At the end of C. S. Lewis's The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
, Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy assume their rightful thrones
as Kings and Queens of Narnia. Lewis dedicates only one sentence
to describing how they governed during the Golden Age of Narnia,
but it is interesting to hear his summary of their most important
accomplishments.
Lewis tells us that they “made good laws and kept the peace and
saved good trees from being cut down and liberated young dwarfs
and young satyrs from being sent to school and generally stopped
busybodies and interferers and encouraged ordinary people who
wanted to live and let live.”
It is interesting to note that the first item of business after
keeping the peace and protecting the environment was abolishing
school! Narnia is thus the first kingdom where home-schooling
is not only encouraged, it is required! But I think Lewis was
talking less about the institution of school and more about what
was being taught there. And when it came to what was being taught,
Lewis thought that stories made all of the difference.

Lewis begins The Voyage of the Dawn Treader with a memorable
introduction of a new character: “There once was a boy named Eustace
Clarence Scrubbs, and he almost deserved it.” In introducing us
to Eustace, Lewis believes the best way for the reader to understand
him is to know the kinds of books he read. “He liked books if
they were books of information and had pictures of grain elevators
or of fat foreign children doing exercises in model schools.”
In other words, he didn't have time for the types of stories that
Lewis adored — stories about heroism, knights and talking animals.
As a result, Eustace is at a significant disadvantage when he
first arrives in Narnia and finds himself in a dragon's lair.
“Most of us know what we should expect to find in a dragon's lair,”
Lewis writes, “ but, as I said before, Eustace had read only the
wrong books. They had a lot to say about exports and imports and
governments and drains, but they were weak on dragons. ”
The situation worsens when the dragon begins to stir: “Something
was crawling. Worse still, something was coming out of the cave.
Edmund or Lucy or you would have recognized it at once, but Eustace
had read none of the right books.”
Reviving Literary Reading
Clearly Lewis is telling us something about more than dragons
and talking mice. He is giving us a simple instruction: You are
what you read. We are shaped and influenced by the books that
we read. They prepare us for more than interesting conversations
— they actually prepare us to face real crises that we encounter
in life. Few people would dispute this simple statement, so let's
ask a simple related question: What are we reading today?
The short answer is: Not much. A few years ago, the National
Endowment for the Arts released a report entitled “Reading at
Risk.” Many people here are probably familiar with its findings,
but allow me to repeat the headline: For the first time in modern
history, less than half of the adult population now reads literature.
The decline is across all races, all education levels, and all
age groups. While this may come as a surprise to young people,
the decline is the most pronounced in their age group. In just
twenty years, young adults have declined from being those most
likely to read literature to those least likely.
The report went on to show that the decline in literary reading
strongly correlates to a decline in cultural and civic participation.
Literary readers are more than twice as likely as non-literary
readers to perform volunteer and charity work, nearly three times
as likely to attend performing arts events, and nearly four times
as likely to visit art museums.
Before you begin to think that this is limited to highbrow events,
literary readers are even substantially more likely to attend
sporting events than non-literary readers. And before you begin
to think that the group of people making up literary readers is
a group of Luddites that has sworn off electronic media, the report
found that literature readers still managed to watch close to
three hours of television each day!
In other words, people who find time for Law and Order can still
find time for Crime and Punishment .
The report concludes on a rather somber note: at the current
rate of loss, literary reading as a leisure activity will virtually
disappear in half a century. This decline will not be reversed
by any one solution. In fact, it will require a number of innovative
ones from a number of different groups.
The Genesis of Walden Media
Cultural restoration, Russell Kirk said, begins at home. Certainly
the same is true of literacy. And in today's media-saturated culture,
I dare to say that it may also begin at the movie theater.
Walden Media was started several years ago by myself, Cary Granat,
and Phil Anschutz. We wanted to create a company dedicated to
recapturing imagination, rekindling curiosity, and demonstrating
the rewards of knowledge and virtue. All of our films would be
based on great books, great people, and great historical events.
They would be made by the best talent in entertainment and they
would all be linked to educational materials developed by some
of the best talent in education. We were taking Henry David Thoreau's
famous advice — to march to the beat of a different drummer —
to Hollywood, which is why we decided to name our company after
Thoreau's most famous book, Walden .
In launching Walden Media, our greatest challenge was in identifying
the stories that we wanted to bring to the screen. We did not
want to waste our time making films out of “the wrong books” that
Eustace Scrubbs wasted his time reading. So rather than turn to
the usual parade of agents and Hollywood producers, we launched
an unusual campaign that continues to this day. We enrolled in
as many educational conferences as we could find. We spoke to
tens of thousands of teachers and librarians and asked them what
books they most enjoyed teaching and recommending.
After seven years, the only thing that seems odd about this strategy
is the fact that our company is the only one doing it. After all,
who knows stories better than teachers and librarians?
I still remember when we first received a letter from a teacher
in Philadelphia recommending a book called Holes . We paid little
attention to it until the following week, when we received dozens
more like it. It seems the teacher decided that she wanted to
lead the class in an exercise of persuasive writing, and they
decided that they would attempt to persuade us to make a film
out of their favorite book. The students were quite persuasive,
and we went on to make Holes as our first feature film. It became
a great commercial and critical success.
