His Dark Materials: Lyra's Oxford
His Dark Materials: Lyra's Oxford book cover

His Dark Materials: Lyra's Oxford

Paperback – Illustrated, September 5, 2017

Price
$7.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
80
Publisher
Yearling
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0399555459
Dimensions
5.19 x 0.23 x 7.63 inches
Weight
2.4 ounces

Description

" Tantalizing. . . . A provocative exporation of traps and trust, awareness and intuition." -- The New York Times Book Review " His Dark Materials is easily the most deservedly labeled epic of contemporary epic fantasies; here as a pendant to that trilogy is a short story that even in its brevity manages to capture some of the majesty--and mystery--of the parent work."-- The Horn Book Magazine " Fans who can't get enough of Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy will embrace this small volume , which packages a short story about Lyra along with such ephemera as a beautifully engraved, fold-out map of the alternate-reality Oxford which Lyra inhabits. Puzzle enthusiasts will enjoy poring over the clues."-- Publishers Weekly PHILIP PULLMAN is one of the most acclaimed writers working today. He is best known for the His Dark Materials trilogy, which has been named one of the top 100 books of all time by Newsweek and one of the all-time greatest novels by Entertainment Weekly. Pullman was knighted for his services to literature in the 2019 New Years Honours. The Book of Dust, Pullman’s eagerly anticipated return to the world of His Dark Materials, will also be a book in three parts. It began with La Belle Sauvage and continues with The Secret Commonwealth. Philip Pullman is the author of many other beloved novels. For younger readers: I Was a Rat!, Count Karlstein, Two Crafty Criminals!, Spring-Heeled Jack, and The Scarecrow and His Servant. For older readers: the Sally Lockhart quartet ( The Ruby in the Smoke, The Shadow in the North, The Tiger in the Well, and The Tin Princess ), T he White Mercedes , and The Broken Bridge. He has written a magnificent collection, Fairy Tales from the Brothers Grimm, and his essays and lectures on writing and storytelling have been gathered in a volume called Dæmon Voices: On Stories and Storytelling. Philip Pullman lives in Oxford, England. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. LYRA didn’t often climb out of her bedroom window these days. She had a better way onto the roof of Jordan College: the Porter had given her a key that let her onto the roof of the Lodge Tower. He’d let her have it because he was too old to climb the steps and check the stonework and the lead, as was his duty four times a year; so she made a full report to him, and he passed it to the Bursar, and in exchange she was able to get out onto the roof whenever she wanted. When she lay down on the lead, she was invisible from everywhere except the sky. A little parapet ran all the way around the square roof, and Pantalaimon often draped his pine-marten form over the mock battlements on the corner facing south, and dozed while Lyra sat below with her back against the sun-drenched stone, studying the books she’d brought up with her. Sometimes they’d stop and watch the storks that nested on St. Michael’s Tower, just across Turl Street. Lyra had a plan to tempt them over to Jordan, and she’d even dragged several planks of wood up to the roof and laboriously nailed them together to make a platform, just as they’d done at St. Michael’s; but it hadn’t worked. The storks were loyal to St. Michael’s, and that was that. “They wouldn’t stay for long if we kept on coming here, anyway,” said Pantalaimon.“We could tame them. I bet we could. What do they eat?”“Fish,” he guessed. “Frogs.” He was lying on top of the stone parapet, lazily grooming his red gold fur. Lyra stood up to lean on the stone beside him, her limbs full of warmth, and gazed out toward the southeast, where a dusty dark-green line of trees rose above the spires and rooftops in the early evening air.She was waiting for the starlings. That year an extraordinary number of them had come to roost in the Botanic Garden, and every evening they would rise out of the trees like smoke, and swirl and swoop and dart through the skies above the city in their thousands.“Millions,” Pan said.“Maybe, easily. I don’t know who could ever count them. . . . There they are!” They didn’t seem like individual birds, or even individual dots of black against the blue; it was the flock itself that was the individual. It was like a single piece of cloth, cut in a very complicated way that let it swing through itself and double over and stretch and fold in three dimensions without ever tangling, turning itself inside out and elegantly waving and crossing through and falling and rising and falling again. “If it was saying something . . . ,” said Lyra.“Like signaling.”“No one would know, though. No one could ever understand what it meant.”“Maybe it means nothing. It just is.”“Everything means something,” Lyra said severely. “We just have to find out how to read it.” Pantalaimon leapt across a gap in the parapet to the stone in the corner, and stood on his hind legs, balancing with his tail and gazing more intently at the vast swirling flock over the far side of the city.“What does that mean, then?” he said. She knew exactly what he was referring to. She was watching it too. Something was jarring or snagging at the smokelike, flaglike, ceaseless motion of the starlings, as if that miraculous multidimensional cloth had found itself unable to get rid of a knot.“They’re attacking something,” Lyra said, shading her eyes. And coming closer. Lyra could hear them now, too: a high-pitched angry mindless shriek. The bird at the center of the swirling anger was darting to right and left, now speeding upward, now dropping almost to the rooftops, and when it was no closer than the spire of the University Church, and before they could even see what kind of bird it was, Lyra and Pan found themselves shaking with surprise. For it wasn’t a bird, although it was bird-shaped; it was a dæmon. A witch’s dæmon.“Has anyone else seen it? Is anyone looking?” said Lyra. Pan’s black eyes swept every rooftop, every window in sight, while Lyra leaned out and looked up and down the street on one side and then darted to the other three sides to look into Jordan’s front quadrangle and along the roof as well. The citizens of Oxford were going about their daily business, and a noise of birds in the sky wasn’t interesting enough to disturb them. Just as well: because a dæmon was instantly recognizable as what he was, and to see one without his human would have caused a sensation, if not an outcry of fear and horror. “Oh, this way, this way!” Lyra said urgently, unwilling to shout, but jumping up and waving both arms; and Pan too was trying to attract the dæmon’s attention, leaping from stone to stone, flowing across the gaps and spinning around to leap back again. The birds were closer now, and Lyra could see the dæmon clearly: a dark bird about the size of a thrush, but with long arched wings and a forked tail. Whatever he’d done to anger the starlings, they were possessed by fear and rage, swooping, stabbing, tearing, trying to batter him out of the air.“This way! Here, here!” Pan cried, and Lyra flung open the trapdoor to give the dæmon a way of escape. The noise, now that the starlings were nearly overhead, was deafening, and Lyra thought that people below must be looking up to see this war in the sky. And there were so many birds, as thick as flakes in a blizzard of black snow, that Lyra, her arm across her head, lost sight of the dæmon among them. But Pan had him. As the dæmon-bird dived low toward the tower, Pan stood up on his hind legs, and then leapt up to gather the dæmon in his paws and roll with him over and over toward the trapdoor, and they fell through clumsily as Lyra struck out with her fists to left and right and then tumbled through after the two dæmons, dragging the trapdoor shut behind her. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • HIS DARK MATERIALS
  • IS NOW AN HBO ORIGINAL SERIES STARRING DAFNE KEEN, RUTH WILSON, JAMES McAVOY, AND LIN-MANUEL MIRANDA!
  • This exciting companion to His Dark Materials tells a not-to-be-missed story about Lyra and her world.When a witch's daemon crashes onto the roof of Jordan College, Lyra and her daemon, Pan, are eager to help. But as this unlikely trio scours the winding streets of Oxford in search of a famed alchemist, their journey takes a deadly turn...This volume also includes a fold-out map of Oxford and fascinating extra glimpses of our favorite characters.
  • Don't miss Philip Pullman's epic new trilogy set in the world of His Dark Materials!
  • ** THE BOOK OF DUST **
  • La Belle Sauvage
  • —now in paperback
  • The Secret Commonwealth
  • —coming October 3

