Shadow in
 
Categories
Law

Shadow in the North (Sally Lockhart Trilogy, Book 2)

Shadow in the North (Sally Lockhart Trilogy, Book 2)

Customer Rating: 
Total Reviews: 79

Best Offer: $3.89
By Supplier: sbd-

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Feedback  |  Description/Reviews  |  Offers
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 
I Think This Might've Been Censored
I'll save a review of the book for others, but suffice it to say that I really liked it. As a narrator, Anton Lesser is superb. I've listened to a lot of audiobooks, and he is one of the best.

However... it was when I was referencing my place in the story in a paper copy that I noticed that a paragraph in a certain physical scene between two characters has been entirely omitted. Later, when the male is asking the female whether their encounter was painful, the dialogue has been altered. I don't know if the audiobook producers are responsible, or if this represents a rewrite by the author, but I was annoyed.
2008-04-17
Great book, better than the first!
This book is so good! i love how dark and sophisticated it is. Sally really comes into her own and it leads perfectly into the next in the series. fantastic!
2008-02-18
Another good adventure
Realy love the way philip developes the story and carries on from the first book, many similitaries to his triliage of the Golden Compase
2008-02-09
Confusing, but good
I loved Philip Pullman's "His Dark Materials" trilogy so much, so I picked up his Sally Lockhart series to keep my glow going. They're really good; not quite as incredible as the HDM books, but very interesting, engaging and suspenseful. I loved the first book in the series. This one, book 2, was a lot more confusing than book 1. I think there may have been too many characters to keep straight; I kept confusing their names and agendas. That said, it still gripped me and held me in the story through the end.
2007-10-05
Puts the "Adult" back in "Young Adult"
I greatly appreciate Pullman's tendency to treat young readers as capable of dealing with sophisticated ideas like religious controversy, drug addiction, violence, and sex. Indeed, youth deal with these things in their everyday lives, and they need literature that addresses them without the aggrandizement or gloss with which they are so often depicted on TV. This novel, with its vivid characters and life-like depictions of 19th century London, treats its young readers with respect.
2007-02-24
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7