His Dark Materials Trilogy
(The Golden Compass; The Subtle Knife; The Amber Spyglass)




(135)
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Book Description
1104 pages in total. 351 pages in The Golden Compass. 288 pages in The Subtle Knife. 465 pages in The Amber Spyglass.
9 Reviews
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Coffee on Mars said on Sep 14, 2008 about the Paperback edition | 1 feedback
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fatfacefan said on Apr 16, 2006 | Add your feedback
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Maryjanelovesspiderman said on Apr 6, 2012 | Add your feedback
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An epic trilogy, brilliantly written and engaging from the the first chapter. Pullman grips the imagination and paints a dazzling and irresistable fantasy world of vast frozen arctic wastes and fascinating multi-layered characters, while simultaneously exploring controversial ideas about religion an ... (continue)
Sugarbear said on Jun 8, 2010 about the Hardcover edition | Add your feedback
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beagle1 said on Oct 29, 2008 about the Paperback edition | Add your feedback
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GeekGirl said on May 14, 2008 about the Hardcover edition | Add your feedback
Book Details
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Rating:




(135)
- English Books
- Mass Market Paperback
- Edition: Boxed
- ISBN-10: 0440238609
- ISBN-13: 9780440238607
- Publisher: Laurel Leaf
- Pub date: Sep 23, 2003
- Dimensions: 1161 mm x 710 mm x 516 mm Just how big is that?
- Also available as: Paperback, Hardcover, Library Binding and Others
- In other languages: other languages
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Prices Change currency & sellers
| ISBN | Edition | List | Sale | Seller |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9780440238607 | Mass Market Paperback | $22.50 | $19.23 | bn.com |
| $22.50 | $14.99 | The Book Depository | ||
| Other editions → | ||||
| + 2 copies tradable: → | ||||
2 people find this helpful
*** This comment contains spoilers! ***
The first book of the trilogy is actually very nice: nicely written and well plotted. From the second onward, Pullman begins losing the thread of the story, the narration gets harder to read and new characters are introduced and removed before becoming memorable, while old ones are just forgotten un ... (continue)
The first book of the trilogy is actually very nice: nicely written and well plotted. From the second onward, Pullman begins losing the thread of the story, the narration gets harder to read and new characters are introduced and removed before becoming memorable, while old ones are just forgotten until the grand finale.
But the thing that really got on my nerves, maybe, was that on the begin of the second book Pullman promised a church-sponsored army of zombies bent to the destruction of parallel universes, and nothing of the kind actually happened.
A nice book all in all, but there sure are better ways to spend your time.
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