No - Only the first two books. The children all, as they grow and learn move on and never return - the books follow a decisive path for each of the "hero's" and the introduction and development of new "heros";
The books are therefore;
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy
Prince Caspian: The Return to Narnia
Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy
The Voyage of the Dawn Treader
Edmund and Lucy Pevensie, along with their cousin, Eustace Scrubb
The Silver Chair
This is the first Narnia book without any of the Pevensie children. Instead, Aslan calls Eustace back to Narnia together with his classmate Jill Pole
The Horse and His Boy
The story takes place during the reign of the Pevensies in Narnia, an era which begins and ends in the last chapter of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. A young boy named Shasta and a talking horse named Bree, both of whom are in bondage in the country of Calormen, are the protagonists. By "chance", they meet and plan their return to Narnia and freedom. Along the way they meet Aravis and her talking horse Hwin who are also fleeing to Narnia
The Magician's Nephew
This takes you to the origins of Narnia where you learn how Aslan created the world and how evil first entered it. Digory Kirke and his friend Polly Plummer stumble into different worlds by experimenting with magic rings made by Digory's uncle. They encounter Jadis (The White Witch) in the dying world of Charn, and witness the creation of Narnia. Many long-standing questions about the world are answered as a result. The story is set in 1900, when Digory was a 12-year-old boy. He is a middle-aged professor and host to the Pevensie children by the time of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe 40 years later
The Last Battle
This book chronicles the end of the world of Narnia. Jill and Eustace (from The Silver Chair) return to save Narnia from Shift, an ape, who tricks Puzzle, a donkey, into impersonating the lion Aslan, creating a showdown between the Calormenes and King Tirian. This leads to the end of Narnia, revealing the true Narnia to which Aslan brings them.
If you listen to what they say at the end of the second movie and book. Peter and Susan have learned all they can from Narnia and they are getting to old for Narnia.But if they make all the books into movies there charachters return in the Last Battle.except for Anna's charachter Susan because she no longer belives in Narnia and thinks it was a childish game the played.
false
I've read the books, and it says Prince Caspian will return, but not Peter and Susan.
Peter returns in the final book of the series, The Last Battle. In the Chronicles of Narnia, Susan does not return with the rest of the heroes because she had stopped believing in Narnia when they left this world for the last time (they were killed in a train accident). Whether she returned to a belief in Narnia and then made her own return to Narnia later is not known.
in the last Narnia peter, Lucy ,Edmund all die and susan lives because she refuses to go back to Narnia and forget all about naria
In "The Chronicles of Narnia" series by C.S. Lewis, none of the Pevensie siblings die during the events of the books. They all survive and play significant roles in the adventures and battles that take place in Narnia.
Anna Popplewell plays the older Susan in the Narnia movies.
No, after Prince Caspian Susan never goes back to Narnia. The other 3 Pevensie children return in The Last Battle, but Susan doesn't because she is no longer a "friend of Narnia." Whenever the others talk about Narnia, she laugh and says how good their memories are to remember that game they used to play.
The surname of Lucy, Edmund, Susan and Peter is Pevensie, sometime spelt Pevensey.CS Lewis took his inspiration for their surname, as well as for Cair Paravel in the Chronicles of Narnia, from Pevensey Castle in England.
The four main characters from "The Chronicles of Narnia" are Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy Pevensie.
No!
Anna Poppelwell played Susan in The Chronicles of Narnia.