Mere  Christianity.  The Chronicles of Narnia.   The Great Divorce.  The Screwtape  Letters.  The Weight of Glory.  The  Problem of Pain.  A Grief Observed.   The Abolition of Man.  Outside of his memoir  Surprised by Joy, every book that I have read by C.S. Lewis has  been outstanding.  His fantasy is a classic of the genre and it is  recommended one reads Narnia at various stages of life to get  the full effect, his essays are excellent, Mere Christianity is  one of the more important and influential books in modern Christianity.   Why, then, did I hesitate for so long before starting the first volume of his  Space Trilogy?  Did I have some premonition?   Everything else has been stellar.  
 And then comes  Out of the Silent Planet.  I couldn't have been more  dissappointed.  It's the story of a man named Ransom who is out walking in  England when he meets a man he knew back in school.  The man, and a cohort,  knock Ransom out, kidnap him, and take him to another planet: Malacandra.   There Ransom escapes his captors and discovers various alien creatures and  learns about their culture (not humanoid at all) and tries to figure out what  exactly he should do next and where exactly he is.  Malacandra is far more  familiar than he would have thought, and the reader can probably guess early on  which planet we're talking about here.  
 Fairly simple story,  but it's all in the telling.  Lewis must have missed something that has  served him well in his other fiction, because I could not have been more weary  of this book.  The action is told in such a way that even when these big  events are happening (travelling to another planet, first contact with a  sentient alien race, speaking with a nearly divine creature), it feels like  nothing is happening.  I'm not sure how that could be.  Lewis  described creation in The Magician's Nephew and the end of  creation as we know it in The Last Battle, and it was  wonderful.  By the time I hit the fifth and sixth chapters I was simply  waiting for it all to end.  It didn't matter.  Thankfully this was a  short novel, otherwise I may have put it down without finishing, but I feel  bad.  I wanted to like this book, I like the work of C.S. Lewis.  I'm  sure somewhere in this trilogy there is a built in Christ story like the  Narnia books, but I don't think I'm going to find out.  I  can't imagine picking up Perelandra and trying to read  it.  There are plenty of books by Lewis which I haven't read and I'm  sure they are all far superior to Out of the Silent  Planet.  
 They'd have to  be.  
1 comment:
To be honest, I've only read two or three, actually more like 2 1/2 of the Narnia chronicles, and I didn't love them. It's hard for me to admit, because I love C.S. Lewis, and everybody raves about these books. The Great Divorce is one of my top five favorite books ever.
Even so...They feel to me like something he wrote that was....how do I say this? Outside himself? I don't know. Maybe it was the audience that they were focused at, and I am just past it. Whatever the case, this has thus far kept me from picking up 'Out of the Silent Planet', and this review hasn't helped to sway my decision!! =P
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