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(703)
★★★★
25%
(586)
★★★
15%
(351)
★★
7%
(164)
23%
(538)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Loved the Lantern Slides

Lyra’s Oxford by Philip Pullman is a short story that takes place after the His Dark Materials series. Half of this book is a story about Lyra while she is in school at Oxford and what happens when she sees a dæmon that is being attacks by birds. The other half of this book were “lantern slides” where Philip creates a kind of slide show with descriptions of holes in a bunch of different character plot lines from His Dark Materials. These were really interesting to read where everyone ended up or what they were thinking about. If you loved His Dark Materials, then you will enjoy this story as well.
7 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Great short story for fans of His Dark Materials

The book is great, an nice lead in to the next book in the series, though not a manditory read. Very short. I give it 3 stars because the seller said it was in excellent shape, and my copy's cover is warped like from water damage. It may have happened in route, and it's not so bad that it's unreadable or broken or anything. I would have said good condition rather than excellent but no biggie.
2 people found this helpful
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Lyra and Pantalaimon enjoy helping others

Lyra and Pantalaimon are enjoying their day when they see a daemon being attacked by birds. They rescue the daemon, who requests help for her human. When night falls, they take off to find an alchemist, who has the cure for the illness affecting the human. Needless to say, not everything is as straightforward as it seems, but Lyra and Pantalaimon do end up helping, just not in the way they expected.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Pay attention to the description. This is a tiny ...

Pay attention to the description. This is a tiny, short book. Not much of a story. Directed to a younger audience than the Dark Matter trilogy.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Not new

This was used. It did not include a pull-out map.
✓ Verified Purchase

Pullman should be ashamed of himself

This is ridiculously short. The excerpt is literally 10% of the book according to my kindle. $8 for 50 pages? At least 5 of which are pictures. They are banking that you are desperate for more and not paying attention. This should be less than two dollars. The collectors at least was only $.99 at 25 pages
✓ Verified Purchase

The map alone is worth it.

The story itself doesn't amount to much, but it is a nice tie-in to the Book of Dust Trilogy. The included fold-out map, however, is beautifully drawn and extremely useful in following all the books of both Trilogies.
✓ Verified Purchase

The map alone is worth it.

The story itself doesn't amount to much, but it is a nice tie-in to the Book of Dust Trilogy. The included fold-out map, however, is beautifully drawn and extremely useful in following all the books of both Trilogies.
✓ Verified Purchase

goo

great short story to the books.
✓ Verified Purchase

17 Pages - WTH

What a waste of money. It took an hour to read this silly thing, terrible writing, just something to make money off of the HBO series - what they didn't pay Pullman?