World Famous Comics: The Elements of His Dark Materials
The Elements of His Dark Materials
By: Laurie Frost Publisher: Fell Press Average Rating: Binding: Paperback Label: Fell Press Number of Items: 1 Number of Pages: 560 Publication Date: September 15, 2006 Reading Level: Young Adult
Product Description: An illustrated, comprehensive, reader-friendly reference to Pullman's brilliant trilogy--valuable for fans and researchers alike. Packed with clues to literary imagery and subtle allusions, Frost's encyclopedia-style guide exposes the depths of all three titles, including the appendices in the 10th anniversary editions of Northern Lights, The Subtle Knife, and The Amber Spyglass published in the UK in 2005 (not yet released in the US).
The Elements of His Dark Materials features: Foreword by Philip Pullman 140 photos 26 illustrations 11 maps (for example: Gobbler sightings, gyptians' voyage, Scoresby's journeys, Will and Iorek's route to the Himalayas) 12 chapters (for example: characters, places, applied and natural sciences, and social structures)
US and UK page numbers for each element described Reference section with suggestions for further reading, works relating to His Dark Materials, and a Pullman bibliography.
Extra-textual remarks accompany some elements' entries and include: Notes on text-level differences between the UK and US editions or between the three volumes; Observations-- speculative comments Facts-- real world counterparts to the fictional elements of the books Updates--based on the appendices Philip Pullman added to the tenth anniversary editions of the trilogy (not yet released in the US).
Seriously Flawed Philip Pullman might use this as a reference, but he also knows what she gets wrong. There are a number of glaring errors, of which I will cite one. Frost asserts that the angel Balthamos is female even though all the quotations she offers refer to Balthamos as "he." And Balthamos is male as is his friend Baruch. Frost's work is seemingly comprehensive but careless, badly edited, and at times misleading. Too bad, as a good encyclopedia of HDM would be welcome.
I was astounded If Philip Pullman refers to this book, how can you go wrong? It is totally encyclopedic. A dense reference book that covers everything that you have remembered or may have forgotten. I keep referring to this tome though I am not currently re-reading the trilogy. The drawings, the cultural references (in the real world), the UK and US differences, this is a mind boggling work. I cannot imagine the effort put into this book. Laurie Frost has seemed, to me, to have exceeded all human limitations in documenting this masterwork.
Resources should always be shiny. There's no better recommendation for a reference book than when the author of the original series states that he's using it to help him remember his own books. And this reference has just such a recommendation.
This is an awesome source, part concordance, part encyclopedia, part character guide. It's a great companion and helped me innumerable times when I was looking for an elusive quote. I also enjoyed seeing the differences between the US and UK versions of the books laid out. The information is presented in a concise and entertaining way, and it's as easy to simply flip open a page and read a bit for fun as it is to look up a specific character or concept.
Frost's attention to detail makes this a book that I will always be glad to own. (Plus, the cover is a shiny picture of the Northern Lights, which just makes it that much more attractive.)