His Dark Materials Books in Order
Part ofPhilip Pullman Books in OrderExplore the His Dark Materials series by Philip Pullman with every book in order, short plot notes, companion novellas, adaptations and guidance on how to read the trilogy and related works.
Last updated: June 7, 2026
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Publication Order
8 books
The Golden Compass
by Philip Pullman
1995
Lyra Belacqua grows up among scholars in an alternate Oxford where every person has a talking animal dæmon. When children start vanishing and her uncle’s research into Dust angers the Church, Lyra travels north into a world of gyptians, witches and armoured bears to uncover a terrifying experiment.
The Subtle Knife
by Philip Pullman
1997
Will Parry, a boy from our Oxford, stumbles into a deserted city in another world and meets Lyra. Together they discover a knife that can cut windows between universes, drawing them into a conflict involving Spectres, angels and ruthless agents of the Magisterium.
The Amber Spyglass
by Philip Pullman
2000
As war erupts in the heavens, Lyra and Will must journey even into the Land of the Dead to learn the truth about Dust and make a choice that will shape every world. Their quest tests love, loyalty and courage against vast cosmic forces.
Lyra's Oxford
by Philip Pullman
2003
This illustrated novella revisits Lyra a few years after His Dark Materials, when a wounded bird leads her into a small, sinister mystery in the alleys and colleges of Oxford. It offers a brief, atmospheric glimpse of how her world has changed.
Once Upon a Time in the North
by Philip Pullman
2008
A prequel to His Dark Materials, this short novel shows how Texan aeronaut Lee Scoresby first met the armoured bear Iorek Byrnison in the rough northern port of Novy Odense, crossing a corrupt politician and a powerful corporation in the process.
Serpentine
by Philip Pullman
2020
Set between His Dark Materials and The Secret Commonwealth, this brief tale sends teenage Lyra and Pantalaimon back to Trollesund to consult the witch‑consul Dr Lanselius, as they struggle to understand their new ability to separate and what it means for their bond.
The Collectors
by Philip Pullman
2022
On a winter night in an Oxford college, two men discuss a disturbing painting and a curious piece of art that may be linked to the enigmatic Mrs Coulter. Their conversation turns into a ghost story that slips between our world and Lyra’s.
The Imagination Chamber
by Philip Pullman
2022
A small companion volume to His Dark Materials, this book gathers tiny scenes, vignettes and images from Lyra’s universe. Each fragment offers a fleeting glimpse of characters, places or ideas, and together they feel like stepping into the author’s private sketchbook.
Series background & context
His Dark Materials is the series that made Philip Pullman a household name: three sweeping fantasy novels about two children, Lyra Belacqua and Will Parry, whose choices shape the fate of countless worlds. On the surface they are adventure stories full of witches, armoured bears and strange devices; underneath they wrestle with questions of authority, belief and what it means to grow up.
In The Golden Compass (originally published as Northern Lights), we meet Lyra running wild with her daemon Pantalaimon among the scholars of Jordan College in an alternate Oxford. Children are disappearing, stolen by mysterious “Gobblers”, and rumours swirl about an experimental station in the far North. When Lyra is given a truth‑telling instrument called an alethiometer, she finds herself drawn into a journey that leads from college roofs to gyptian boats, witch clans and the ice‑bound fortresses of armoured bears.
The Subtle Knife brings in Will Parry, a boy from our own Oxford who is on the run after a terrible accident. He slips through a shimmering window into another world and meets Lyra in the abandoned city of Cittàgazze, a place haunted by soul‑eating Spectres that prey only on adults. Together they discover a miraculous knife that can cut openings between universes, a weapon that many powerful forces—angels, spies, agents of the Church—would kill to control.
In The Amber Spyglass the story expands again into a full‑scale cosmic conflict. Lyra and Will must travel to the Land of the Dead, bear witness to the suffering of trapped souls and make an almost unbearable sacrifice to put things right. At the same time, Lord Asriel and Mrs Coulter pursue their own desperate, conflicting missions, and the nature of Dust—the mysterious particles at the heart of the story—comes into focus.
One of the pleasures of His Dark Materials is the texture of Lyra’s world: daemons that change shape in childhood and settle in adolescence, talking bears who forge their own armour, witch queens who cross the sky in pine‑branch sleds. Pullman treats these marvels matter‑of‑factly, trusting readers to piece together the rules and consequences.
Around the trilogy sit several shorter works. Lyra’s Oxford, Once Upon a Time in the North, Serpentine, The Collectors and The Imagination Chamber each show small, vivid corners of the wider universe—snapshots of Lyra’s later life, Lee Scoresby’s past or the shadows cast by Mrs Coulter. On stage, on radio and in screen adaptations, the story has taken on new shapes, but the books remain the place to start.
For new readers, the simplest path is to read the main trilogy in publication order, then explore the novellas and The Book of Dust if you’d like to dig deeper. However you approach it, His Dark Materials offers a rich, questioning kind of fantasy that treats its readers—young or old—as capable of thinking hard about love, loyalty, freedom and loss.
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