For all those who have read Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials trilogy, Northern Lights, The Subtle Knife and The Amber Spyglass I have some questions:
Can’t answer 1/2 (though I’m thinking about them).
As to 3, I think they’re probably the best of their genre I’ve read in years. I’ve read a couple of reviews which compare him very favourably to Tolkien. On the basis of this trilogy, I prefer him.
probably some sort of feline - maybe a cheshire cat
still thinking
read all three in about a week. My SO recommended them but I kept putting it off as ‘books for kids’ (maybe fearing I was getting into something a little Harry Potterish). Good for light reading and wouldn’t be surprised if someone thinks of making a film.
Definitely a snake, a Cobra or maybe a Coachwhip. A snake daemon could coil around a limb to be out of the way, or hide beneath my clothes, but rear up and threaten when necessary. Plus, snakes can swim.
Since I was working scut jobs in my adolescence, that probably counts as “servant”; therefore, a dog. A Border Collie if I’m lucky.
The trilogy was stunning. The hardback covers (U.S.) are the best, especially on The Amber Spyglass.
I think they pretty much suck and are bizarrely overrated. I got about half-way through the second book before I realized that the series wasn’t going to get any better.
animal spirits who existed before as just regular critters, but have passed through the first stage, and are now in the second, where they learn the human brain and soul, and get to be humans in the third stage. Some, like the armored bears, are stuck in the second stage.
animal spirits who existed before as just regular critters, but have passed through the first stage, and are now in the second, where they learn the human brain and soul, and get to be humans in the third stage. Some, like the armored bears, are stuck in the second stage.
I’m a servant, what can I say?–maybe a German shepherd.
An extremely powerful sentient German shepherd.
First book and one-half were pretty good, but it really went downhill at the end–Pullman’s ham-handed bashing of religion gets in the way of his ability to finish what started as a good story.
Loved them, although not really the last 1/2 or so of the last one. Although i did like the image of the dead people coming out of the ground into the starlight and disappearing…