Book Review of The Subtle Knife by Phillip Pullman

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Book Review of The Subtle Knife by Phillip Pullman

This week I chose to read the novel 'The Subtle Knife' written by

Phillip Pullman. Philip Pullman was born in Norwich on 19th October

1946. The early part of his life was spent travelling all over the

world, because his father and then his step father were both in the

Royal Air Force. He spent part of his childhood in Australia, where he

first met the wonders of comics, and grew to love Superman and Batman

in particular.

From the age of 11, he lived in North Wales, having moved back to

Britain. It was a time when children were allowed to roam anywhere, to

play in the streets, to wander over the hills, and he took full

advantage of it. His English teacher, Miss Enid Jones, was a big

influence on him, and he still sends her copies of his books.

The Subtle Knife is the second part of the trilogy that began with The

Golden Compass. That first book was set in a world like ours, but

different. This book begins in our own world.

The Subtle Knife begins in our own world, where Will Parry, driven by

curiosity about his mysterious, missing father and concern for his

vulnerable, disturbed mother, accidentally kills an intruder. While

fleeing, he finds a "window" into a sunlit otherworld. What could be a

better refuge than a hidden universe? But this universe is a strange,

empty place: a city that seems to have been abandoned in such haste

that food is left rotting on plates at a sidewalk cafe. The

inhabitants of the city, Cittàgazze, have fled from the invading

Spectres, ghostlike creatures that devour the souls of adults. But

Spectres are harmless and invisible to children, and soon Will meets

another fugitive child in Cittàgazze: Lyra. Although he does not know

it, their lives are soon to become forever intertwined when Lyra's

alethiometer gives her one simple command: Help Will find his father.

Philip Pullman gives his readers precisely the satisfactions they look

for in a novel: well-made, absorbing characters, supreme elegance of

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