The Dawn Treader is the first ship Narnia has seen in centuries. King Caspian has built it for his first voyage to find the seven lords, good men whom his evil uncle Miraz banished when he usurped the throne. The journey takes Edmund, Lucy, their cousin Eustace, and Caspian to the Eastern Islands, beyond the Silver Sea, toward Aslan's country at the End of the World.
This was the third book written in The Chronicles of Narnia. It now stands as the fifth book in the series.
Don't miss any of the books in C.S. Lewis' classic Chronicles of Narnia series.
©1952, 1980 C.S. Lewis Pte. Ltd; (P)2003 HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.
"Great Classic"
I had read the books before, but to have them read to me while I drive was amazing. Great story with some good Bible based lessons. The lessons are not pointed out, but they are certainly there.
"Favorite Narnia book"
This was my favorite book out of all 7. I liked the shorter stories that went along with each adventure. I also liked how Eustace changes as the book goes on. The imagery Lewis creates is amazing, espcially toward the end.
"Another strong contender"
Imagine jumping from a room into a boat in a painting and joining the voyage of the Dawn Treader to the ends of the world. The adventures, the perils and the life lessons learned as well as the tests of friendship are superb. C.S. Lewis at his storytelling best!
"a grand adventure"
This is almost my favorite of the Narnia books. I love the episodic nature of the story as they travel from island to island, and the utterly different perils they face on each. The Lucy - Edmond - Eustace - Caspian combination is excellent. Eustace is quite annoying for the first third of the book, but he's redeemable.
Jacobi is an EXCELLENT reader of this tale. I only regret that he chose such a shrill voice for Reepicheep-- almost made my eyes water!
I highly recommend this book and this recording.
I'm not blind drunk, I'm just blind.
"A classic well-done."
Voyage of the Dawn Treader picks up presumably not long after thhe four Pevensies returned from Narnia at the end of Prince Caspian. While Peter goes to study with the famous Professor Kirk and Susan visits America with their parents, Edmund and Lucy are enduring an unpleasant stay with their disagreeable cousin Eustace Scrubb. Things get complicated whent he three children are suddenly sucked into a painting of a ship sailing one of the seven seas. They find themselves aboard the Dawn Treader, King Caspian's personal ship. Caspian reveals that he is on a quest to find sevenn Narnian lords banished during the reign of his tyranical uncle Miraz and return them to Narnia. While Edmund and Lucy are overjoyed to be back in Narnia, the pampered Eustace wants nothing more than to go back home. Will the crew of the Dawn Treader be able to complete their quest? And will Eustace drive them all crazy?
This was an excellent production. Derek Jacobi does a good job of bringing the various characters to life. About my only complaint? is his portrayal of Reepicheep, but since he's a talking mouse... Needless to say I couldn't put this one down.
"Voyage into Deep :Philosophy"
The Voyage of the Dawn Treader is a story for all ages, a marvelous adventure with deep philosophical and theological insights. I would have enjoyed this as a child. I enjoyed it at age 75. Fabulous story.
"always enjoy a great Lewis novel."
one of my favorites of the collection. a great book to listen to with the kids in the car as well.
"Love C.S. Lewis and the Chronicles"
Yes, all the stories are great for both young and old. They are humorous and full of life and imagination.
Eustace - He is so mean and nasty to start and changes throughout the story as he gets some real life lessons.
A great accent and just the right way of saying the humorous lines that C.S. Lewis puts in the story.
When Eustace turns into a dragon. Poor fellow, we weren't sure if he would get out of that fix.
You will love to listen to this series over and over.
"Continues where Prince Caspian left off"
Their is a gap of decades between 'The Magician's Nephew' (Book 1) and 'The Lion, Witch and the Wardrobe (Book 2). Between Prince Caspian (Book 4) and 'The Voyage of the Dawn Treader' is only a few years. This book keeps us with Prince (King) Caspian and explains more of what happened after the kids left in Book 2. It's a great gap filler to give us the details background of what happened in the short time between books. This book also points out that time in Narnia is slowing down to match our own. This book sets the stage for the remaining books.I won't give any spoilers. I will say that you need to read this book to understand that one of the kids will be left out of the rest of the books.
"Wonderful narrator, poor audio"
This was my second audiobook from audible.com, and I'm sorry to say I was quite disappointed. This is one of our favorite books, so we were eagerly anticipating this one for our driving trip. The narrator does a marvelous job, but the audio quality is such that we could not easily listen in the car. There was a great deal of background noise -- not really hissing or popping, but that kind of echoey white noise you sometimes get. The children were unable to understand and we kept having to pause and repeat what had been said. Very frustrating.