ub
@HJohn-xn9ub Год назад
@@kennethlau8990, only if one is so mentally challenged that they can’t comprehend the long-standing literary concepts of foreshadowing and flashbacks! (Of course we can always make allowances for those who are too slow.)
@kennethlau8990
@kennethlau8990 Год назад
@@HJohn-xn9ub Excuse me? Are just trying to be an a-hole?
@charlessapp1835
@charlessapp1835 Год назад
The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe definitely needs to be read first. Overall, I would agree with publication order for the first time. Afterwards, I like chronological order.
@SaltySirenFloriduh
@SaltySirenFloriduh Год назад
I read them for the first time in ‘98 and my set started with The Magician’s Nephew. I only recently found out there are different ways to read them. Glad to randomly find this channel!
@karisgranger6013
@karisgranger6013 Год назад
Interesting topic. I'm usually someone who likes reading things in chronological order. For example, I'm reading the Hobit before the Lord of the Rings. But actually, I watched the Lord of the Rings before the Hobit, and my first interaction with Narnia ever was watching The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe (the old BBC version because the modern ones hadn't come out just yet). I actually now think it makes more sense to read The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardobe first, before the Magician's nephew. I listened to the Magician's nephew on audiobook (Focus on the Family dramatized version which is amazing btw), and I started connecting all these dots and it was much cooler to find out the origins for Narnia once I already knew what Narnia was. And the Lion is a much better first introduction to Narnia because you really don't know anything about it. You're learning just as the kids are and it feels like you're going through it with them. Aslan is a mystery, the white witch is a mystery, the origins of Narnia are a mystery. When I have kids I'm gonna introduce them to the Lion the witch and the wardrobe first.
@mayalackman7581
@mayalackman7581 Год назад
When it comes to LOTR and The Hobbit, it's at all analogous to the Narniad. The Hobbit was published in the late 1930s and LOTR was published in the early 1950s, so for The Hobbit/LOTR publication order and chronological order are the same, though admittedly Tolkien made significant revisions to the Hobbit after LOTR came out to reconcile contradictory elements of their plots (in particular the chapter Riddles in the Dark was almost entirely rewritten).
@twiceborn_by_grace
@twiceborn_by_grace Год назад
I’ve only seen the movies and I forget which one this is in but I love when Aslan breathes one the kids and tells them of someone like him who exists in their (our) world and time.
@heyrob-net
@heyrob-net Год назад
That's from "Voyage of the Dawn Treader". Here's how it reads in the book: “You are too old, children,” said Aslan, “and you must begin to come close to your own world now.” “It isn’t Narnia, you know,” sobbed Lucy. “It’s you. We shan’t meet you there. And how can we live, never meeting you?” “But you shall meet me, dear one,” said Aslan. “Are-are you there too, Sir?” said Edmund. “I am,” said Aslan. “But there I have another name. You must learn to know me by that name. This was the very reason why you were brought to Narnia, that by knowing me here for a little, you may know me better there.”
@jenniedarling3710
@jenniedarling3710 Год назад
​@@heyrob-netI love this quote and like the way The BBC adaptation has this as it's written in the books.
@ndeming5801
@ndeming5801 5 месяцев назад
I love this quote!
@jamesonstalanthasyu
@jamesonstalanthasyu Год назад
I will always be a publication order for Lewis and Tolkien, and I recommended it that way to my new readers. Even with the movies. And that quote about how he wrote each book without knowing if another would follow is the way it should be. It led to a complete story in each book, and not wasting space to a future book that just drags a story out.
@AndrewCarlisle11B
@AndrewCarlisle11B Год назад
Great video Stuart! Being new to the books I'm glad I've read them in the publication order as it's helped me to better understand and appreciate the stories. Keep up the great work!
@IntotheWardrobe
@IntotheWardrobe Год назад
Welcome to the team, Andrew! Glad you have you aboard!
@NarnianTerabithian
@NarnianTerabithian Год назад
ABSOLUTELY beautiful! 😇I loved how you explained that. 🥰 Now, I have been a Narnian for quite some time and have read these books multiple times before, but after hearing about the BEST way to read them, I started to reread them, and boy, a BRAND NEW perspective and appreciation for them has lifted for me. Thanks again, my fellow Narnian!
@whovian809
@whovian809 Год назад
I'm loving these videos! I just was cast as Edmund in a stage adaptation of LWW. I'm rereading the books and watching your videos to refresh my knowledge of the lore! It's been awesome!
