LO: is it just me or is Lyras Oxford over priced (£10!)
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LO: is it just me or is Lyras Oxford over priced (£10!)
hey, lyras oxford is to expensive, its a tenner, you can buy the amber spyglass for £7!
Last edited by muddmania on Sat Nov 06, 2004 4:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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muddmania - Grazer
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This was one of the general moans when it was released. Of course it isn't just a standard mass market paperback. They have put effort into giving it the 'feel', and with all the accompanying ephemera it costs more to make than a paperback. But yes I do agree that it is still overpriced.
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They gave it5 a price tht they new people would pay plus im sure those engravings aren't cheap
Into this wild abyss, The womb of nature and perhaps her grave, of neither sea, nor shore, nor air, nor fire, But all these in their pregnant causes mixed Confusedly, and which thus must ever fight, Unless the almighty maker them ordain His dark materials to create more worlds, Into this wild abyss the wary fiend Stood on the brink of hell and looked a while, Pondering his voyage...John Milton-Paradise Lost-Book 2
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i agree, it has got a lot more depth and feel,(like the map and postcard) its almost like having a peice of PP's worlds there with you. It would be briliant if TBOD is like it, with pull-outs and stuff.
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muddmania - Grazer
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Personally, I think all books are excellent value when compared with other media, and so this one is reasonably priced (while, for example, TAS at £7 is ludicrously cheap - think about the enjoyment per pound compared with the average CD or game you buy).
Last edited by Max on Fri Nov 05, 2004 10:30 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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I never thought like that, thanks !! although music and games are enjoyable to a point books will always be much better, especialy the ones that enspire and please so many other people, HDM, LOTR ect.
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muddmania - Grazer
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I initially thought that the book was hideously over priced as well, but it is just a beautifully put together piece. If it was just a flimsy paperback book, with none of the pull-outs I'm sure it could have been sold for under a fiver, but as it is, I think a tenner is spot on.
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I bought Lyra's Oxford it in Waterstones at Trafalgar Square when I visited London.
In France, it costs 12.5€ (about £7.00)
Strange fact, HDM is in store in my (french) town, in english version. The price for the english book (with the whole trilogy inside) is 24€ (£16) and that cheaper that in UK where this book is sold for £25. I don't understand why it's cheaper.
But I find books are incredibly expensive in UK. This summer as I said, I visited London and oxford (taking pictures of every HDM places...) and I was looking for books. And there are 50% more expensive than in France.
In France, it costs 12.5€ (about £7.00)
Strange fact, HDM is in store in my (french) town, in english version. The price for the english book (with the whole trilogy inside) is 24€ (£16) and that cheaper that in UK where this book is sold for £25. I don't understand why it's cheaper.
But I find books are incredibly expensive in UK. This summer as I said, I visited London and oxford (taking pictures of every HDM places...) and I was looking for books. And there are 50% more expensive than in France.
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Since over 10 years, The Book of Dust will be published in 2 years.
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Everything is more expensive in the UK, which is why we buy a year's supply of everything whenever we go to any other country. Especially cheese and wine in France .
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Vodka in Poland (GBP 3.50 a litre there, GBP 20+ here!)Everything is more expensive in the UK, which is why we buy a year's supply of everything whenever we go to any other country. Especially cheese and wine in France .
CDs and Shoes in the US.
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I think lyra's oxford is more than a story I think it's a tourguide and perhaps even something that hints at pullmans inspiration for the books
being originally from oxford I can trace the steps from town to jericho in my head. I walk with the book one day to confirm my suspicions
being originally from oxford I can trace the steps from town to jericho in my head. I walk with the book one day to confirm my suspicions
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I know it's not exactly the theme of the topic, but I agree.I think it's a tourguide
I went to Oxford this summer and the Lyra's Oxford map was very useful to me, to find place of HDM, and places in the city !!!!
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Since over 10 years, The Book of Dust will be published in 2 years.
Since over 10 years, The Book of Dust will be published in 2 years.
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Oh! Haku, did you go from Turl to Juxon? I did, just curious. Makepeace's house in our world is pretty uh...dreary. But indeed, with the LO map I was much more successful at finding things than I had been with...nothing.
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The map got Shoe Lane wrong. In our world it goes from New Inn Hall Street to the back of the Clarendon Centre (a horrible shopping mall). There is no Clarendon Centre in Lyra's Oxford, so Shoe Lane should run all the way from New Inn Street to Cornmarket Street. But the map shows Shoe Lane as a cul-de-sac, as it is here.
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Peter - Not an endangered species
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I've seen a 1950s map and Shoe Lane was always a cul-de-sac.The map got Shoe Lane wrong. In our world it goes from New Inn Hall Street to the back of the Clarendon Centre (a horrible shopping mall). There is no Clarendon Centre in Lyra's Oxford, so Shoe Lane should run all the way from New Inn Street to Cornmarket Street. But the map shows Shoe Lane as a cul-de-sac, as it is here.
Touché!
What I want to know is, why does every street named on the L-Oxford map bear the same name it does on the A to Z of our Oxford, except that our New Inn Hall Street is their New Inn Street. Is this another teaser, like 31 April?
Common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by the age of eighteen (Albert Einstein)
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Not if you go far enough back:I've seen a 1950s map and Shoe Lane was always a cul-de-sac.The map got Shoe Lane wrong. In our world it goes from New Inn Hall Street to the back of the Clarendon Centre (a horrible shopping mall). There is no Clarendon Centre in Lyra's Oxford, so Shoe Lane should run all the way from New Inn Street to Cornmarket Street. But the map shows Shoe Lane as a cul-de-sac, as it is here.
Touché!
Original here.
A hit! A palpable hit
Or has Mr Pullman crossed the fine line...
What I want to know is, why does every street named on the L-Oxford map bear the same name it does on the A to Z of our Oxford, except that our New Inn Hall Street is their New Inn Street. Is this another teaser, like 31 April?
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Peter - Not an endangered species
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