Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials is comprised
of three novels: Northern Lights (known in the US as The Golden Compass), The
Subtle Knife and The Amber Spyglass. The story is set in a fantasy world that
contains numerous parallel universes, some of which bear some resemblance to
real-life Oxford. Lyra, the protagonist, inhabits the fictional Jordan College,
Oxford, in a world in which human beings are accompanied by animal embodiments
of their souls, called daemons. The initial similarities and intriguing
differences between Lyra’s world and real life will draw you in right from the
start, and you’re sure to be gripped as you accompany Lyra on a journey that
sees her coming of age and discovering that space and time are not what she
expected. If you want to do some background reading, try Milton’s epic poem
Paradise Lost, of which Pullman’s trilogy is a partial reinvention.
It was impossible to choose just one Jane Austen
novel for this list, as they’re all absolutely brilliant and packed full of
interesting and sometimes amusing characters – and heroines you can’t fail to
love. As well as being entertaining stories in themselves, Jane Austen’s novels
are recognised for their historical importance thanks to their social
commentary on the Georgian aristocracy. Austen herself was on the outskirts of
the aristocracy, well-placed to write about the people and situations she
undoubtedly met with in real life. Pride and Prejudice, Emma, Sense and
Sensibility, Mansfield Park, Persuasion, Northanger Abbey; take your pick, but
if forced to choose, my personal favourite is Emma, the tale of a well-meaning
but headstrong young woman who makes it her mission to act as matchmaker to
local villagers – with disastrous consequences both to them and to her own
chances of romance.