Our teacher and librarian friends introduced us to a whole new
world of authors and books that publishers like to classify as
“young adult” literature. But we were surprised to see that the
books — while accessible to a younger audience — were every bit
as profound and meaningful as the books I had read as a literature
major in college. The books deal with real issues — death, racism,
divorce, alcoholism, alienation, war. But similarly they all deal
with the common theme of redemption. And many deal with faith
respectfully, as a critical and transformational force in people's
lives.
Holes took place in a juvenile detention center — the perfect
setting for a redemptive story. Our next film, Because of Winn
Dixie , told the story of a young girl dealing with her mother's
abandonment, adults struggling with alcoholism, and the lasting
sting of racism. Our recent film, Bridge to Terabithia , deals
with the toughest issue haunting parents — the death of a child.
Our project has opened up a fair debate about whether children
should read books that have such frightening content. C. S. Lewis
tackled this issue head-on and offered some good advice that informs
how we select our projects:
Those who say that children must not be frightened may mean two
things. They may mean (1) that we must not do anything likely
to give the child those haunting, disabling, pathological fears
against which ordinary courage is helpless: in fact, phobias .
His mind must, if possible, be kept clear of things he can't bear
to think of.
Or they may mean (2) that we must try to keep out of his mind
the knowledge that he is born into a world of death, violence,
wounds, adventure, heroism and cowardice, good and evil.
If they mean the first I agree with them: but not if they mean
the second. The second would indeed be to give children a false
impression and feed them on escapism in the bad sense. There is
something ludicrous in the idea of so educating a generation which
is born to the …atomic bomb. Since it is so likely that they will
meet cruel enemies, let them at least have heard of brave knights
and heroic courage. Otherwise you are making their destiny not
brighter but darker.
In conjunction with every film, we launch an ambitious educational
campaign that places the book at its center. Since starting Walden,
we have distributed hundreds of thousands of books, mostly to
Title One Schools that are not able to afford them. When we released
Winn Dixie , we also launched a program in conjunction with the
Girl Scouts of America and Sunrise Assisted Living Centers to
draw attention to the “Reading at Risk” report. Girl Scouts across
the country volunteered to read Winn Dixie at different Sunrise
Centers. In doing this, we were showing one way to reverse the
decline in reading and volunteerism at the same time.
Recently, with the release of Charlotte's Web , we invited teachers
and students to read a section from E. B. White's classic to break
the Guinness World Record for most people reading simultaneously.
The previous record was 133,000. At last count, more than 500,000
people participated in all 50 states and 28 countries.
While it is virtually impossible for us to determine if our efforts
have made any kind of dent in the decline in reading, there is
overwhelming evidence that we have exponentially increased the
book sales of the books we have adapted into feature films. The
Narnia books saw an increase in sales that was several multiples.
In fact, because of the increased focus on C. S. Lewis, sales
of his other books increased by several multiples as well.
Amazing Grace
In February we released two films. Our first, Bridge to Terabithia
, follows our traditional model of a film based on a popular book
— in this case Katherine Paterson's Newbery Award Winner. And
the following week we released Amazing Grace , a film based on
a great man — William Wilberforce — and a great event — the abolition
of the slave trade in Great Britain.
After a powerful conversion experience, William Wilberforce dedicated
himself to what he called his two great objectives — the suppression
of the slave trade and the reformation of society. In pursuing
the first, he was challenging a mindset that had existed for centuries.
Wilberforce recognized that if he wanted to change the law, he
needed to change peoples' hearts and minds. And he also knew that
none of this was possible until his own heart experienced a radical
transformation.
Wilberforce's childhood preacher, John Newton, experienced an
even more dramatic conversion than Wilberforce. In a graceless
world, absent of God's mercy, Newton should have rotted in the
bowels of a slave ship or been tossed in the sea. Yet God, in
his providence, saved this wretch and gave him something he didn't
deserve, a prominent role in the story of freedom. And Newton
went on to pen one of the most redemptive songs in human history
— “Amazing Grace.”
Wilberforce and Newton both understood that they could not accomplish
great change alone. It required friends — people from all walks
of life and from both sides of the political aisle. Wilberforce
called them his “co-belligerents” — people who had many differences
but were united in their commitment to end the slave trade and
improve British society. Despite decades of defeat, ridicule,
and treachery, they were companions for the common good. This
March, we will celebrate the 200-year anniversary of their greatest
victory — the abolition of the British slave trade.

After decades of defeat, through faith and perseverance, Wilberforce
and his friends of the Clapham Sect accomplished what everybody
thought was impossible. But their story did not end there. It
was said of Wilberforce that good causes stuck to him like pins.
Over his lifetime, he launched more than 65 social initiatives,
including the first animal welfare society, the first Bible Society
and the first National Gallery of Art. He also helped reform penal
laws and child welfare laws.
Today we desperately need more leaders like William Wilberforce
and the Kings and Queens of Narnia who will fight to make good
laws, keep the peace, save good trees from being cut down, and
encourage ordinary people who want to live and let live.
We are all familiar with the problems that good people face,
both nationally and globally. In his “Letter from a Birmingham
Jail,” Dr. Martin Luther King wrote that we have two options when
faced with such problems. We can act like a thermometer and merely
make a record. Or we can act like a thermostat and correct what
is wrong.