His Dark Materials

trilogy of novels by Pullman
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His Dark Materials, trilogy of bestselling fantasy novels by British author Philip Pullman. The series includes Northern Lights (1995; published in North America as The Golden Compass), The Subtle Knife (1997), and The Amber Spyglass (2000). Set in parallel universes, the trilogy is considered a classic of fantasy literature that blends a coming-of-age story with magic and ideas drawn from theology, physics, and philosophy. Pullman says he writes with no particular age group in mind, and the critically acclaimed novels are popular with children and adults, although they are often categorized as children’s literature. The series is named for a phrase in John Milton’s Paradise Lost, and Pullman explores ideas inspired by the epic poem.

Northern Lights won the Carnegie Medal for children’s literature in the United Kingdom in 1995, and in 2001 The Amber Spyglass was the first children’s book to win the Whitbread Book of the Year award, given to writers in the U.K. and Ireland whose books inspired reading across a wide audience. In 2005 Pullman was a co-winner of the Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award for outstanding contribution to children’s and young adult literature, partly for His Dark Materials.

By 2023 the trilogy had sold more than 22 million copies in 50 countries and had been translated into more than 40 languages. The series has been adapted into a film, plays, television series, and graphic novels.

Summary of His Dark Materials

(Warning: This section contains spoilers.)

Northern Lights follows 12-year-old Lyra Belacqua (or Lyra Silvertongue, as she is later known) as she attempts to rescue a friend, Roger Parslow, who was kidnapped by abductors called Gobblers. She encounters witches and armored polar bears—such as Iorek Byrnison, who becomes essential to her quest—on her travels in the North. She carries with her an “alethiometer,” a compasslike instrument that helps a skilled user find truthful answers to their questions. In The Subtle Knife Lyra meets 12-year-old Will Parry, who is from our world. Their worlds are parallel—similar but not the same (in terms of technology and other aspects); Pullman explains, “The first book was set in a world like ours, but different. This [second] book begins in our own world.” During the course of the second novel, Will acquires a knife that can cut windows between worlds. In the third book, The Amber Spyglass, Lyra and Will embark on new adventures that have consequences for the living and the dead in all the parallel universes, which differ in the types of environments and living creatures they contain but are all happening in the present.

Accompanying every person in Lyra’s world is a “daemon” (pronounced “demon”), which is that person’s soul in the form of a talking animal. Daemons are always physically near their people and can change shape during the person’s childhood. Once a daemon’s person reaches puberty, however, the daemon “settles” into the form of a particular animal.

One of the main themes of the trilogy is the transition from childhood to adulthood, as shown through the character development of Lyra and Will. The two preteens wrestle with issues of morality, faith, and free will. In the process, the series offers a strong critique of organized religion, especially Christianity, which is represented in the books by the Church, also called the Magisterium, which operates a theocracy.

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As Lyra and Will journey through worlds, they learn about a mysterious elemental particle called Dust. According to Pullman, “Dust is a source of great anxiety to the Authority, that is the church. Dust, it believes, is the physical evidence of original sin. Dust comes to us when we grow up and become corrupted by the wickedness of the world, of knowledge.” However, because adults commit horrible acts in their quest to eradicate Dust, Lyra recoils and comes to believe that Dust is not evil but “everything that is best about humanity—love, kindness, and curiosity—and must be encouraged rather than destroyed.” By the end of The Amber Spyglass, Lyra and Will have to make a hard choice to save Dust. They have fallen in love and want to spend their lives together, but, in order to be together, they must use Will’s knife to cut windows between their worlds. However, this allows Dust to flow out of the universe, so they choose to return to their separate worlds, seal the windows, and never see each other again.

The trilogy comes down on the side of a humanistic morality, which some religious organizations have criticized as an attack on religion. Pullman has described himself as “a Church of England atheist.”

Companion books to His Dark Materials

Pullman followed up His Dark Materials with The Book of Dust, another trilogy featuring Lyra. He calls this series an “equel” trilogy (books that stand alongside the originals) rather than a prequel or a sequel. Volume one of the trilogy, La Belle Sauvage (2017), takes place when Lyra is an infant, before the events of His Dark Materials. In volume two, The Secret Commonwealth (2019), Lyra appears as a young woman, after the events of His Dark Materials. The publication of the third volume is expected in 2024.

Pullman has also written a series of companion works centering on various characters featured in His Dark Materials. Lyra’s Oxford (2003) is a sequel to The Amber Spyglass, and it takes place two years after the events of that book. In the novella, Lyra and her daemon, Pantalaimon, are called upon to bring medicine to an ailing witch. Once Upon a Time in the North (2008) is a prequel to Northern Lights. It tells the story of how Texan aeronaut Lee Scoresby—a main character in His Dark Materials—acquires his hot-air balloon, travels to the North, meets Iorek Byrnison, and finds himself in a struggle over a town’s oil resources.

Serpentine (2020) is a novella set five years after the events of The Amber Spyglass and before the events of The Secret Commonwealth. In Serpentine, Lyra travels to the North to consult with the witch-consul about her strange ability to separate from Pantalaimon. The complicated character of Marisa Coulter (a power within the Church and Lyra’s mother) from His Dark Materials appears again in the novella The Collectors, first released as an audiobook in 2014. In The Imagination Chamber (2022), Pullman reveals new information about many of his characters.

Karen Sottosanti