In La Belle Sauvage (2017) Philip Pullman offers backstory to events
and characters of his Dark Materials trilogy.
Some of the same characters appear, along with new ones, and the infant
Lyra, who as a young girl was the central character of the trilogy, plays an
important role. The focus of this novel is an eleven-year-old boy named
Malcolm. He’s bright and resourceful and
not entirely aware of his innate intelligence and talents. He’s the owner of a canoe, La Belle Sauvage, which he uses to
travel from place to place, especially during the flood that dominates the
novel’s latter chapters. La Belle Sauvage
is the first installment of a new trilogy called The Book of Dust.
This novel is more earthbound than
the Dark Materials books, which is not a criticism. The plot concerns a darkening political
situation as the government is increasingly dominated by people and ideas
associated with the Magisterium, which is gradually imposing a police state.
(The Magisterium is a thinly veiled version of Catholicism, which itself stands
for Christianity, and which is also representative of repressive, authoritarian
religion in general).
The novel is very readable. Pullman delineates characters effectively and
deftly develops a mystery that gradually becomes a full-blown crisis. A budding attraction between Malcolm and a
sixteen-year-old girl named Alice who works at his father’s pub is an important
element.
My problem with the Dark
Materials trilogy centered on its attempts to make religion the central enemy
of a just and reasonable world. The
second and especially third installments grew increasingly strident and
polemical. While I do not disagree with this notion (current events--not to
mention two thousand years of history--make it credible), I don’t like novels
that attempt to indoctrinate young readers.
This was my complaint against C. S. Lewis’ much over-rated Narnia novels, each of which in
succession grew more tedious and didactic.
Pullman in La Belle Sauvage does not overblow his antagonism against the
Church. Instead he allows characters and
events to develop on their own terms. We
can see that sexual harassment and pedophilia may become elements that he will
attack in later novels in this new trilogy. And there’s no doubt that the
danger of a theocratically governed world will be at the center of the
developing crisis.
Pullman is not opposed to
religion per se. We see a convent of
nuns whom he treats sympathetically, even though many of them die in the
flood. He portrays pagan religion to an
extent, the old religions and legends of the British past. What he does not care for is an institutional
religion that imposes control over how people think and act, an authoritarian
religion that becomes the basis of an authoritarian, tyrannical government.
He’s opposed to fascism, clearly enough.
And the government that is developing in this novel is one that shares
many affinities with the rise of Nazism and its persecution of Jews and other
minorities. It also has affinities with our current American situation.
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