@joshuadesautels
@joshuadesautels Год назад
It's clearly meant to be read in release order.
@gustavramirez2891
@gustavramirez2891 Год назад
Not necessarily - they can be, but don’t have to be. I know someone who read through them for the first time chronologically I loved them, while also not being lost.
@cameronnebe
@cameronnebe Год назад
Thanks for saying so well what I have been saying for years! All the mysterious and fantastic reveals are destroyed if you go in the new order. I first read them in the publication order and I can't imagine my introduction into that world not having the mystery of a wardrobe and lamp post and snow and aslan and everything going on as it was shown there. But now I want to read them again!
@RaeBehrs
@RaeBehrs 5 месяцев назад
I tried starting with The Magicians Nephew as a child and never finished the book or went on with the series. Now I am planning to revisit them as an adult and read them out loud to my children. We will definitely be following publication order. Thank you!
@thomas35835
@thomas35835 Год назад
I fully agree with your reasoning here. As a kid my fist introduction to Narnia was through Magicians Nephew and I remember that once I got to Lion, With and the Wardrobe I remember being kind of disappointed. Everything there reads like the first introduction to Narnia but I didn't feel the sense of mystery and joyful discovery what the book clearly tried to achieve. It really was mostly through the first film that I rediscovered the feeling.
@lauraa1345
@lauraa1345 Год назад
Another amazing video, Stuart! I personally read the chronicals of Narnia for the first time last summer but in chronological order. Therefore I'm very thankful for this video cause without it I probably never would have considered reading it in the order it was published 🌟
@IntotheWardrobe
@IntotheWardrobe Год назад
My first read was Chronological too. :-) I still loved it, by the way!
@lauraa1345
@lauraa1345 Год назад
@@IntotheWardrobe oh really? I loved it too and I'm sure I'll read them many times :)
@ethansutphin9988
@ethansutphin9988 Год назад
Fantastic video!!! I remember picking up a copy of The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe off the floor in my older brother's room and have fallen in love with these books ever since. Sad thing was we didn't have Prince Caspian until I got the collection of all 7 books for the Promotion of 2005's LWW. Ultimately, publication order is the best for new readers, but I would encourage for returning readers to read them "Chronologically" at least once.
@tayloredwards4968
@tayloredwards4968 Год назад
My gateway into The Chronicles of Narnia was the Disney. Years later I found out about the books and check them out. I actually checked them out in the wrong order. I started with a Chronicles of Narnia first I didn't know that the magician's nephew was first. I actually had to look it up to find the right order.📚
@Silverfur
@Silverfur Год назад
When I first read The Chronicles of Narnia, it was in publication order. And I would recommend that order for anyone reading for the first time. But I have also enjoyed reading them in chronological order, sometimes even reading A Horse and His Boy before the closing chapter of The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe.
@katiewhitfield9186
@katiewhitfield9186 Год назад
I am so glad I'm not the only one who reads Horse and His Boy before the closing chapter of The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe.
@tashamoore2373
@tashamoore2373 Год назад
I can't say enough- I first read the Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe- and THEN the magician's nephew- and that was a shock that really hit me hard and I still smile when I think about my reaction! I enjoyed it that way and wouldn't change it!
@raynitaylor1912
@raynitaylor1912 Год назад
I got both versions. The Publishing Order was the one I was gifted as a pubescent child. Later, when looking for a newer set I found the Chronological Order set. Matter of fact, just recently got my hands on the 50th anniversary hardback.
@christineheminger7762
@christineheminger7762 3 месяца назад
For me (and many others, I think) Wardrobe was my introduction to the series-book, tv, movies. It’s hard to hold on to the magic when it’s done a million times. It becomes-“Well, in this version they changed this,but did a pretty good job with that”. With the others, my imagination and the talent of the narrators of the HC audiobook series made them so much better. It makes sense to me to read/listen to them in the order that they happened in Narnia
@LyleFrancisDelp
@LyleFrancisDelp Год назад
No anger here, but I shall continue to fully believe that the original order is best for reading. I didn't read the series until high school, when a pastor's wife suggested it. When I came to the Magician's Nephew, I was introduced to the back story in way that gave me such great insight and made the allegory all the more powerful. The sense of wonder and discovery one gets when one reads the Lion, Witch, and Wardrobe first is fully paid off when one gets to the Magician's Nephew.
