Jill and Eustace are flung into Narnia one second before (in our world) they end up in a trauin accident. Lucy, Digory, and Polly are with them. Edmund and Peter are waiting on the platform, and get hit bu the train, die, and go to Narnia.
That's hard to do in one sentence, but here goes.........The Last Battle describes the "twilight of the Gods" in Narnia, the end times, when the Narnia's last king fights and loses the last battle as Narnia comes to an end.
Actually, in The Last Battle, everyone dies. It is an allegory for Armageddon and the end of the world. The beauty of the story is that noble beasts such as Jewel rejoin Aslan in the new, recreated world.
Peter was in the end of the book, but he was not one of the main characters in the plot.
Because at the end of the book, Narnia is destroyed.
At the end of the Battle of Arithmetic in "The Last Battle," the four men who are still alive are Peter, Edmund, Lucy, and Eustace. They are among the last remaining characters from the Chronicles of Narnia series, having participated in the final battle against the forces of darkness. Their survival symbolizes hope and the enduring spirit of Narnia as they transition to a new, brighter existence.
Susan is not present in the last Narnia book, "The Last Battle," because she has become obsessed with trivial and materialistic things, losing her faith in Narnia and Aslan. This ultimately causes her to no longer be included in the story's conclusion.
He brings her to Narnia after their voyage to the end of the world. He marries her then. You find this out in The Silver Chair.
Aslan tell Susan and Peter that they are too old to return, and that they have learned everything they can "from this world". It is time for them to move on, to find who Aslan is in their own world.
The setting in C.S. Lewis's "The Last Battle" primarily takes place in the kingdom of Narnia as it faces its final days. The story unfolds in various locations within Narnia, including the stable, Cair Paravel, and the Great Hall, among others. The overall atmosphere is one of impending doom and a sense of closure as Narnia's fate hangs in the balance.
No. In The Last Battle, Lewis recounts how her two brothers and Lucy are killed in a railway accident and enter Narnia for the final time. (From there they enter Aslan's land. heaven). Susan is not with them, and in the book is said to "no longer be a friend of Narnia". Lewis experts have lively discussions about what ultimately happens to her. Here's what Lewis says in a letter to a young child"The books don't tell us what happened to Susan. She is left alive in this world at the end, having by then turned into a rather silly, conceited young woman. But there's plenty of time for her to mend and perhaps she will get to Aslan's country in the end... in her own way."
At the end of The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe (chronologically the first book) Edmund does indeed become a king of Narnia. However, he is never THE king, as Narnia under the Pevensies has two kings: Peter (the High King) and Edmund (just king), and after that Narnia has moved on with new monarchs, and, indeed, dynasties.
NO. She doesn't end up with anyone. All the children except susan die in the last book and go to "heaven" aka Narnia