All we know about Susan is that she turned away from Narnia -- she pretended it had all been an imaginary game -- and that she was interested in being a young woman while she was a young woman. Eustace, Jill, and Polly vocally disapprove of her. Peter says only that Susan is no longer a friend of Narnia, and then cuts off the others' complaints. Edmund, Lucy, and Digory say nothing on the subject.
Given that it's the characters with the least personal knowledge of Susan giving the case against her, it is really up to reader interpretation exactly what became of Susan (other than, obviously, having to identify all her family's corpses and go on alone after devastating loss). And there is nothing to say she couldn't stop ignoring Narnia later on.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-10-06 03:43 pm (UTC)Given that it's the characters with the least personal knowledge of Susan giving the case against her, it is really up to reader interpretation exactly what became of Susan (other than, obviously, having to identify all her family's corpses and go on alone after devastating loss). And there is nothing to say she couldn't stop ignoring Narnia later on.