@isaacmapes
@isaacmapes 8 месяцев назад
I read the books for the first time all the way through this year and read them in publication order instead of chronological order. It was a really cool experience. I got them for Christmas in a box set and they started with The Magician’s Nephew so I switched them around to fit the publications order.
@eidolon1809
@eidolon1809 Год назад
I agree completely with your arguments for the publication reading order! As it happens I read "The Magician's Nephew" first, but purely by accident. This was around 1970 --- I came across it in my school library and I didn't know about any of the other books. It wasn't until later that I got the complete set, and I found that much was explained that had been confusing about "The Magician's Nephew" the first time around.
@theresamusser4390
@theresamusser4390 3 месяца назад
I have read the books many times and will do so many more times. To me, The best/only way that really seems to makes sense, is to read them the same order as C.S. Lewis imagined, composed and released/published them. The way that he revealed details and gave us things to wonder about are best learned as he saw them, wrote about them and revealed them to us in that order. I feel that something magical is😢 lost otherwise.💗
@alexmalcolm6309
@alexmalcolm6309 Год назад
I remember reading The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe first after borrowing a copy from the library. Sometime after that I got a box set of the whole series for Christmas and ended up reading the rest in chronological order. It wasn't until years later that I discovered the original order
@mikelarsen5836
@mikelarsen5836 Год назад
In the great scheme of things, it doesn't matter if you go by chronological or publication order. The important thing is the books are read. Sometimes I dip into the series randomly. The pleasure is always there!
@jasonrodgers880
@jasonrodgers880 Год назад
This is an ongoing conversation I have with anyone who listens. I even took my box-set and renumbered it to the "correct" order. Still trying to get my kids to enjoy them as much as I did growing up. Excellent vid!
@kennethlau8990
@kennethlau8990 Год назад
Congratulations, you've made Lewis spin in his grave! Just kidding, but in all honesty, just please let the kids read in chronological order, OK?
@jasonrodgers880
@jasonrodgers880 Год назад
@@kennethlau8990 no. Because I’m not insane. But thanks for your input. 😉😂
@kennethlau8990
@kennethlau8990 Год назад
@@jasonrodgers880 I didn't say you were insane.
@jasonrodgers880
@jasonrodgers880 Год назад
@@kennethlau8990 I know. I was joking.
@johno2655
@johno2655 Год назад
I bought my set pre-1995 and I'm proud to say they're in the original publication order 👍
@jonathanbrewer7072
@jonathanbrewer7072 Год назад
Stuart's work is the most impressive, comprehensive, thoroughly researched, insightful, on the on the world beyond the Wardrobe.
@ADGZone
@ADGZone Год назад
I need to get my hands on all the books
@yunogasai1338
@yunogasai1338 Год назад
I first experienced narnia through the lion, the witch, and the wardrobe in fifth grade as a read along. I got a giant compilation with the white witch from the movie with the 'chronological order for Christmas as a child shortly after.I read through it in early high school after I felt I could tackle it. The way it was ordered made it something to trudge through rather than fully enjoy. A couple years ago I received a box set from the 70's for my birthday. It was heavily used but I found the publication order to be much more enjoyable. My favorites are the lion the witch and the wardrobe, voyage of the dawn treader, and the silver chair. I finished my read of that set early last year and came away far more satisfied. It's truly a beautiful series and I'm glad I walked through the wardrobe again. '
@andrewmiller6051
@andrewmiller6051 Год назад
This is the best presentation of this topic that I’ve seen. Most articles, although agreeing with the conclusion, emphasise only reason 3, that “some lines don’t make sense chronologically”, which is by far the weakest reason in my opinion.
