Lucy's Reviews > The Subtle Knife

The Subtle Knife by Philip Pullman
Rate this book
Clear rating

by
307208
's review

did not like it


I am not a fan of forwarded emails. They frustrate me, because they usually come from the same group of people, people I like a great deal but who never send me a normal "hey, how's it going?" message. Just "Support our Troops" or "Tell every woman you know she's special" or "Microsoft is running a test and if you send this you could get a check for $1,000!" When I see the letters FWD in the subject line, I usually simply delete it.

I lost track of the number of emails I received telling me about the Anti-God movie The Golden Compass and the need to boycott the movies and the books. It was well over ten. Ten people wanted me to send that email on to everyone I know, telling them the same thing. Don't see this movie! Don't read these books! Alert! Alert! Alert!

Nothing like calling attention to something like a planned boycott. I haven't seen the movie, because I'm cheap and it's not something I'd take my kids to or something I'd be prone to see anyway, but as I had already read the first book in the series, enjoyed it and hadn't found it to be Anti-God, I was curious to read the next to see what the fuss was all about.

I don't know if the emails worked and I read with a bias, but I did not enjoy this second book. Not because it is Anti-God...which it really isn't, but more anti organized religion and organized religion's version of god, but because the writing is bad.

Dialogue - choppy.

Descriptions - cliched. (how do I get that little accent marking over the e?)

Storyline - totally falters.

I felt enormously disappointed in the direction of this book. Lyra, the young female protagonist in search of dust and her father, all but disappears in this second story. She still plays a part, but now as the sidekick to Will, a new character who is a giant "young adult fiction" stereotype (in search of the father he never knew while protecting his mother from bad guys and seems to be gifted in the combat department). I don't remember the writing being bad in the first book. I thought it descriptive and unique and thoughtful. Not so, in The Subtle Knife. Pullman changes gears and loses focus. There is a lot more going on and none of it is developed well. I stopped caring about the characters and their goals.

I think these books had great potential. There could be a lot to discuss with adolescents (not young children...at all). The nature of the soul, the natural man, the costs and benefits of religions. All appropriate things to discuss with youth ready to question and discover on their own.

Pullman takes that conversation away with his lack of metaphor. It becomes impossible to argue, "I think the dust means this." or "what do you think The Authority is for Pullman?" when he throws his opinion at you with real life Christian beliefs. It's inappropriate and unfair. Write a fantasy or a satire or a parable if you want to. Other authors have done it...and done it well.

Pullman didn't.

I won't be reading the third book.
61 likes · flag

Sign into Goodreads to see if any of your friends have read The Subtle Knife.
Sign In »

Reading Progress

Started Reading
December 1, 2007 – Finished Reading
December 4, 2007 – Shelved

Comments Showing 1-9 of 9 (9 new)

dateDown arrow    newest »

Mikaila Alas, I have to disagree with you.


message 2: by Julia (new)

Julia W I absolutely agree - especially with your 5th full paragraph about the shift in writing styles and the lack of development. The third book is even more poorly written than the 2nd. The first was decent and enjoyable, but the writing just got progressively worse - I read all three, and I was so grateful to finally have the third book done. It baffles me that the were on best sellers lists when the second and third books are so poorly written.


Suzanne I thought these books were overrated. I also think they are violent, anti-religious and not something I would give to a child. The themes are quite disturbing. My daughter, a teacher, said many of her middle school students were reading them and gave them to me for my opinion. I agree with yours.


message 4: by DT (new) - rated it 2 stars

DT Segrest People get so huffy about these books and their plot. I liked how you put it, they aren't anti-God they're anti-organized religion and id even go from there and say they are anti-corrupt organized religion. I'm reading the third book now and I'm surprised I've made it this far. I love the story but I really do think the plot is weak and the writing is just plain bad.


Damian Pullman's dialogue in The Subtle Knife is among the worst I have ever read.


Shannon Why is it inappropriate and unfair? Christian writers do it all the time.


Geekycheeky Damian I don't think the dialogues is that bad, especially knowing that a book like The Dark Is Rising Saga exists :)

Lucy I'm not sure if the religious approach is what initially put me off this, for me its more like all the elements the author focused on building in the first book became irrelevant to him in the second. All the people we thought were well developed became cheerleaders to new characters we didn't have the time to care for. Lyra entering a supporting role and making dumb decisions she wouldn't otherwise have done in the first book. Lee and his ending. Sarafina losing that awesome fantasy quality she had so well in the first and the armored polar bear and gyptians (were the eff were they?). All the elements of the golden compass just got thrown away. So in many ways I do agree with your review but maybe it's written this way for children because they do not spot as many significant errors as we do.

Shannon, like you, the idea of a battle against the almighty authority I didnt think was offensive (and I'm a christian, i think). But the problem with it in this book is that it felt so out of place and forced. It didn't come with all the grace the first book started with. We come from this simple fantasy alternate universe to BAM, theres more universes like it and now they are all rallying to go kill God. Like where the eff did that come from? I must admit i never saw it coming but had to read through anyway because I've been cursed with finishing a book once I've started. For another book it might have fitted well. Imagine trying to stop voldemort only to realise he isn't only trying to take over the world but to harness the power from the world once he's taken over it and then advance to destroy God. Doesnt quite fit now, does it?


Ivana Books Are Magic I felt the same way, I liked the first but he ruined it all with this second book.


Jeffrey Gao Nah, it's intriguing and exciting!


back to top