Product Details
Northern Lights (His Dark Materials)

Northern Lights (His Dark Materials)
By Philip Pullman

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Product Description

When Lyra's friend Roger disappears, she and her daemon, Pantalaimon, set out to find him. They travel to the ice kingdoms of the North, where armoured bears rule and witch-queens fly through frozen skies. Lyra possesses a device that will aid their quest - ifshe can decipher its mysterious messages. But it knows terrifyingsecrets about their journey, and the dangers that await them in worlds far beyond their own.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #6366 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-03-05
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 448 pages

Editorial Reviews

Synopsis
When Lyra's friend Roger disappears, she and her daemon, Pantalaimon, set out to find him. They travel to the ice kingdoms of the North, where armored bears rule and witch-queens fly through frozen skies. Lyra possesses a device that will aid their quest - if she can decipher its mysterious messages. But it knows terrifying secrets about their journey, and the dangers that await them in worlds far beyond their own.


Customer Reviews

Oh dear1
If there was a zero star I would have to put that. The worst thing is reading a book where an author obviously has strange, misguided and warped opinions and hang-ups regarding society, sexuality and religious faiths and puts them into the mouths of his or her little invented characters (which all reveal a little part of the writer). Even the characters themselves are weird and un-likable and get up to revolting and unsavoury things. If you take the entire conception of this trilogy as a possible reality and to it's obvious conclusion you would go mad with no hope. I read these books out of interest and was very disappointed. What strange ideas throughout the whole vein of these stories. I would definately recommend Narnia instead where the characters are likable and the pleasant good overcoming bad concludes the adventure nicely. As the author said he loathes the Narnia series, this is a very poor attempt at the opposite side to Aslan and Narnia. I recently read 'The pied piper of atheism' which shows all the creepy, warped and sad thoughts behind the motive and intention of these fictional books. Surely fiction is a little retreat into a nice adventure rather than popping into the mind of a bit of a strange person with obvious bitterness and anger than needs to be reconcilled.

ABSOLUTELY FANTASTIC5
By Alex aged 10


This book is suspense-ridden and has loads and loads of fantastic descriptions. The way Pullman uses metaphors and describes the scenery is utterly stunning. The characters are very well thought out and have several layers of personality. Lyra, at the start lives wild and carefree at Jordan college (most of the time spent on the roofs) having loads of fun spoiled only occasionally by a boring visit by her Uncle. The way he sets the scene makes your imagination go crazy. I like the way he has chopped and changed our world and added bits of that world. I think daemons are a fantastic idea and wouldn't mind having one myself. I think Lord Asriel is an absolutely fantastic character. One moment kind and gentle the next rough and demanding. Mrs.Coulter is so evil she's almost serpent like, the way she actually enjoyed watching the children in pure agony, amongst other things. The Gyptians are supposed to be gypsies I found out after some research, and the word he used was derived from the Egyptian word. The armoured bears were so remarkably un human-like even though they can talk and have opposable thumbs. The descriptions of the aurora are so in-depth I think he Philip Pullman must have gone and seen them himself, here is just one of descriptions, Lyra watched as the aurora grew more intense. The first veils of translucent colour trembled and raced to one side, and jagged curtains folded and unfolded above, increasing in size and brilliance every minute; arcs and loops swirled across from horizon to horizon and touched the very zenith with bows of radiance. If that description doesn't tell you that Philip Pullman is an absolutely fantabbywhatsadooda author then you don't like books, as plain as that. The thing I admire the most about his writing is his choice of words and his way of setting the scenes. His words are so adept you almost see through Lyra's eyes. This book is one of the best children's books ever written (In my opinion) and as you read through the trilogy they get better.

Good start but poor overall2
This book starts with potential and promise but the initial rush gets dragged back by long list of problems. Poor writing (point of view violations, "telling" not "showing" too often), near zero characterisation (Lyre meets Iorek and within pages they form a bond), a meandering plot (reads like a checklist), inconsistencies (characters not using the alethiometer for arbitrary reasons), and a predictable back-story (the protagonists parentage), are just a few of the nuisances that made me roll my eyes with despair at this book.

The author certainly had some good ideas at the start, but I couldn't help but feel I was reading a first draft. Perhaps the series improves, but quite frankly I can't be bothered to find out when there are far superior alternatives in the world of speculative fiction.