@helsalightstone1344
@helsalightstone1344 15 дней назад
I was introduced to Narnia with the wardrobe, but when I started reading the books I absolutely loved the chronicle order and my teenage heart wondered why you would read them "out of order" but there are always good reasons to do it "out of order"
@Saw_Squatch
@Saw_Squatch Год назад
I inherited the set of Narnia books my grandfather read to my mother so when I was read them as a kid I was introduced to Narnia through the original publication order and truthfully it makes the most sense to me both as an adult and most importantly as a child who was being read to
@monkeymajor128
@monkeymajor128 Год назад
This is the one and only order! My husband just recently decided to read them to my kiddos. He has only ever read Lion witch & wardrobe before. I told him firmly that publication order would be the only allowed way to introduce our children to Narnia. I will hide Magicians Nephew if I have to. Reading that first would take all the fun out of the book, and you will miss the join of freaking out when you feel all cool knowing things. I have to admit watching my whole family discover my beloved world of Narnia has been so fun and I’m excited for them to explore it even more. ( They are finishing the last chapter of Prince Caspian as I type)
@loftus4453
@loftus4453 Год назад
This was my favorite book series as a kid. I wore out some of the books from reading them so often. Can’t believe I found a whole channel devoted to this series! ❤😊
@justinacarothers2699
@justinacarothers2699 11 месяцев назад
I read them starting with the Lion, the Witch, & the Wardrobe. My set didn't even come with the Magician's Nephew & knew nothing about it. So it wasn't until I introduced My children to Narnia in the 90's that I read it myself. It just put all the missing pieces in place for me. So when my 8 & 6 year olds read them. I reread them myself. I was so tickled to listen to their thoughts & understand of Narnia & Aslan I was so impressed with their questions & their personal explanations of it all. And I definitely knew which of my children had a greater grasp on their personal relationship with their maker & which one 100% thought it was all a marvelous fantasy with no hidden meaning behind it all. It was not as I would originally have expected. Who knew you could learn so much reading the classic's along side your children! Still one of my all time favorite stories that I will buy for each of my grand children as they turn about 8. Only one has reached that age so far. So excited for it to all be read again ♡
@mjgirard3381
@mjgirard3381 Год назад
This! I have spent the last decades skulking around eBay, and used bookstores/flea markets/yard sales picking up the original order collections for the kids in my life-and keep a few on hand for emergencies.
@matthewmccann9932
@matthewmccann9932 Год назад
I only just got around to watching this and I grew up with the original order and I wanted to thank you because the publication order is definitely better for first timers, I've had multiple friends only be able to manage to get into the books by following my advice to start with the Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe
@freddie3222
@freddie3222 Год назад
There does need to be more Narnia because just through the books already written there are so many more stories to tell the one I'm most interested in is how the white witch returned and took over Narnia after her exile. I'm working on fan fictioning this story so far IV called it Winter of the witch
@doryinsanime6862
@doryinsanime6862 11 месяцев назад
I love your reviews about all the Narnia books learning about the world,characters.
@NostalgiaBrit
@NostalgiaBrit Год назад
The very _first_ time I read them to my son, I read LWW first, then PC, VTD, SC & LB, with MN being _last,_ to tell him how it all began. Ever since then, we read them _chronologically._ We alway skip H&HB, because we both hate it; I tried reading it to my son, but didn't even get halfway through before he begged me to stop & skip ahead to PC. So, for us, our _current_ reading order is: *1. 'The Magician’s Nephew'.* *2. 'The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe'.* *3. 'Prince Caspian'.* *4. 'The Voyage of the Dawn Treader'.* *5. 'The Silver Chair'.* *6. 'The Last Battle'.*
@elf1384
@elf1384 Год назад
I had read the books in publication order and then in chronological order. I have enjoyed reading them regardless of which way to read them. Lewis has been there for me since I was about 6 years old when I was first introduced to the series when the BBC series came out on PBS and then when I grew older I read the books. I love how you explain the order of the books and Lewis's explanation. It's an interesting take on how to read books. Keep up the good work, my fellow Narnian! 😃🦁
@MrKneeV
@MrKneeV Год назад
I have read the series many many times, and I have read them in all three orders. I agree with you 100%. Reading them in the publication is absolutely the best way to read them.
@michaelwarner8316
@michaelwarner8316 Год назад
My first copies of the novels were those I purchased in England in 1971 when I was 12. They were presented in published order (no numbers on the spine but a statement on a page before the title page). Your argument is spot on.
@IntotheWardrobe
@IntotheWardrobe Год назад
Amazing. Do you still have those copies?
@michaelwarner8316
@michaelwarner8316 Год назад
@@IntotheWardrobe I had to replace PC and TLB some years back after loaning them to a friend who didn't care for them as I did, and the replacements are from Penguin Books as well to maintain the authenticity ;).
@mender722
@mender722 Год назад
I have listened to the dramatized versions and audio book versions so many times I have lost count. I might be a little obsessed. I have tinnitus and listening to something as I go to sleep sees to help. It also helps that I really like the stories.
