The Golden Compass: His Dark Materials, Book 1

February 9, 2019 - Comment
Add to Cart $15.99Amazon.com Price
(as of 6 April 2020 21:27 GMT+0100 - Details)

When Lyra and her daemon Pantalaimon decide to spy on a presentation her uncle, the commanding Lord Asriel, is making to the elders of Jordan College they have no idea that they will become witnesses to an attempted murder, and even less that they are taking the first steps in a journey that will lead them into danger and adventure unlike anything Lyra’s unfettered imagination has conjured up.

Though she has been raised at the college in an atmosphere of benign neglect that has allowed her to become a half-wild child of the streets, Lyra soon finds herself apprenticed to the elegant Mrs. Coulter, and in possession of a strange device called the alethiometer, a “golden compass” that reads not true worth, but truth itself.

But truth is a precious commodity, and before long Lyra and Pan are running for their lives, the object of an obsessive hunt by mysterious forces who have been stealing children for dark purposes that no one understands. Lyra will need all her street-learned wiles if she and Pan are to survive.

An international sensation from the moment it was published, The Golden Compass comes to spectacular new life in this unabridged recording, narrated by Philip Pullman himself, with the support of some of the finest actors of the London stage.

Comments

Anonymous says:

I loved all three books I loved all three books in the series. However, although the main heroine is 12 years old, there is probably too much cruelty, complexity and adult themes in the story for children that age or younger. In my opinion these are books for adults who like reading about magic. I believe there are quite a large numbers of us out there.There are at least two layers to the story. One is the Lyra’s adventures in the worlds filled with magic and amazing creatures. The other layer deals with…

Anonymous says:

A rich fantasy world His Dark Materials has been on my to-read list for many years. I saw the film and was underwhelmed (despite the excellent casting). However, the imminent release of a new book in the series spurred me to try it, and I read the entire trilogy in two days.Lyra is a wild girl who lives at Jordan College with scholars, in a world that is familiar but also very different from ours. Her world has a steampunk quality to it, not as advanced as our world, but it also has magic. Here, each…

Anonymous says:

A Worthy Read For Younger AND Older Readers This book seems to be written for a younger audience, and I have no doubt that preteens and up could read it without difficulty, but at the same time I feel that a lot of the themes and the nuance could go over the heads of younger readers. The use of accents, speech patterns, dress, and behavior to denote class, the writing of younger characters to think and behave as young people would and do while still keeping things moving forward at a good pace and keeping things both exciting and…

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