Meanwhile, with the help of another group member, Mr Richardson, who also has the inner strength to withstand the angelical archetypes, Anthony is enabled to understand the process that has been unleashed by Berringer. Together they plan to counter it and reverse the threat. Its next phase has already started and some of the town's buildings begin to collapse as Berringer's house is swallowed in a column of unquenchable flame. Armed with the secret names of the archetypes from a grimoire, Anthony summons them back to their point of focus while Richardson neutralizes the fire by walking into it.
Critical reception
T. S. Eliot described Williams' novels in this genre as "supernatural thrillers".[1]J. R. R. Tolkien and C. S. Lewis had found the book inspirational and it is often cited as a major work that altered their own writings and helped them both become novelists.[2]Anthony Boucher and J. Francis McComas, in their survey of fantasy fiction, called The Place of the Lion "one of the most daringly conceived and stunningly visualized of all Williams’ novels".[3] Similarly, for Glen Cavaliero in his study of Williams' work, "plot, themes and literary treatment coalesce in an artistic unity that makes The Place of the Lion the most technically flawless of the novels, and thus a more satifyingly integrated fable than its predecessors".[4] Over the years the novel has been the subject of a number of other academic studies.
References
^Anna Bugajska, "Disordered Beauty" in Charles Williams' The Place of the Lion, Academia, p.1