@mender722
@mender722 Год назад
I have been doing this on and off for over 20 years.
@zacharyclark3693
@zacharyclark3693 Год назад
I tend to find with stories that skip around chronologically (Narnia, Middle Earth, or even Star Wars) the publication order is best for new audiences. Experiencing the story as it unfolded, sometimes out of order, recreates the experience that fans experienced.
@urahara64360
@urahara64360 5 месяцев назад
The lion the witch and the wardrobe was my only introduction to the series for years. I am still working my way through the books for the first time.
@thirdplanet4471
@thirdplanet4471 Год назад
This series was first introduced to me back when the movies came out and I was hooked. I loved the first film, saw a bit of the second, and saw the all of the third. Sadly, I didn't know that there were books until I heard about the magicians nephew on youtube. I looked it up but the audio readings weren't complete. Later on I found and read a copy of dawn treader on my mission. Anyway, thanks to this video I think I can finally read and finish off this series.
@wendyvermette9095
@wendyvermette9095 20 дней назад
Several years ago I was able to purchase the unabridged book of Narnia. It was written in chronological order and as you've just said perhaps it should be different. It makes a lot of sense what you're saying because after starting with the magician's nephew I already know where the lamppost comes from. I will be reading the entire book again soon for two reasons. The first reason is because I want to take the Bible with the book and make a list to put into the book of Narnia all the references that come from the Bible. The second reason I want to read this again now is because I will be starting with the lion the witch and the wardrobe and I will be putting the Magicians son the next to the last book to read.
@jacobbeezer3603
@jacobbeezer3603 Год назад
Dang just changed my mind and got me to subscribe with one video. I was all for chronological until the part about aslan being mentioned in wardrobe and I remember listening to the book when I was a kid before I knew magicians nephew existed. It was kinda a mind blowing book experience that I want other readers to share.
@IntotheWardrobe
@IntotheWardrobe Год назад
Lol, so happy we could win you over! Thanks for sharing!
@JudeMichaelPeterson
@JudeMichaelPeterson Год назад
I had the old order growing up and that is the best way to read them in, my opinion, except for the Horse and His Boy, which I feel is pretty standalone and can easily be inserted anywhere into the order. The Horse and His Boy is by far my favorite.
@smileywolf
@smileywolf Год назад
I completely agree that for someone discovering Narnia for the first time, the publication order is best. But as a long time lover of Narnia, when I go back, I love reading the story in chronological order.
@misseli1
@misseli1 Год назад
I read them in the most random order, but luckily I started with The Lion, the Witch, & the Wardrobe. After that, I read them as an English teacher of mine lent me copies of the different installments. The second book I read was The Magician's Nephew, followed by The Horse and his Boy, The Silver Chair, and finally The Last Battle. I don't think I read Prince Caspian or The Voyage of the Dawn Treader until last year, (when I was in the midst of reading them in publication order for the first time), and when I did I absolutely loved them!
@fr.jeremiahcaughran6191
@fr.jeremiahcaughran6191 Год назад
I agree with publication order. I used to drive my wife mad when I would rearrange our box set into publishing order. But it all goes back to finding an old box set my brother had with them in publishing order long before I ever read the books. I only knew a few bits about the Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. Yet that chance encounter with my brother’s books led me years later to read them in publishing order despite those nice and tempting numbers on the set I was reading. It leaves the world in a place of utter discovery because you are simply thrown into it and left with questions that must be answered.
@BellaDelilahWho
@BellaDelilahWho Год назад
Just found your channel. I believe that I first saw the series on television. Then a substitute teacher read (Lion, witch and the wardrobe) and I was hooked to reading. I then got the whole series and read them 1-7 first then did I discover 1 and 3. These were my first real books I read and I couldn’t stop after that.
@gigchingo1999
@gigchingo1999 Год назад
OMG, THANK YOU! I hated, hated, HATED the short-sighted and ignorant decision to re-order this series. You elegantly articulated all of my objections with this - including the loss of "wonder" by putting Naria in chronological order. We recently found a copy of the series at my mom's house. I re-ordered it before giving it to my niece.
@ricdiaz3721
@ricdiaz3721 Год назад
I Love This Series You Should Do More Videos of Inside The Wardrobe Please 😊❤😊😊😊😊❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ Just Talk About Narnia we Love These Episodes I Just Love This Channel Thank You Ricardo .
