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His Dark Materials: The Subtle Knife (Book…
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His Dark Materials: The Subtle Knife (Book 2) (original 1997; edition 2001)

by Philip Pullman (Author)

Series: His Dark Materials (2)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
23,634343126 (4.05)412
As the boundaries between worlds begin to dissolve, Lyra and her daemon help Will Parry in his search for his father and for a powerful, magical knife.
Member:Andy5185
Title:His Dark Materials: The Subtle Knife (Book 2)
Authors:Philip Pullman (Author)
Info:Yearling (2001), 384 pages
Collections:Your library, To read
Rating:
Tags:None

Work Information

The Subtle Knife by Philip Pullman (1997)

  1. 82
    The Neverending Story by Michael Ende (Leishai)
    Leishai: Also a story about fantasy with another world
  2. 52
    Wizard and Glass by Stephen King (levasssp)
    levasssp: or any of the Dark Tower series...similarities include an ability to travel between different, but closely related, worlds through portals or doors. Additionally, there are themes of religion, good/bad and questions about "essence" that are similar in both series.… (more)
  3. 21
    The City of Dreaming Books by Walter Moers (Leishai)
  4. 11
    Lycidas by Christoph Marzi (Leishai)
1990s (8)
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» See also 412 mentions

English (328)  Spanish (4)  German (2)  French (2)  Dutch (2)  Italian (2)  Portuguese (Portugal) (1)  Danish (1)  All languages (342)
Showing 1-5 of 328 (next | show all)
At first I thought I wouldn't like this as much as the first book. It was just a bit too much with the alternative universes and freaking Will taking over as a POV character at times (I liked Lyra a lot less from his perspective ... at least at first!), but somehow it all worked really well. And I enjoyed that we got to see other people take the narrative, such as the witches and Lee Scoresby. It was all very nicely tied together.

Until, like, the last five pages? Man, those were not good. Things happened very quickly and almost comically (despite being foreshaded throughout the book), metaphors more of less came to life (that whole taking his father's coat-thing... is that even how the idiom goes in English???), and the Christian themes became insanely real. No thanks, that's not ym thing at all.

But we'll see. The book was good, and I wasn't sold on the ending of the last book either, so maybe the third one will be better. I just need to collect more points on certain websites so I can order the next book. It'll probably be a few weeks until I get to read the end: very frustrating!

