Hello All
PostPosted: Mon Jul 25, 2011 7:55 pm
Hi there!
My name here is Aileth and like it says by my introduction here, I'm a newbie in the forum.
I came here through Mark Reads and I plan to stay for a long while. I started with HDM the year Northern Lights came out, or perhaps the next one depending on the month. If you've read the books it means you're fairly good readers so you may have experienced something like this. Have you ever had the feeling of a book calling you even if you keep ignoring it? That was Northern Lights for me. For months, I saw the book everywhere I went, calling me, until I decided it must mean something so I bought it. It was like Dust was actually calling me to read it and with good reason.
When I finished it (2 or 3 days?) my mom took it up, and then my sister. You can imagine an eager child (well, not child as the first book came out when I was 16, but you get the idea) going every month to bookstores to ask when the next book was coming out for at least 2 years before The Subtle Knife came out and how I came to know every bookstore clerk and they came to know me and answer my question the moment I stepped into the store. Of course, this second book was almost ripped from my hands by my mother when I got it.
The truly difficult time was when the third book, The Amber Spyglass, was supposed to come out. Three years passed without a word, then four years. Finally, I got tired of waiting and went to the internet to see if it had been published or not. To my surprise, the book had been published three years before and never made it to print in my language; it took five years for that to be accomplished. Of course, I didn't wait that long. I ordered the entire trilogy on my own way before I even knew that it'd come to my country eventually (I got it more than a year before it came), plunged into it from the beginning and finished everything in less than a week.
That's the story of how I came into the books. As for why I love them is merely this: the ideas given in them are ones I can share in my experience with religious, moral and ideological thinking and action. If you read it as a work of fictional ideas, it's an example of the mismanagement of a system. I see no threat of the idea of a creator, only the idea of people fighting against someone controlling your ideas.
For those who put up with my ramblings so far, thank you. I hope I didn't bore many of you. See you at the threads!
My name here is Aileth and like it says by my introduction here, I'm a newbie in the forum.
I came here through Mark Reads and I plan to stay for a long while. I started with HDM the year Northern Lights came out, or perhaps the next one depending on the month. If you've read the books it means you're fairly good readers so you may have experienced something like this. Have you ever had the feeling of a book calling you even if you keep ignoring it? That was Northern Lights for me. For months, I saw the book everywhere I went, calling me, until I decided it must mean something so I bought it. It was like Dust was actually calling me to read it and with good reason.
When I finished it (2 or 3 days?) my mom took it up, and then my sister. You can imagine an eager child (well, not child as the first book came out when I was 16, but you get the idea) going every month to bookstores to ask when the next book was coming out for at least 2 years before The Subtle Knife came out and how I came to know every bookstore clerk and they came to know me and answer my question the moment I stepped into the store. Of course, this second book was almost ripped from my hands by my mother when I got it.
The truly difficult time was when the third book, The Amber Spyglass, was supposed to come out. Three years passed without a word, then four years. Finally, I got tired of waiting and went to the internet to see if it had been published or not. To my surprise, the book had been published three years before and never made it to print in my language; it took five years for that to be accomplished. Of course, I didn't wait that long. I ordered the entire trilogy on my own way before I even knew that it'd come to my country eventually (I got it more than a year before it came), plunged into it from the beginning and finished everything in less than a week.
That's the story of how I came into the books. As for why I love them is merely this: the ideas given in them are ones I can share in my experience with religious, moral and ideological thinking and action. If you read it as a work of fictional ideas, it's an example of the mismanagement of a system. I see no threat of the idea of a creator, only the idea of people fighting against someone controlling your ideas.
For those who put up with my ramblings so far, thank you. I hope I didn't bore many of you. See you at the threads!