Showing posts with label La Belle Sauvage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label La Belle Sauvage. Show all posts

Friday, March 9, 2018

The Book of Dust


La Belle Sauvage, the first of the projected trilogy The Book of Dust, is a worthy successor to Pullman's immensely popular fantasy trilogy His Dark Materials.  A kind of prequel, La Belle Sauvage deals with the rescue from dark forces of a mysterious baby named Lyra by an unlikely pair of protectors, a great flood, and an edge-of-your-seat boat chase down the flooded Thames.

The whole thing is a pure delight. Fantastic but also realistic -- not only must the protectors elude one of the nastiest villains around, they also have to keep finding fresh supplies of food and diapers for their charge.

I look forward to the rest of the trilogy -- alas, not yet published.  


The first trilogy concerns Lyra, no longer a baby but a young girl with coming into her powers, a young girl who, the witches of the North say, will change the world. Lyra has been raised in an Oxford college to keep her safe from the insidious forces of a religion/government cabal but she is pitched from the safety of Jordan College into a series of adventures, both in her own world -- which is not quite like our own (anbaric power! zepplins, armored polar bears! daemons!) -- and various parallel worlds. 



I gulped down The Book of Dust in such a hurry to find out what happened that I know I missed a lot. So I'll re-read it -- but I think I'll re-read the other three first. Pullman has built such a many-layered universe, so full of incident and meaning that I'll be happy to return.