English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

7 answers

Children/Fantasy

2007-11-08 14:58:04 · answer #1 · answered by b_friskey 6 · 1 0

Fantasy

And this is for "robotrip"

On the subject of thinly veiled propaganda - take a close look at the Aragon books. You might as well say any good book with a powerful protagonist and a great message is Christian propaganda. As a matter of fact why don’t you. It would be fine by me…

2007-11-08 23:11:52 · answer #2 · answered by Ralph 7 · 2 0

I've always filed them under the "thinly veiled chritstian propaganda" genre.

But that's just me.

And to Mr. Ralph:
Firstly, the handle is robotripper, not robotrip. Secondly, The author of 'The Chronicles of Narnia' (CH Lewis, if memory serves) admitted that these books are nothing more than christian propaganda disguised as a children's fantasy, though I don't believe he used the word propoganda.

Also, thanks for taking the troll bait. Its fun to think of you, sitting in front of your computer and hiding behind your totally illogical religious beliefs getting all angry over this.

2007-11-08 23:03:08 · answer #3 · answered by robotripper989 2 · 0 4

At Barnes and Noble they are found under both Young Adult and Fantasy/Science Fiction.

2007-11-08 23:14:36 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Depending on where you look, they'd usually be considered children's fantasy. Sometimes they'd be categorized as religious.

2007-11-08 23:14:02 · answer #5 · answered by emily_brown18 6 · 0 0

Children's Fantasy. Almost fairy tales.

Classic books though.

2007-11-08 23:03:55 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

probably faantasy; adults can read them too, so they're not just children's books.

2007-11-08 23:02:30 · answer #7 · answered by cami344 4 · 1 0

fedest.com, questions and answers