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Narnia Books in Order
C.S. Lewis's seven Narnia books spark a famous debate: read them in publication order (starting with The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe) or chronological order (starting with The Magician's Nephew).
Narnia Books in Order โ complete list
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Why this order?
The Chronicles of Narnia is the rare series where the "right" reading order is genuinely contested, and both sides have a real case. The two contenders are publication order and chronological (story timeline) order, and the difference comes down to one book: The Magician's Nephew, a prequel that reveals how Narnia was created, where the lamppost came from, and why a wardrobe is a doorway between worlds.
Publication order follows the sequence C.S. Lewis released the books from 1950 to 1956, opening with The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. This is how the first generation of readers met Narnia, and it preserves the original sense of discovery. You walk through the wardrobe knowing nothing, then years later The Magician's Nephew rewards you by explaining the mysteries you'd quietly accepted. Many readers and scholars argue Lewis built those reveals on purpose, so seeing them spoiled up front weakens the magic.
Chronological order arranges the books by when events happen inside Narnia, starting with The Magician's Nephew (the creation) and ending with The Last Battle (the apocalypse). This is the numbering printed on most modern HarperCollins boxed sets, partly because Lewis once wrote in a letter that he didn't mind a young reader preferring it. It reads more like a continuous history, which some newcomers find clearer.
Our honest take: read it in publication order the first time to protect the surprises, then revisit in chronological order to enjoy the full timeline. If you love this kind of mythic, allegorical fantasy, try The Lord of the Rings by Lewis's friend J.R.R. Tolkien, or His Dark Materials by Philip Pullman for a deliberate counterpoint.
Timeline 1950โ1956
Every entry plotted by release year โ see the gaps, clusters and revivals at a glance.
Where to play it today
- Print and ebook from HarperCollins (bookstores, Amazon Kindle)
- Audiobook on Audible and Apple Books
- Library borrowing via Libby/OverDrive
Affiliate links (Bookshop.org for books, store links for games/films) slot in here.
Frequently asked questions
How many Chronicles of Narnia books are there?
There are seven books, written by C.S. Lewis and published between 1950 and 1956. They are sometimes packaged in a single omnibus volume, but it remains a seven-book series.
What order should I read The Chronicles of Narnia in?
For a first read, most readers recommend publication order, starting with The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, to preserve the surprises. On a reread, chronological order (starting with The Magician's Nephew) lets you follow Narnia's timeline from creation to end.
Why do the books have two different orders?
Publication order is the sequence Lewis released them. Chronological order follows in-story events. The Magician's Nephew is a prequel, so it comes last in publication order but first chronologically, which is the main source of the debate.
Which order did C.S. Lewis prefer?
Lewis never issued a firm decree. In a 1957 letter to a young fan, he said reading them in chronological order was fine and might even be better, but he wrote them in publication order, so opinions remain split.
Which book should I read first?
Start with The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe if you want the original experience, or The Magician's Nephew if you prefer to begin at the chronological beginning of Narnia's history.
Do I need to read all seven books to understand the story?
No single book requires the others, and The Horse and His Boy works almost as a standalone. But reading all seven gives you the full arc of Narnia, from its creation to The Last Battle.
Last updated · Sources: en.wikipedia.org, Wikidata
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