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4.0 out of 5 stars THE HORSE AND HIS BOY by C. S. Lewis, February 4, 2011
This review is from: The Horse and His Boy (Paperback)
The Horse and His Boy (1954) is a children's fantasy novel, the fifth in C. S. Lewis's Chronicles of Narnia. Here, an adopted lower-class boy, a young, independent girl, and two Narnian talking horses attempt to flee from Calormen into Narnia; on the way, they get caught up in international political intrigue.

While Lewis wrote this book fifth, it takes place during the original reign of the Pevensies during the last chapter of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. The only reason for this chronological decision is so that Lewis can bring the Pevensies back in supporting roles, which he does (plus Mr. Tumnus). And it is nice to see them as adults, more mature but still distinctly the same characters.

I trust it will not be too great an affront to Lewis to say that this story reads like The Prince and the Pauper by way of Arabian Nights. Not that there's anything wrong with the story; it's well-told, but it doesn't feel particularly imaginative, and that's what separates the good Narnia stories from the great ones. The Horse and His Boy feels too much like Lewis took a number of trusty old story elements and gave them the Narnia treatment.

This is the only book in the series where children from Earth are not prominent characters (there's not much time spent in Narnia, either), and that alone gives The Horse and His Boy a different feel from the rest. But this isn't Lewis's best set of characters. Shasta is decent enough, but I feel like we've seen him before, in Twain and elsewhere. While the horses have their own personalities, they don't add much to the story. A highlight is Aravis (another character we've seen before), in whom Lewis has the strongest female character in the series. (Aslan, as usual, steals most of his scenes.)

Lewis offers lessons to be learned, of course. The most obvious theme is pride: the Calormenes are a prideful people in general, and several of the book's prominent characters have to learn to practice humility. Another is divine providence, which, thanks to Aslan, is present in all the books in a general way, but here is much more pronounced, culminating in Aslan explaining to Shasta how he has been present and involved at every key moment of the boy's life.

Some critics have pointed to The Horse and His Boy (as well as to The Last Battle) and cried "racism." In a book where most of the people who are good and right are light-skinned and the warmongering villains are dark-skinned, that's understandable, but, I think, taking it too far. Certainly Lewis has populated his other Narnia books with light-skinned enemies, and, while he has done Calormen in the style of the medieval Arab world and set this culture up as a rival to Narnia, there is nothing egregiously antagonistic on Lewis's part here, particularly since he portrays Aravis so sympathetically.

In short, while not Lewis's best, The Horse and His Boy is another quality adventure.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My Favorite Chronicle of Narnia, November 17, 2010
This review is from: The Horse and His Boy (Paperback)
This was not the first book I read in the Chronicles of Narnia, but the Horse and His Boy can stand alone on its own merit.(I think for chronological order it would have made sense to have started with The Magician's Nephew rather than The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe, but that is another matter.)

Shasta is a slave who doesn't wish to be sold, Aravis is Calormen nobility wanting to escape marriage to a man old enough to be her grandfather. Both are befriended in their time of need by talking horses who have been in captivity for years. The horses tell the children that in Narnia everyone is free--there is no slave class as in Calormen. So on to Narnia and the North!

Children will enjoy this story, but adults will be aware of the more subtle theme of the clash between worldviews. Absolute Monarchy vs. Limited Monarchy, East vs. West, slavery vs. freedom.
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The Horse and His Boy by C.S. Lewis (Paperback - 1977)
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