@hummingbird7548
@hummingbird7548 Год назад
Reading Magician's Nephew 2nd to last is SO magical it has forever changed the way I read Genesis! As they flew over the world and saw places where history hadn't happened yet but yet we knew - we have foreknowledge - of what is to come! I imagine that as God sees our modern continents arise from the waters of the flood, he sees the small ledge of passageway where the Battle of Thermopile will be fought. He sees Europe and its history. Where China will arise and the path Marco Polo will take. I never would've had that perspective without encountering Narnia the way we encounter our world. We're born here, and live a lot of our childhood before we ever consider how it began. And then, to have MN right before The Last Battle! Just amazing to see Genesis to Revelation so close together! I imagine that to God, our Genesis and our Revelation will occur in just a few minutes. Without reading them in publication order, I would've never learned so much about OUR world.
@LindyLime
@LindyLime Год назад
Great breakdown! But my favorite part was at the beginning when you mentioned that in Narnia we find a world more real than our own. ^-^
@sarahtonen4873
@sarahtonen4873 5 месяцев назад
We read LWW first as part of a book club, then as soon as we were done we found the BBCs Focus on the Family version of MN, then straight through from HB to LB in the traditionally numbered order. We loved doing them like this because it made the discovery of Professor Kirke and the lamppost and even Jadis seem exciting. Because HB was also audio book, it went quickly and we were back with the Pevensies quickly. Infact LWW was theonly one we originally read, all the rest was audio book. Now this year, because my children loved Narnia so much we are doing the Narnia curriculum Further Up Further In. The curriculum creator recommended reading all the books in traditional order not the publishing order and she does discuss the alternate possibilities. If you homeschool and love Narnia, I couldn't recommend this curriculum more. Also, I want to recommend a much more recent book A Place To Hang the Moon, it's a Narnia inspired fanfiction about Evacuees. It makes an excellent companion book. Just subscribed to your channel. I really love it. Thank you for your hard work and inspiration 😊
@CassieLopez
@CassieLopez Год назад
Thank you! Finally I heard someone explaining so very well all the objections I have to the chronological reading order, and the beautiful crafting of the saga in the publication order. I was horrified the first time I saw the Narnia books on shelves in the bookstores with the numbers in chronological order. And it kept going for years and years with nobody fixing the obvious mistake. Thank you thank you for making this video. I'll be sharing it a lot!
@drfill9210
@drfill9210 Год назад
Lion witch and wardrobe is a loving fantasy to a niece. I'm not dissing the other books, just highlighting the care in which it was written. The mysteries were there to enthral the reader. The other books were mostly an explanation to those who were interested, and further fan fiction. Lion is a stand alone book. Read that on its own and you'll do just fine without reading the others. I never even considered reading them chronologically and am surprised people do
@envee1014
@envee1014 Год назад
Your channel has been very enjoyable and useful since I stumbled upon it a few months ago, so thank you. Besides a reminder of the Chronicles’ details and a nostalgic reminder of my childhood 25 years ago, your videos also make me happily anticipate reading them again with my own children in a few years. Discussing these books’ subtle (okay, kid-level subtle) theological lessons with my children will be an intelligent gateway into the next level of understanding Christian virtues and actions.
@yahccs1
@yahccs1 Год назад
Well explained, thanks! I read The Lion the witch and the Wardrobe first as I didn't know there were any others until I saw someone at school reading the Voyage of the Dawn Treader, which got me intrigued, so I had them almost in publish order - I think it was Wardrobe, Prince Caspian, Voyage, Silver Chair or Magicians Nephew, the Horse and his Boy and Last Battle. But since then I have re-read them in chronological order, which works if you already know the story, but I'd agree the order to discover them is the same as the order in which the Pevensies and Eustace and Jill discovered Narnia. I also think reading the books before seeing the films is much better than the other way around. If you see movies first you can't get their images out of your mind when you read the books (especially Harry Potter!). Reading the books first gets your own imagination working (helped by simple illustrations). PS There is a wood in our town with an old lamppost like the one in Narnia! I thought there was one somewhere in Oxford too... I know some parts of Oxford feel like you're in another world or another age! It was funny today a friend mentioned Narnia because I had randomly picked a Narnia ambient music video yesterday on RU-vid and had been thinking about it. Funny this one came up tonight!
