Lions, witches, magical wardrobes were set up during the Second World War. As their mothers wanted them to be safe, the four children had to be sent to live with Professor Kirk. One day, the kids decided to hide and seek at home and the youngest girl, Lucy found a hidden wardrobe inside. When Lucy was in the closet, she was in an unusual place. The closet got her full with snow. When Lucy started moving around, she met a small deer named Tumnus. He took her home.
Lions, witches, and wardrobes are one of the seven books of the Narnia national story and are most famous. Most of this book is in the magical country, Narnia, where the witch dominated the winter for 100 years. The closet is like a passage to this magical country. Lion, Aslan are guardians of the country of Narnia and will protect the four children from demonic witch to magical country of Narnia. A bear called Paddington is the first book to introduce Perkington's adorable bear. The whole story is about how they found him and how this polite and cute bear changed the life of Brown's family. Michael Bond has a wonderful job to create characters like Paddington Brown and teaches children a lot of good things.
Known as her white witch who governed Narnia, Jadis was the only enemy in the villain of Narnia, a lion, a witch, a wardrobe, and a nephew of the magician. In the lion, the witch, the wardrobe, she froze the warrior of Narnia and brought the winter of a century; she turned the enemy into a statue and killed Aslan on the stone table, but in the fight after the resurrection After being killed by. In the "scorpion of magician" she was magically sleepy in Charlie's death world, she was inadvertently taken to Victorian London, then she was sent to Narnia who stole the apple, I gave her an immortal gift.
Aslan, a great lion, is a lion of the same name as a lion, a witch, a magical wardrobe, his role in Narnia has developed in other books. He is also the only person in all seven books. Aslan is the lion speaking, the king of the beast, the son of the emperor of the sea. He is a wise, considerate, miraculous authority (including time and spirit), a guide to the mystery and kindness of human children, and guardian and savior of Narnia. C. S. Lewis states Aslan as a substitute for Jesus as a form in which Christ may appear in another reality.