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- Published on: 1603
- Binding: Hardcover
Customer Reviews
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 8 people found the following review helpful.
Too much like HP?
By kittiwake
Three children rather than one - but the boy even wears wire-rimmed glasses!Wrapped in blankets as small children and taken away by a man who, except for being scruffy rather than neat sounds remarkably like Dumbledore?Car disappears and reappears somewhere else (the Night Bus?).Orphans who are to be afraid of 'him' coming to get them!Children who are not told the whole story about their past or their future task - they will be told about it later!A book (pensieve?) into which they fall to another time, by means of photos rather than memories - but aren't photos memories anyway?Screamers (Dementors?) - scary beings in black!A big house (Hogwarts Castle?)in mountains that cannot be seen by most people.I have great difficulty with the similarities that I perceive.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Enchanting and Epic
By TeaPartyPrincess
WOW.This was as magical as Harry Potter and as epic as Narnia. The Emerald Atlas was simply a delight to read.This is a fantastic children's fantasy. The characters are engaging and each has their own personality, making it easy to relate to at least one. And they have flaws. They have real believable flaws.The world is simply enchanting. It is built so well that I could imagine it all so well - at points I wondered to myself if there had been a dramatisation of this made because it really came to life. There are your common fantasy races like dwarves and witches, but then there are some brand new - and quite terrifying! - additions.The plot is fantastic - there are aspects of mystery that don't end as you think they will. It twists and turns and helps to weave this marvellous story. And that ending. Just when you think everything has calmed down, that everything is going to be OK now... Well, I don't want to spoil it for you.When I finished this I was left with that slightly empty yet expectant feeling that I have very rarely felt. This is a really powerful start to the series.I can't wait to read on.
29 of 31 people found the following review helpful.
My 11-year-old was gripped from the first page...
By D. M. Purkiss
... but I wasn't. This is one of those books which really illustrates the folly of trying to cross over between children and adults. An adult reader who picks it up will probably sigh - so many of the elements are familiar. A lonely orphan boy with glasses that keep getting into trouble (check: Harry Potter), and two other orphans (check: the Baudelaires from Lemony Snicket) one a responsible older sister (check: Violet Baudelaire) with a feisty younger sister (check: Sunny Baudelaire), some dwarfs (check: Tolkien), an older wizard figure (check: Dumbledore, Gandalf), a mean sorceress (check: Narnia) and the pressing need to save the world (just about everything). Pace the blurb on the back, I can't see much of Philip Pullman here, except the time travel between quantum worlds. The writing is workmanlike, and the only jarring element is perhaps the rather primary-school urge to use speech modifiers - and I'm with Elmore Leonard on this one. (Don't use speech modifiers, he admonished gravely.) It ends on a cliffhanger, and so does every chapter, just as books like How To Write a Bestseller instruct. The unusual element is the eponymous magic book, which seems to refer back to the emerald tablet of Hermes Trismegistus.So much for my sour, crabbed, middle-aged views, which you should now forget, because what is much more important is that the eleven-year-old could hardly be physically parted from the book until she had finished it. She now writes:This book gets more and more exciting, every page has another revelation. I only have one bad thing to say about this book which is that it has a few too many speech modifications and adverbs for my liking. [She's channelling me here, I fear.] However I love this book and I think it ends in a very interesting way. The Books of Beginning is a bit like a magical, more serious and scary Lemony Snickett. I recommend this book to anyone who likes fantasy. Emerald Atlas, The Books of Beginning really is an incredible book.It makes me feel like Prospero. To her this is a brave new world, that has such people in it. of course I can reply, 'Tis new to thee', and thus make myself into an old bore. Children actually like a remix of the familiar; they like being able to identify elements known to them, make guesses about plot developments, who's bad, who is good. We should probably all shut up and let the children enjoy John Stephens. I know my daughter is on tenterhooks for the sequel. The hype may be a tad extreme 'define a generation' is a very big claim, and people like to find stuff for themselves - but this is certainly a great, rattling read for children.
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