@Luv2Dnce4
@Luv2Dnce4 Год назад
The white-covered boxed set is what my brother-in-law bought me for Christmas (when I was in fourth or fifth grade). I’ve read both the publication order and the chronological order. I’ll always prefer the former. Even knowing all the twists and reveals… I would never watch the last few minutes of a twist-ending movie to better understand the plot.
@IntotheWardrobe
@IntotheWardrobe Год назад
I'd love to get my hands on that set. The artwork is so wonderful!
@TheNerdstalgicPodcast
@TheNerdstalgicPodcast Год назад
See i read the magicians nephew first and still found the riddle of the lion the witch and wardrobe intact and the rest of the books made beautiful sense to me, being able to see the beginning of Narnia and the end, it all made sense to me and i never felt lost and enjoyed it and appreciated it
@IntotheWardrobe
@IntotheWardrobe Год назад
Yes! I read chronologically my first time as well, and I also enjoyed it. Still, I think the pleasure of the surprise connections in MN would have been even greater if I had read the publication order, don't you agree?
@doryinsanime6862
@doryinsanime6862 11 месяцев назад
I love reading all the books and listening to all the books and learning about life and characters,world. This amazing,interesting.
@sandybeach123
@sandybeach123 5 месяцев назад
I like the choice of art used in these Narnian videos.
@TheoWadeFraser
@TheoWadeFraser Год назад
Hey dude, I’ve been looking for this video, once I realised it wasn’t already made I began waiting for it. Glad it’s finally out. Thank you for this channel. Big props to you ❤
@heyrob-net
@heyrob-net Год назад
Funny, even though I often fight for the publication order for first time readers, I always reread in chronological order. But you can also see Mr. Lewis' progression in vision over time. In the "Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe", Mr. Lewis implies that the magic has something to do with the house: "It was the sort of house that is mentioned in guide books and even in histories; and well it might be, for all manner of stories were told about it, some of them even stranger than the one I am telling you now." But in "The Last Battle", the portals and rings barely matter. It's just the will of Aslan.
@IntotheWardrobe
@IntotheWardrobe Год назад
Great point.
@kennethlau8990
@kennethlau8990 Год назад
No, chronological is better. It's awkward if TSC breaks off to a bunch of prequels before the last book.
@LittleJordanFarm
@LittleJordanFarm Год назад
Well done. Praying for you
@MysticaFaery
@MysticaFaery Год назад
I read them chronologically but with a 15-year break between books 6 and 7. I had been told that book 7 is "everyone just loses, he hates on Susan and it is terribly sad" so didn't want to pick it up s a kid. Truly selling the book and its meaning short! Was positively surprised by it as an adult. As an aside, I was waiting way too much for Chekov's torch to appear in the later books as an ancient artefact of King Edmund to save the day.
@ravenlord4
@ravenlord4 Год назад
Christopher Nolan read them in reverse chronological order as a child. And, well, the rest is history . . .
@spidersoldier1039
@spidersoldier1039 Год назад
I read the series mostly in the published order. I started with Wardrobe and went from there skipping the horse and his boy until I read the silver chair and realized the horse and his boy happened between Wardrobe and Caspian. I found that I liked the horse and his boy best out of all seven books. I read the magicians nephew next and lastly the last battle. As this channel points out, I loved putting all the pieces together after I read the magicians nephew after having read the other books before it.
@andrewceglio7549
@andrewceglio7549 Год назад
I've read them both ways, publishing order and chronological, and I agree. The publishing order is the way to go. Great assessment, great video.
@kennethlau8990
@kennethlau8990 Год назад
No, chronological FTW. It's called the CHRONICLES for a reason.
@manaman9625
@manaman9625 Год назад
The magicians nephew was actually my favourite of the series and I’m positive it was my favourite only BECAUSE I had read all the other ones before it
@hanagara1907
@hanagara1907 Год назад
When I was a kid, my mum read these aloud to me in publication order and my opinion now is that is the proper order, we need to CARE about the world before we go back and see the origins. Not only that, while chronological may make sense to some, to me it makes sense to see the very beginning before the very end
@Nasalkeihpos
@Nasalkeihpos Год назад
I always start with the Magicians Nephew. I really enjoyed knowing the things the children didn’t, such as why the white witch was who and how she was, or how come Lamppost glade exists. Yes, there’s bits where the narrator expects the reader not to know bits, but overall it helped me appreciate the other books more. But as a reader who likes ‘the horse and his boy’ best, I’m likely to be in a minority here 🤷‍♀️
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