And yes I cried when a certain character died!!! He was my fave. :( ( )
  upontheforemostship | Feb 22, 2023 |
Ho fatto davvero fatica a leggere questo secondo capitolo della storia perché davvero noioso e prolisso nelle descrizioni di ambienti e fatti insignificanti. Non mi è piaciuto il ruolo assegnato a Lyra dall'autore infatti vedere una bambina furba, coraggiosa e intelligente sottomettersi a Will , il maschio alfa, è stato un pugno nello stomaco. Mi è piaciuto Will come personaggio un bambino costretto a crescere troppo in fretta a causa della malattia della madre e dell'assenza del padre ma non ho apprezzato il ruolo secondario assegnato a Lyra. Buona l'introduzione della lama sottile , dell'esistenza di altri mondi, degli spettri, di Cittagazze mancano invece molti personaggi che avevamo conosciuto nel primo libro. Facciamo la conoscenza di un nuovo personaggio la scienziata Mary Malone che studia anche lei la polvere e avra' un ruolo nel successivo romanzo. Mi hanno infastidito gli attacchi ingiustificati alla chiesa infatti, possibile che tutta la chiesa sia corrotta? Che fine hanno fatto i santi? Religiosi buoni come Don Bosco o Madre Teresa non esistono nell'universo creato da Pullman e persino l'Autorita' Dio è vista in maniera negativa. Un Dio assente indifferente all'uomo, negatore della libertà per asservire l'uomo. Lord Asriel vuole sfidare, combattere ed eliminare non solo la chiesa, ma addirittura l’Autorità. E nessuno dei suoi seguaci si pone una domanda, nessuno ha il minimo dubbio. Oltretutto perchè seguendo il filo logico di Pullman il Magisterium non perseguita le streghe o gli orsi ma solo Lyra e i suoi simili? Deludente questo capitolo. ( )
  Antonella2023 | Jan 26, 2023 |
Ho fatto davvero fatica a leggere questo secondo capitolo della storia perché davvero noioso e prolisso nelle descrizioni di ambienti e fatti insignificanti. Non mi è piaciuto il ruolo assegnato a Lyra dall'autore infatti vedere una bambina furba, coraggiosa e intelligente sottomettersi a Will , il maschio alfa, è stato un pugno nello stomaco. Mi è piaciuto Will come personaggio un bambino costretto a crescere troppo in fretta a causa della malattia della madre e dell'assenza del padre ma non ho apprezzato il ruolo secondario assegnato a Lyra. Buona l'introduzione della lama sottile , dell'esistenza di altri mondi, degli spettri, di Cittagazze mancano invece molti personaggi che avevamo conosciuto nel primo libro. Facciamo la conoscenza di un nuovo personaggio la scienziata Mary Malone che studia anche lei la polvere e avra' un ruolo nel successivo romanzo. Mi hanno infastidito gli attacchi ingiustificati alla chiesa infatti, possibile che tutta la chiesa sia corrotta? Che fine hanno fatto i santi? Religiosi buoni come Don Bosco o Madre Teresa non esistono nell'universo creato da Pullman e persino l'Autorita' Dio è vista in maniera negativa. Un Dio assente indifferente all'uomo, negatore della libertà per asservire l'uomo. Lord Asriel vuole sfidare, combattere ed eliminare non solo la chiesa, ma addirittura l’Autorità. E nessuno dei suoi seguaci si pone una domanda, nessuno ha il minimo dubbio. Oltretutto perchè seguendo il filo logico di Pullman il Magisterium non perseguita le streghe o gli orsi ma solo Lyra e i suoi simili? Deludente questo capitolo. ( )
  Antonella.23 | Jan 22, 2023 |
This series is definitely dark. There are a lot of dark themes weaved into the plot which twists and turns unrelentingly. I can see how the book is unsettling to some people, much more than The Golden Compass. I'm sure my imagination is only scratching the surface of where the next book will end up. ( )
  talon2claw | Dec 30, 2022 |
Another winner from Pullman. Very well written continuation of the series - a bit jumpier than the first book, but only because it has to be. Experimental theology, indeed. Read it. ( )
  dhaxton | Dec 28, 2022 |
Showing 1-5 of 328 (next | show all)
J. R. R. Tolkien, the granddaddy of modern high fantasy, asserted that the best fantasy writing is marked by ''arresting strangeness.'' Philip Pullman measures up; his work is devilishly inventive. His worlds teem with angels, witches, humans, animal familiars, talking bears and Specters, creatures resembling deadly airborne jellyfish... Put Philip Pullman on the shelf with Ursula K. Le Guin, Susan Cooper, Lloyd Alexander, at least until we get to see Volume 3.
 

» Add other authors (21 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Pullman, Philipprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Bailey, PeterIllustratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Bützow, HeleneTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Nielsen, CliffCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Peterson, EricCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Rohmann, EricCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Ströle, WolframÜbersetzersecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Tutino, AlfredoTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Will tugged at his mother's hand and said, "Come on, come on..." But his mother hung back.
Quotations
“I’m only an ignorant aëronaut. I’m so damn ignorant I believed it when I was told that shamans had the gift of flight, for example. Yet here’s a shaman who hasn’t.”

“Oh, but I have.”

“How d’you make that out?”

The balloon was drifting lower, and the ground was rising. […]

“I needed to fly,” said Grumman, “so I summoned you, and here I am, flying.”
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As the boundaries between worlds begin to dissolve, Lyra and her daemon help Will Parry in his search for his father and for a powerful, magical knife.

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