Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy ( The Golden Compass, The Subtle Knife, The Amber Spyglass ) has sold more than fifteen million copies and been has published in more than forty countries. The first volume, The Golden Compass, was made into a major motion picture starring Nicole Kidman and Daniel Craig. Pullman is at work on a companion His Dark Materials novel, The Book of Dust. He lives in Oxford, England.
Pullman's Fairy Tales offers something unique: the chance to watch a master storyteller think through these most foundational of tales. . . . It is fascinating. --The New York Times You didn't know you needed to reread Grimm. You do. This is a grand and great book. . . . I read it ravenously, rapturously. --Gregory Maguire, author of Wicked and Making Mischief: A Maurice Sendak Appreciation Zippy! . . . These tales are about plot and economy and speed [and] make great bedtime read-alouds for children who can handle a little gore. . . . The original tales weren't for children, of course; they were for everyone. So is this book. . . . Pullman is both erudite and funny. . . . He has fun with dialogue, and is particularly snappy with dwarfs. . . . You know what? He crushes it, as the youth of today are wont to say. . . . His translations are perfection. --The New York Times Book Review It is such a pleasure to read these tales again, to experience their strangeness and richness, their violence and beauty, their sheer nonsense. . . . Reading Pullman's version it is impossible not to hear Pullman's own gentle voice; he is present on every page. . . . [His] interventions work brilliantly. --The Boston Globe These wonder tales . . . compel belief as powerfully as any adventure or thriller. --Marina Warner, The Times Literary Supplement Excellent . . . His beginnings are like invitations that cannot be refused. . . . Pullman shows how completely he understands the Grimms. . . . [He] pays homage to the Brothers' pioneer work and simultaneously breathes new life into a great, venerable tradition of magical storytelling. --Jack Zipes, Los Angeles Review of Books A real pleasure to read . . . This is the kind of writing that stands up to years of bedtime repetition. . . . The author's best appearances are in the notes, which are often as entertaining as the stories themselves. . . . Swiftness and clarity, he says, were his guiding principles; to which he has added wit and invention. . . . Beautiful or grotesque, the mad poetry of these tales is often delightfully funny too. --The Economist Pullman s Fairy Tales offers something unique: the chance to watch a master storyteller think through these most foundational of tales. . . . It is fascinating. The New York Times You didn t know you needed to reread Grimm. You do. This is a grand and great book. . . . I read it ravenously, rapturously. Gregory Maguire, author of Wicked and Making Mischief: A Maurice Sendak Appreciation Zippy! . . . These tales are about plot and economy and speed [and] make great bedtime read-alouds for children who can handle a little gore. . . . The original tales weren t for children, of course; they were for everyone. So is this book. . . . Pullman is both erudite and funny. . . . He has fun with dialogue, and is particularly snappy with dwarfs. . . . You know what? He crushes it, as the youth of today are wont to say. . . . His translations are perfection. The New York Times Book Review It is such a pleasure to read these tales again, to experience their strangeness and richness, their violence and beauty, their sheer nonsense. . . . Reading Pullman s version it is impossible not to hear Pullman s own gentle voice; he is present on every page. . . . [His] interventions work brilliantly. The Boston Globe These wonder tales . . . compel belief as powerfully as any adventure or thriller. Marina Warner, The Times Literary Supplement Excellent . . . His beginnings are like invitations that cannot be refused. . . . Pullman shows how completely he understands the Grimms. . . . [He] pays homage to the Brothers pioneer work and simultaneously breathes new life into a great, venerable tradition of magical storytelling. Jack Zipes, Los Angeles Review of Books A real pleasure to read . . . This is the kind of writing that stands up to years of bedtime repetition. . . . The author s best appearances are in the notes, which are often as entertaining as the stories themselves. . . . Swiftness and clarity, he says, were his guiding principles; to which he has added wit and invention. . . . Beautiful or grotesque, the mad poetry of these tales is often delightfully funny too. The Economist Pullman s Fairy Tales offers something unique: the chance to watch a master storyteller think through these most foundational of tales. . . . It is fascinating. The New York Times You didn t know you needed to reread Grimm. You do. This is a grand and great book. . . . I read it ravenously, rapturously. Gregory Maguire, author of Wicked and Making Mischief: A Maurice Sendak Appreciation Zippy! . . . These tales are about plot and economy and speed [and] make great bedtime read-alouds for children who can handle a little gore. . . . The original tales weren t for children, of course; they were for everyone. So is this book. . . . Pullman is both erudite and funny. . . . He has fun with dialogue, and is particularly snappy with dwarfs. . . . You know what? He crushes it, as the youth of today are wont to say. . . . His translations are perfection. The New York Times Book Review It is such a pleasure to read these tales again, to experience their strangeness and richness, their violence and beauty, their sheer nonsense. . . . Reading Pullman s version it is impossible not to hear Pullman s own gentle voice; he is present on every page. . . . [His] interventions work brilliantly. The Boston Globe These wonder tales . . . compel belief as powerfully as any adventure or thriller. Marina Warner, The Times Literary Supplement Excellent . . . His beginnings are like invitations that cannot be refused. . . . Pullman shows how completely he understands the Grimms. . . . [He] pays homage to the Brothers pioneer work and simultaneously breathes new life into a great, venerable tradition of magical storytelling. Jack Zipes, Los Angeles Review of Books A real pleasure to read . . . This is the kind of writing that stands up to years of bedtime repetition. . . . The author s best appearances are in the notes, which are often as entertaining as the stories themselves. . . . Swiftness and clarity, he says, were his guiding principles; to which he has added wit and invention. . . . Beautiful or grotesque, the mad poetry of these tales is often delightfully funny too. The Economist Pullman's Fairy Tales offers something unique: the chance to watch a master storyteller think through these most foundational of tales. . . . It is fascinating. -- The New York Times You didn't know you needed to reread Grimm. You do. This is a grand and great book. . . . I read it ravenously, rapturously. --Gregory Maguire, author of Wicked and Making Mischief: A Maurice Sendak Appreciation Zippy! . . . These tales are about plot and economy and speed [and] make great bedtime read-alouds for children who can handle a little gore. . . . The original tales weren't for children, of course; they were for everyone. So is this book. . . . Pullman is both erudite and funny. . . . He has fun with dialogue, and is particularly snappy with dwarfs. . . . You know what? He crushes it, as the youth of today are wont to say. . . . His translations are perfection. -- The New York Times Book Review It is such a pleasure to read these tales again, to experience their strangeness and richness, their violence and beauty, their sheer nonsense. . . . Reading Pullman's version it is impossible not to hear Pullman's own gentle voice; he is present on every page. . . . [His] interventions work brilliantly. -- The Boston Globe These wonder tales . . . compel belief as powerfully as any adventure or thriller. --Marina Warner, The Times Literary Supplement Excellent . . . His beginnings are like invitations that cannot be refused. . . . Pullman shows how completely he understands the Grimms. . . . [He] pays homage to the Brothers' pioneer work and simultaneously breathes new life into a great, venerable tradition of magical storytelling. --Jack Zipes, Los Angeles Review of Books A real pleasure to read . . . This is the kind of writing that stands up to years of bedtime repetition. . . . The author's best appearances are in the notes, which are often as entertaining as the stories themselves. . . . Swiftness and clarity, he says, were his guiding principles; to which he has added wit and invention. . . . Beautiful or grotesque, the mad poetry of these tales is often delightfully funny too. -- The Economist