Full disclosure: I love this series so much that I'm
planning to get an alethiometer tattoo when I'm feeling a little
more flush. (After the scarlet A and the Deathly Hallows symbol, that is.) My
second time through the series (I've read it three times now) was on audio CDs
in my car when my kid was 5 years old, and even though it was far too advanced
for them at the time, they fell in love with it too. I wrote this review after
my second reading but before the third, and long before the prequel was
published.
So:
In this alternate universe where people’s souls have a physical reality and manifest themselves outside people’s bodies as animal-shaped “daemons,” and the Magisterium (think of the Catholic Church during the days of the Inquisition) rules politics, morality, and, as far as possible, people's minds, Lyra is an orphan who lives at Jordan College, Oxford. She is being raised haphazardly amid the benign neglect of the professors there and has a good, if chaotic, life.
Then a mysterious relative appears and Lyra saves his life; she ends up with a unique artifact called an alethiometer (the eponymous Golden Compass), in her possession; her friend Roger is disappeared by the much-feared Gobblers; and she is taken to live with the beautiful, self-willed Mrs. Coulter, whom the Jordan scholars obviously fear. Now Lyra needs to learn the nature of the relationship between all of these events, and what they have to do with Dust, a substance whose very existence is inimical to the Magisterium, and which nobody is supposed to know about--least of all a half-wild young girl.
This is an incredibly beautiful metaphysical work (I can't just call it a work of fantasy, though it is that) about the
nature of truth and the soul, along the lines of the best C. S. Lewis
books--but written by someone with a deep distrust of organized religion and of
anybody who withholds important truths in order to control people.
The protagonist, Lyra, is a liar, a teller of tales, and the product of a society based on lies, brought up not knowing the most basic facts of her existence. But she is also intelligent, resourceful, intensely curious, and deeply loyal to her friends. This gets her into trouble, of course, but it may also be, along with her boundless ability to love and her fierce determination to find her disappeared friend, what ultimately saves her and her world.
The protagonist, Lyra, is a liar, a teller of tales, and the product of a society based on lies, brought up not knowing the most basic facts of her existence. But she is also intelligent, resourceful, intensely curious, and deeply loyal to her friends. This gets her into trouble, of course, but it may also be, along with her boundless ability to love and her fierce determination to find her disappeared friend, what ultimately saves her and her world.
Five out of five stars. At least.
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