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His Dark Materials
  

His Dark Materials (Library Binding)

by Nicholas Wright (Adapter), Philip Pullman (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 31.96
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In 1995, young English readers could happily call Philip Pullman their own. Northern Lights was, after all, officially for them. But when the novel was published in the U.S. a year later, adults began to invade their turf. Yes, these usurpers argued, The Golden Compass (as it was retitled) is a spectacular fantasy set in an alternate universe in which only six planets circle the sun, everyone has a dæmon--an animal familiar--and zeppelins and hot-air balloons rule the sky. And yes, it features a fearless, feisty little girl who excels at giving grownups a good talking-to. Lyra's comrades include an armored bear who is a dab hand at both combat and gnomic speech--"War is the sea I swim in and the air I breathe"--and a witch who can "hear immortal whispers from time to time." She will need these allies, and an army of others, in order to rescue a friend trapped in the Arctic. Or so she thinks. In fact, Lyra must fulfill a more complex, earth-altering destiny over the course of this and the next two volumes of Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy. And all the while she must evade the clutches of several baddies, including the ruthless, alluring Mrs. Coulter. (Let's just say that this woman's golden monkey dæmon would give even Jane Goodall the willies.)

But, continued Pullman's older audience, The Golden Compass is also a vital revision of Paradise Lost and a provocative inquiry into the nature of the soul and true goodness--one that proffers a none-too-positive take on organized religion. And the author certainly doesn't pull any narrative punches. In the second book, The Subtle Knife, terrible things continue to afflict the innocent and there are several more wrenching scenes of death. Nor is Pullman afraid of ambiguity. Will Parry, who joins Lyra in her quest while searching for his lost father, is a killer. When Lyra asks her alethiometer--a rare instrument that can reveal the truth to those few gifted or learned enough to read it--about him, the boy very much passes muster: "A murderer was a worthy companion."

Now that Pullman's trilogy is complete, youth and age will continue to claim him. All will be frantic to know if Lyra and Will can fulfill their separate prophecies--not to mention what final form her dæmon will take, if any--even as they relish the books' several worlds and singular creatures (from devastated angels to tiny poisonous warriors who ride to battle on hummingbird-skin-saddled dragonflies to beings who look "like a cross between antelopes and motorcycles, but they were stranger than that even: they had trunks like small elephants"). Just as wondrous, though, are the grace notes, fraught with meaning and longing and all the more precious as they occur in horrific moments. In one scene, children who "had as much substance as fog, poor things," and whose "voices were no louder than dry leaves falling" desperately recall their lost dæmons. In another, right before they venture into "the last of all worlds," Lyra allows herself to hear someone who had earlier seemed more enemy than friend:

Her voice was low and expressive, with a current of laughter and happiness under the clear surface. In all the life she could remember, Lyra had never been read to in bed; no one had told her stories or sung nursery rhymes with her before kissing her and putting out the light. But she suddenly thought now that if ever there was a voice that would lap you into safety and warm you with love, it would be a voice like the Lady Salmakia's, and she felt a wish in her heart to have a child of her own, to lull and soothe and sing to, one day, in a voice like that.
Throughout his epic, the author does not merely conjure up air and angels, soul and consciousness--he grounds them in a dark yet tender reality. Toward the end of The Amber Spyglass the wise witch Serafina Pekkala urges two dæmons, "Take in all that you can, and remember it well." It's a piece of advice that Pullman's readers will also be keen to follow. --Kerry Fried --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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9 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Avid Reader, Feb 26 2007
By Avid Reader in NB (New Brunswick, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: His Dark Materials (Paperback)
Someone loaned me the first book of the trilogy, 'The Golden Compass.' Once I started I couldn't stop. After reading the first, I went out and purchased the last two, 'The Subtle Knife' and 'The Amber Spyglass.'
I couldn't put them down. My husband-to-be said that he now knows what it would feel like if he were widowed; my entire life, with the exception of the necessities, like work, became this story. It completely enveloped me.
It aroused several different emotions in me while I read. It has so much substance and so many angles that I couldn't help becoming intrigued.
I've read the trilogy three times now, and I'm sure I'll read them again, enjoying the journey all the way, no matter how many times I've taken it!
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5.0 out of 5 stars makes Harry look like a Boy Scout!, Jun 10 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: His Dark Materials (Paperback)
Not that there's anything wrong with Harry. But Lyra, rather than being portrayed as a slightly inept side-kick, is THE HEROINE. Her adventures through the Dark Materials have many levels, in which both adult and older child will find many meanings both metaphorical and physical. I couldn't put this down until I'd read all 3 books in the series. I'm leaving for vacation with all three again after being away for 3 years -- I want to do it all again! I hope you enjoy this wonderful trilogy.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A great book for adults of all ages, Dec 15 2000
By Rachel Adler Golden "harpomom" (Newtonville, MA United States) - See all my reviews
Phillip Pullman's trilogy "His Dark Materials" is one of the most ambitious and compelling modern works of fiction that I have ever read -- an expertly crafted and exceptionally imaginative adventure story, a daring morality fable, and an intellectual jigsaw puzzle built on the outlines of Milton's Paradise Lost. Moreover, its nonstop suspense and emotional power makes this book an intense cardiac workout for the reader.

