Nov 19, 2010

The Golden Compass: His Dark Materials, Book 1

Author: Philip Pullman
Published: 1996, Knopf
399 pages

Philip Pullman is a genius.  I could talk about this book for days, but I'll try to reel it in as best I can.  This is Book #1 in a trilogy, and probably the only one I'll talk about unless I get requests to post about the others.  The other two are The Subtle Knife, and The Amber SpyglassThe truth is, there are so many underlying themes in all of these books that can go right over children's heads, but there is also a fantastic story that everyone can enjoy.

The story follows the child Lyra Belacqua, who is easily my favorite character ever created, as she travels to the North to save her friend and other children who have been captured to endure horrendous experiments at the hands of the Magisterium.  Pullman has created a truly magical world in which polar bears can talk, witches fly through the Northern sky, and all humans have animal counterparts called daemons.

In the midst of Lyra's adventure, Pullman manages to skillfully intertwine elements of modern science, my favorite being the Many-Worlds Theory of quantum physics.  If you're interested in that aspect, an entire book has been written about that alone: The Science of Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials.

There has been a lot of controversy about this book, especially when it was being made into a movie in 2007, that stems mostly from Pullman's outspoken atheism.  There are certainly some elements in The Golden Compass that are anti-organized religion, but this theme is not as prevalent in the first book as it is in the second two (and definitely not as prevalent as it is in his latest book: The Good Man Jesus and The Scoundrel Christ).  And, frankly, the story is good enough that if you didn't know anything about the controversy before reading it, you might completely miss it.

Anyway, I'm glad I'm so obsessed with this book because now I can name my future spawn Lyra instead of "Ponyboy Curtis," which I was planning to do after reading The Outsiders and which is just not a socially acceptable name (no, not even for a librarian's child).  My future child thanks you, Philip Pullman.

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