book data
29602 ratings, 4.12 average rating, 3944 reviews
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published
October 18th 1996
(first published 1995)
by Scholastic Point
binding
Paperback, 416 pages
characters
setting
Unknown
isbn
0590139614
(isbn13: 9780590139618)
description
Some books improve with age--the age of the reader, that is. Such is certainly the case with Philip Pullman's heroic, at times heart-wrenching novel, ...more
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avg 4.12
bookshelves:
childrens-fantasy,
childrens-fiction
Read in January, 1996
recommends it for:
Anyone Who Reads...and Likes to Think
In his Carnegie Medal Acceptance Speech, given in 1996, Philip Pullman contends that "There are some themes, some subjects, too large for adult fiction; they can only be dealt with adequately in a children's book." His subsequent remarks about the importance of story, its centrality to both children's and adult literature, will be most welcome to anyone who grows tired of the sort of "literary armageddon" that certain critics, ala Harold Bloom, envision when faced with...more
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(27 people liked it)
5 comments
bookshelves:
digested
Read in January, 2003
recommends it for:
everyone
the golden compass trilogy seems like a natural progression in christian literature. yes, it is christian literature, the same way the chronicles of narnia are. aslan is only a lion when the reader is about 10 or so in the united states. after a point, he unrepentantly becomes jesus. and the four children are like, the gospels or something. and the story is somewhat ruined then, because as an adult, you can't just shoehorn jesus into a lion outfit without snickering a little.
pullman however,...more
pullman however,...more
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yes
(9 people liked it)
4 comments
Read in October, 2007
recommends it for:
Though billed as a children's book, I dug it, and I'm a 38 year old dude; good for fans of fantasy
The story in brief: The book is a fantasy novel set in a strangely familiar pseudo-Victorian/steampunk parallel Earth. The protagonist is a young ophaned girl who's been raised at Oxford by the attending scholars. The story concerns kidnapped children, hidden mysteries of the Church, wandering gypsies, proud Arctic warrior bears, long-lived flying witches, and the possibility of a rift that could exist between different worlds.
Daemons: Each human being in this world has a con...more
Daemons: Each human being in this world has a con...more
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(9 people liked it)
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Read in September, 2007
recommends it for:
people who like trilogies
[Note: After I wrote this review (below) I was emailed by many people that my interpretation is WAY off. Everyone tells me that in the 2nd and 3rd books, the author's purpose in writing is to increasingly "kill God in the minds of children." I haven't read those other books so I can't confirm or deny that theme. But Snopes confirms what people have told me. Read the article at http://www.snopes.com/politics....]
...more
...more
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(9 people liked it)
15 comments
bookshelves:
fantasy,
young-adult
Read in January, 2008
Although it's 3 physical books for publishing reasons, His Dark Materials (HDM)is one continuous story (well... see below), so I'm reviewing the whole set. It isn't useful to review one part alone.
HDM is a decent read with many great elements. On Orson Scott Card's "MICE" scale--Milieu, Idea, Character, and Event--it's mostly a Milieu story, so expect a tour of the world(s), focusing on the strangeness therein and the history thereof. It's a great setting with many fabulous ...more
HDM is a decent read with many great elements. On Orson Scott Card's "MICE" scale--Milieu, Idea, Character, and Event--it's mostly a Milieu story, so expect a tour of the world(s), focusing on the strangeness therein and the history thereof. It's a great setting with many fabulous ...more
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(7 people liked it)
1 comment
bookshelves:
9th-grade
Read in March, 2008
The Golden Compass
By Philip Pullman
Alfred A. Knopf, 1995, 399 pp.,$20.00
IBN 978-0-679-87924-4
Unknown, unconsciousness, witchcraft, faith, destiny and betrayal-anyone want a ride? Philip Pullman’s The Golden Compass, the first book in his trilogy, His Black Materials, is everlasting. Imagine you’re living in a college where everywhere you go is filled with books, books, and more books. Of course you would be bored, thirsting for some kind of adventure. If you are Lyra and someone ...more
By Philip Pullman
Alfred A. Knopf, 1995, 399 pp.,$20.00
IBN 978-0-679-87924-4
Unknown, unconsciousness, witchcraft, faith, destiny and betrayal-anyone want a ride? Philip Pullman’s The Golden Compass, the first book in his trilogy, His Black Materials, is everlasting. Imagine you’re living in a college where everywhere you go is filled with books, books, and more books. Of course you would be bored, thirsting for some kind of adventure. If you are Lyra and someone ...more
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yes
(6 people liked it)
13 comments
bookshelves:
tutoring
Read in August, 2007
The Golden Compass, by Philip Pullman, picks up where the Harry Potter series leaves off. As in Rowling's series, the hero of The Golden Compass--Lyra, a pre-teen girl in Oxford, England--is plucked from her mundane existence to become supremely important to the fate of the living world.
However, unlike the Potter series, The Golden Compass, immerses us immediately in political, religious, and cultural conflict as well. While the central character is indeed a child, w...more
However, unlike the Potter series, The Golden Compass, immerses us immediately in political, religious, and cultural conflict as well. While the central character is indeed a child, w...more
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(6 people liked it)
1 comment
Read in November, 2007
recommends it for:
Parents should read first
Okay. I know there is a huge controversy about this book in the Christian community. I think I have received a forward about this book/movie from about 10 different people, warning about the athiest undertones and asking people to boycott the movie. Of course, curiosity got the better of me and I had to see if it was really up to all the hype.
