<p><em>Great books can change us. Having immersed myself so completely in this story I am sure I will never be able to look up at the stars again without thinking of the Little Prince up there somewhere. And I will look at a flower differently at people differently...I will think of myself differently too and try even harder to look after and cherish the child in me.&nbsp;For the child in each of us is the heart and soul in each of us.</em></p><p>- Micheal Morpurgo Foreword to the Little Prince 2018</p><p>The effect the Little Prince had on Michael Morpurgo is precisely the effect The Gospels are meant to have on us. Metanoia. A transformative change of heart. But they don't do they? Tolstoy tried again in 1902. That didn't work either. So here goes...</p><p>I am not a Christian. I don't believe in God. I believe all gods are a work of our imagination and that The Bible as a product of our imagination is far more important than the god it seeks to describe. I feel The Little Prince tells the story of our god as well if not better than The Bible almost as well as Tolstoy. Hence merging them seems like a step in the right direction.</p><p>Antoine de Saint Exupery's The Little Prince is loved by children's and adults alike. It is the most widely translated book after The Bible in history.&nbsp;It may well be as misunderstood. Using the cast of Characters from The Little Prince here I retell Tolstoy's version of the Gospels.</p><p class=ql-align-justify>Julain Baggini in his attempt to do what Tolstoy had already done a century before (The Godless Gospel 2018) ended his work with the thought that perhaps it was time for Jesus to die for us again. I don't know about you but I think he's done his bit. Here I offer The Little Prince to take his place.</p>
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