Book One, the Golden Compass, introduces the twelve-year-old heroine, Lyra, an apparent orphan who lives among scholars of Jordan College of Oxford, in a world not our own but eerily similar. In her world, humans are accompanied by "daemons", animal beings embodying the soul. The daemon's dialogue with its owner serves as a window into the character's thoughts and feelings, and is reminiscent of the internal dialogues that children have with their imagination. The story follows brave Lyra as she is propelled by fate into a dangerous adventure of unknown purpose, guided only by her truth-telling alethiometer. Her journey is filled with colorful characters, exotic peoples, armored bears and witches, and increasingly hostile encounters with agents of the powerful Church as she follows the footsteps of her Uncle Asriel to the barren North, finally to step out of her world entirely. Book Two, the Subtle Knife, introduces Will, another independent, fearless young teen who cares for his ill mother near the real Oxford, England in our own world. The story then follows the adventures of Lyra and Will as they meet, acquire the Subtle Knife, search for Will's missing father, and pursue their mysterious mission through a multiplicity of parallel worlds. Meanwhile, multiple, parallel plot threads flesh out Pullman's inverted retake on the traditional stories of Adam and Eve and the war between God and Satan; the narrative pulls the reader along at a furious pace from one powerful, artistically conceived scene to the next. Love in all its forms, mortality, loss, and sacrifice are constant themes, and Pullman's juxtaposition of the familiar and strange reinforces a mood of nostalgic sadness, as when one visits a place of one's childhood many years later. All is wrapped up in the final book, the Amber Spyglass, which is especially intense with its poetic imagery, enormous contrasts in mood (a major portion is devoted to a harrowing journey through the World of the Dead), and supremely ironic plot twists. The ending left me in tears.

The potential fly in the ointment of this great work is Pullman's increasingly open hostility towards religious authority, despite his fascination with Judeo-Christian mythology. For some readers it will be not a fly but an elephant, obscuring Pullman's wisdom in matters of the heart as well as his central, humanistic message -- which, as a follower of Jewish tradition, I interpret as "Tikkun Olam", repair of the world through good deeds. Pullman presents this message in a literal realization of the divine light-filled universe of the Kabbalah, and offers it as a consoling and healing gift to Lyra, Will, and the rest of us (surely all adults) who have been touched by deep loss.

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Stunning literature
In the guise of a young adult's fantasy, Philip Pullman has written a masterpiece. Inspired by Milton's Paradise Lost, the trilogy deals with some very adult themes, adventure,... Read more
Published on Dec 2 2000 by cruzdiva

5.0 out of 5 stars Among the greatest
His Dark Materials are wonderful. They have so much suspense, action, thrills, and adventure, you will never put them down. Read more
Published on Nov 20 2000

5.0 out of 5 stars Among the best books I've ever read If not the best at that
I'd have to say that after reading all the ambigouosly worded quotations on the back of the book, I was apprehensive when picking up The Golden Compass, the first book in the... Read more
Published on Oct 28 2000 by Steve

5.0 out of 5 stars Among the best books I've ever read If not the best at that
I'd have to say that after reading all the ambigouosly worded quotations on the back of the book, I was apprehensive when picking up The Golden Compass, the first book in the... Read more
Published on Oct 28 2000 by Steve

5.0 out of 5 stars Among the best books I've ever read If not the best at that
I'd have to say that after reading all the ambigouosly worded quotations on the back of the book, I was apprehensive when picking up The Golden Compass, the first book in the... Read more
Published on Oct 28 2000 by Steve

5.0 out of 5 stars AWESOmE!
One of the best series I have ever read! Kept me enthralled from The Golden Compass to the very end. DEFINITELY recommend!
Published on Oct 10 2000 by Autumn Y Pinkerton

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