Perelandra

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Cover of Perelandra by C. S. Lewis 0007157169title:

Perelandra

author:C. S. Lewis
format:Paperback Buy Perelandra Now
publisher:Voyager
released:December 5, 2005
isbn:0007157169
isbn-13:9780007157167
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Customer Reviews

Great - Rated 5/5
This is the second book in C.S. Lewis's amazing Space Trilogy. This book was written as a sequel to the immensely popular Out of the Silent Planet but Lewis also wrote it so that the story can stand on its own. So if you haven't read the first you can start here.

This book takes place some time after the first, but we are not sure how long. Ransom has received a summons to Venus, a planet that is just beginning its inhabited life. This planet's `Adam' and `Eve' are on the planet and they must choose to obey God or to reject his law and face a `fall' as has happened on earth.

Ransom must face his old foe Weston, and try to save a planet from great evil. Can he navigate this watery planet; can he negotiate the intricacies of human weakness, temptation and corruption? Can he conquer himself and help others to learn obedience?

This is a great creation story. Try it - you won't be disappointed.


Beautiful but flawed - Rated 3/5
C. S. Lewis is said to have found "Perelandra" his favourite among his own books, and an improvement over "Out of the Silent Planet". Though a strong Lewis fan, I'm afraid I cannot agree. OOSP attempts one thing, and achieves it perfectly. Perelandra fails by being too ambitious.

"Out of the Silent Planet" is an almost perfect story. The description of Martian creatures and scenery is delightful, without the author having to ram home how terribly significant it all is; and the evil targeted for attack is limited, believable, and allowed to collapse under its own weight. (Ransom's translation of Weston's speech out of the Shavian-evolutionary into Malacandrian i.e. plain English is one of the funniest things I've read.) In Perelandra, on the other hand, the author is always TELLING you how beautiful everything is, instead of letting you find this out for yourself, and the appeal of every new fruit or creature is swept aside by its being used as the occasion for yet a further sermon on the nature of pleasure.

The central flaw is the problem of any writer in depicting evil: how do you make it obvious enough that it IS evil, but also account for its appeal? It is cheating, and ultimately self-defeating, first to depict the beliefs you dislike, and then to make them more obviously evil by adding a few extra unrelated vices. Weston (the devil figure in this book) is so plausible in his attempts to mislead the new Eve that Ransom does not know how to reply other than by physically removing him from the scene. However, Weston also amuses himself in his spare time by pointlessly mutilating frogs. This is of course explained by a further lecture on the banality of evil and its fundamental hatred of intelligence; but it is a grave tactical mistake, by the author as well as by the devil, as surely all Ransom needed to do was to show a frog to the lady. (In the same way, in That Hideous Strength, the Institute's programme as originally outlined by Devine is already bad enough, without adding gratuitous devil-worship.)

The odd thing is that no one knows these things better than Lewis. For the importance of letting the emotional situation speak for itself, see An Experiment in Criticism; for the blackening of villains by adding an inappropriate vice, see his review of Orwell's 1984. (That, incidentally, is where Brave New World scores heavily: the rulers there are not villains but entirely well-meaning, it is their beliefs that are gently shown to be disastrous.)

OK then, why so many as three stars? The language, as always, is wonderful. Lewis really is, in the words of Beachcomber's spoof review (obviously prophetic of Da Vinci-style tripe), "that rare thing, a writer who can combine breathless excitement with profundity of thought". The Lady's combination of innocence and majesty is perfectly done, and the consideration of the ways in which she does, and does not, need to grow up and of how Ransom's feelings for her are, and are not, sexual is suggestive and moving. The vision at the end is reminiscent of Dante. In showing how each thing in turn, by being utterly different, is in its own way the pivot of creation, it suggests an imaginative solution to the problem of creating a world that is both peaceful and interesting.

Not a book to miss.


The solution is violence and subjugation of women - Rated 2/5
Honestly, I was expecting a lot better from C.S.Lewis. Yes, he has a mastery of language, a way of describing Perelandra that makes you long to be there, but the rest...Behind the language lies a story that turns into preaching every other page, and the points that Lewis wants to make seems to be 1) Women is wrong to have ambition beyond homemaking. 2) When you can't argue your point with words, it is Gods' will that you go after your combattant with physical violence. 3) The wicked are eternally wicked, and so are in no need of mercy (Lewis is fond of predestination, too). I can't agree. In this book, far more than in others, it shows that Lewis is a writer from a, thank God, bygone era.

He does touch upon some more interesting areas, such as has been mentioned above (why was the forbidden tree there in the first place), the nature of evil as being petty rather than grand, and the insight that the fall comes from the desire of security, the craving for possessions. Had he developed those themes, it would perhaps become more interesting. Now, it is a sometimes very longwinded plod through oldfashioned ideas about women, violence and rigtheousness, illuminated in places by Lewis' mastery of descriptive language.


a fantastic tale of what could of happened - Rated 5/5
Perelandra is Adam and Eve all over again. And once again C S Lewis doesn't let us down. His genious overwhelms me. I devoured this book within a couple of days and I recommend you read it before That Hideous Strength and after Out of The Silent Planet.

Lewis focuses on Venus. Here Ransom appears again and is taken to the planet to stop the fall of the race. Lewis presents the case exceptionally well, with the idea that the test would determine whether the race would fall or whether they would move up to a higher state of being. I won't give away the ending, JUST READ IT! I highly recommend it.


Amazing, definitely an instant favorite. - Rated 5/5
Perelandra is an amazing book. After having just finished it, and digesting it, I came to the conclusion that the word "beautiful" seems shallow and crude in describing this book. Its imagery is very enchanting and exotic, and the storyline very gripping and, while intense and suspenseful, also very calm inducing: Lewis's descriptions of the planet Venus allow you to feel the purity, calmness, peace, and innocence of its setting while still appriciating the stakes at risk. I have read Out of the Silent Planet, and I loved it. But now it seems harsh in comparison to Perelandra. Most say the Space Trilogy is an allegory. I see it rather as a fictional extension to the history of the Universe as told in the Bible. It is a very stimulating and imaginative book. Get this one.

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