| Description:
 
 From the very start of its very first scene, The Amber Spyglass  will set hearts fluttering and minds racing. All we'll say here is that we  immediately discover who captured Lyra at the end of The Subtle Knife,  though we've yet to discern whether this individual's intent is good, evil, or  somewhere in between. We also learn that Will still possesses the blade that  allows him to cut between worlds, and has been joined by two winged companions  who are determined to escort him to Lord Asriel's mountain redoubt. The boy,  however, has only one goal in mind--to rescue his friend and return to her the  alethiometer, an instrument that has revealed so much to her and to readers of  The Golden Compass and its  follow-up. Within a short time,  too, we get to experience the "tingle of the starlight" on Serafina Pekkala's  skin as she seeks out a famished Iorek Byrnison and enlists him in Lord Asriel's  crusade:
  A complex web of thoughts was weaving itself in the bear king's mind, with more  strands in it than hunger and satisfaction. There was the memory of the little  girl Lyra, whom he had named Silvertongue, and whom he had last seen crossing  the fragile snow bridge across a crevasse in his own island of Svalbard. Then  there was the agitation among the witches, the rumors of pacts and alliances and  war; and then there was the surpassingly strange fact of this new world itself,  and the witch's insistence that there were many more such worlds, and that the  fate of them all hung somehow on the fate of the child. Meanwhile, two factions of the Church are vying to reach Lyra first. One is even  prepared to give a priest "preemptive absolution" should he succeed in  committing mortal sin. For these tyrants, killing this girl is no less than "a  sacred task."  In the final installment of his trilogy, Philip Pullman has set himself the  highest hurdles. He must match its predecessors in terms of sheer action and  originality and resolve the enigmas he already created. The good news is  that there is no critical bad news--not that The Amber Spyglass doesn't  contain standoffs and close calls galore. (Who would have it otherwise?) But  Pullman brings his audacious revision of Paradise Lost to a conclusion  that is both serene and devastating. In prose that is transparent yet lyrical  and 3-D, the author weaves in and out of his principals' thoughts. He also  offers up several additional worlds. In one, Dr. Mary Malone is welcomed into an  apparently simple society. The environment of the mulefa (again, we'll reveal  nothing more) makes them rich in consciousness while their lives possess a slow  and stately rhythm. These strange creatures can, however, be very fast on their  feet (or on other things entirely) when necessary. Alas, they are on the verge  of dying as Dust streams out of their idyllic landscape. Will the Oxford  dark-matter researcher see her way to saving them, or does this require our  young heroes? And while Mary is puzzling out a cure, Will and Lyra undertake a  pilgrimage to a realm devoid of all light and hope, after having been forced  into the cruelest of sacrifices--or betrayals.    Throughout his galvanizing epic, Pullman sustains scenes of fierce beauty and  tenderness. He also allows us a moment or two of comic respite. At one point,  for instance, Lyra's mother bullies a series of ecclesiastical underlings: "The  man bowed helplessly and led her away. The guard behind her blew out his cheeks  with relief." Needless to say, Mrs. Coulter is as intoxicating and fluid as  ever. And can it be that we will come to admire her as she plays out her  desperate endgame? In this respect, as in many others, The Amber Spyglass  is truly a book of revelations, moving from darkness visible to radiant truth.  --Kerry Fried
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