By The Voyage of the Dawn Treader (third to be written), the Narnia lore is much less messy than this volume or The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. However, it is less messy than the lore of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. As this was the second one to be written, the lore is still messy, and a lot of elements of it are borrowed from ancient mythology. There is a twist at the end (not a major twist, and not a stupid twist either). Those expecting a richer and more layered story will be disappointed in the Narnia series, especially this one. The story here is a lot simpler than that of the others. The lack of blatant allegory does not make this book any worse (or any better) than the other ones. If you want a less Christian story about Narnia, this is the book for you. This theme also does not have to apply to Christianity. (I didn't even notice it until I looked it up). In the other ones, it is pretty easy to spot Christian allegory. This one has a theme of religious corruption and restoration. This one still has Christian content, but it is much subtler than it is in the other ones. Most of the Narnia books have pretty blatant Christian allegory. Though it was published second, this is actually the fourth book in the Narnia series.
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