The Golden Compass is the first of three books in the trilogy titled His Dark Materials by Philip Pullman. In case any of you are going to read it or s...more
The Golden Compass is the first of three books in the trilogy titled His Dark Materials by Philip Pullman. In case any of you are going to read it or s...more
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(5 people liked it)
1 comment
bookshelves:
novels
Read in January, 2004
recommends it for:
Nonbelieving Narnia fans
Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy has acquired the reputation of being a sort of Narnia for Atheists. This reputation is, at least by the end of The Golden Compass, largely unearned. Though the religious beliefs depicted in Pullman's fantasy universe throw their real-world parallels into an interesting light, there is nothing that compares to the explicitly Christian message in C.S. Lewis' classic children's books.
His Dark Materials is set in the Edwardian Engl...more
His Dark Materials is set in the Edwardian Engl...more
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(5 people liked it)
2 comments
bookshelves:
books-read-in-2007
Read in September, 2007
THE GOLDEN COMPASS, HIS DARK MATERIALS BOOK 1 BY PHILIP PULLMAN: Originally published as Northern Lights in 1995, this is the story of a young girl who doesn’t know what to do or what is going to happen with her life, but soon discovers that she is on a specific course of destiny that she is unable to avoid. While The Golden Compass is considered a children’s book, like the Harry Potter series, it is written with an adult voice in an adult language, with adult themes. It seems that British...more
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(5 people liked it)
8 comments
Read in June, 2008
recommends it for:
Any Harry Potter fans or people interested in religious (or anti-religious) allegory
Alternate universes, strong female heroes and anti-heroes, graphic death scenes, talking polar bears, religious controversey...What's not to like about this book?
Incidentally, I'm working at a Catholic publishing house right now run by the Daughters of St. Paul. Here's what one of the sisters, who's written a lot books for our Faith and Culture line, said in the Huffington Post about the movie:
Sister Rose Paccate, director of the Pauline Center of Media Studies in Culver City, Calif., s...more
Incidentally, I'm working at a Catholic publishing house right now run by the Daughters of St. Paul. Here's what one of the sisters, who's written a lot books for our Faith and Culture line, said in the Huffington Post about the movie:
Sister Rose Paccate, director of the Pauline Center of Media Studies in Culver City, Calif., s...more
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(3 people liked it)
2 comments
Read in March, 2008
The Golden Compass
Ballantine Books,1995, 351 pp., $6.99
Philip Pullman
ISBN 0-345-41335-0
"In fact, of course, Lyra and her peers were engaged in deadly warfare. The children of one college waged war on another." Mischievous, Lyra is for a girl, always being told to settle down and act like t...more
Ballantine Books,1995, 351 pp., $6.99
Philip Pullman
ISBN 0-345-41335-0
"In fact, of course, Lyra and her peers were engaged in deadly warfare. The children of one college waged war on another." Mischievous, Lyra is for a girl, always being told to settle down and act like t...more
Like this review?
yes
(3 people liked it)
5 comments
bookshelves:
9th-grade-in-class-books
Read in March, 2008
The Golden Compass Yearling, 2001,399 pp., $7.5
Philip Pullman ISBN 978-0-440-41832-0
Lyra, a teenage girl, trapped by a cunning woman, in a risky and heart-compulsive situation, faces the danger of losing her best friend to events beyond her control. Locked in a mortal battle with creatures, dreadful and petrifying, she fights bravely. If you are already a fan of fantasy books, The Golden Compass will make you feel more passionate. If you have never been attracted by fant...more
Philip Pullman ISBN 978-0-440-41832-0
Lyra, a teenage girl, trapped by a cunning woman, in a risky and heart-compulsive situation, faces the danger of losing her best friend to events beyond her control. Locked in a mortal battle with creatures, dreadful and petrifying, she fights bravely. If you are already a fan of fantasy books, The Golden Compass will make you feel more passionate. If you have never been attracted by fant...more
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(3 people liked it)
6 comments
The first book in Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials trilogy, The Golden Compass, is a well crafted story awash with a new sense of morality, adventure and some annoying narrative flaws. While they don’t hamper the experience too heavily, they do detract from an excellent story and a thoughtful approach to the still powerful, if not more openly mocked, position of religion in people’s lives.
First, the up sides. Much like most modern popular fiction, the element of story has received m...more
First, the up sides. Much like most modern popular fiction, the element of story has received m...more
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(3 people liked it)
add a comment
bookshelves:
children-and-young-adult,
oh-so-british,
sci-fi-fantasy
Read in December, 2007
recommends it for:
fantasy fans
This book started off strong, but by the end of the story, I felt that Pullman had sacrificed logic and direction for drama and suspense. He did a good job of gradually making Lyra less of an ignorant brat and more of a noble little savage girl. Overall, I liked this book well enough to want to read the second one in the trilogy, but I had several problems with it:
-There was no comic relief or even any funny moments in this book. It took itself extremely seriously and was rarely light-hea...more
-There was no comic relief or even any funny moments in this book. It took itself extremely seriously and was rarely light-hea...more















