| "BARTIMAEUS TRILOGY - 3 BOOK SET"
Author: Jonathon Stroud
Interest Level: Middle Grades (4-8)
ATOS Reading Levels: 5.7-5.9
AR Points: 19.0-24.0 each
Publisher Recommended Age: 9-12
Publisher: HarperCollins/Hyperion
Book Type: 3 Book Set includes 3 paperback books
Series Overview:
The title character, Bartimaeus, is a five-thousand year old djinni, a spirit of approximately mid-level power. There are five basic levels of spirits, in order of increasing power: imps, foliots, djinni, afrits and marids. There also exists a variety of subclasses in each level. Above these levels exist even more powerful entities, who are rarely summoned. Most notable of these entities are Ramuthra and Nouda.
The story is told through the viewpoint of three characters, the magician Nathaniel (or John Mandrake), the djinni Bartimaeus, and the commoner Kitty Jones. There is also one short chapter featuring the viewpoint of a foliot called Simpkin. The three novels are set in an alternate history to our own, though many countries, cities, events, and people are from actual history.
The books presume the idea that magic, magicians, and demons have been active throughout history, thus radically altering it. In particular these changes are reflected in various contrasts between modern aspects (such as electricity and cars) and older ones (colonial-era weapons including muskets). The current time is never directly given.
Books in the Series:
Amulet of Samarkand (Book 1, Paperback, 462 pages)
A magician's young apprentice, Nathaniel, secretly summons the irascible 5,000-year-old djinni, Bartimaeus, to do his bidding. The task for Bartimaeus is an interesting mission: he must steal the powerful Amulet of Samarkand from Simon Lovelace, a master magician of unrivalled ruthlessness and ambition.
Before long, Bartimaeus and Nathaniel are caught up in a terrifying flood of magical intrigue, rebellion and murder. Nathaniel learns quickly that he may have gotten into a plot much more in depth than he and his djinni can cope with.
Booklist: "A dynamic, inventive beginning to a new trilogy."
New York Times Book Review: “…colorful…the witty, shape-shifting Bartimaeus is the main show. How can books two and three possibly top the adventures here? Well, you’d need to steal a scrying glass, or crystal, to find out.”
Publishers Weekly (Starred Review): “A darkly tantalizing tale…Readers will eagerly anticipate the next two volumes.”
The Golem's Eye (Book 2, Paperback, 562 pages)
Like the rest of the Bartimaeus Trilogy, The Golem's Eye is set in somewhat modern-day London in an alternate history in which magic is commonplace and magicians are an accepted part of society; in fact, most magicians are in positions of power. They comprise the government, and commoners are treated as inferior.
The main character is Nathaniel, a magician who works for the government in the ministry of internal affairs. His (unwilling) partner is the wisecracking spirit Bartimaeus. Together they embark on a quest to discover the secret behind the commoners' resistance and the mysterious beast that is stalking London.
Publishers Weekly (Starred Review): “Fans of book one will enjoy revisiting this delectably uneasy bond between boy and djinni. Bartimaeus’s pointed humor makes for a story worth savoring.”
School Library Journal (Starred Review): “A must-purchase for all fantasy collections.”
New York Times Book Review: “The ‘top of the class’ of the currently-popular fantasy series.”
Ptolemy's Gate (Book 3, Paperback, 462 pages)
Three years have passed since the magician Nathaniel (otherwise known as John Mandrake) helped prevent an attack on London that would have been cataclysmic for its magicians and commoners.
Now an established member of the British Government, he faces unprecedented problems: foreign wars are going badly, Britain’s enemies are mounting attacks close to London, and rebellion is fermenting among the commoners. Increasingly imperious and distracted, Nathaniel is treating Bartimaeus worse than ever.
ALA Booklist (Starred Review): “For readers who loved the earlier volumes for the sheer adventure, this, with it’s battles, magic and great crashing conclusion, will not disappoint. A worthy ending to an exceptional saga.”
Book Awards:
- USA: 2004 ALA Notable Book (Amulet of Smarkand)
- USA: 2004 Best Books for Young Adults Top Ten Pick (Amulet of Samarkand)
- USA: Bank Street 2004 Best Book of the Year (Amulet of Samarkand)
- USA: Booklist Top 10 Fantasy Book for Youth 2004 (Amulet of Samarkand)
- USA: Texas Lone Star Reading List 2005-2006 (Amulet of Samarkand)
- USA: Booksense Children's 76 Book (Amulet of Samarkand)
- USA: Booksense Children's Top Ten Title (Amulet of Samarkand)
- USA: 2004 Boston Globe-Horn Book Honor Winner (Amulet of Samarkand)
- USA: “Capitol Choices” selection for 2004 (Amulet of Samarkand)
- USA: “CCBC Best Children’s Books of the Year” selection (Amulet of Samarkand)
- USA: Publishers Weekly Children’s Best Seller August, 2004 (Amulet of Samarkand)
- USA: Book Sense Pick (Golem's Eye)
- USA: New York Times Best Seller (Golem's Eye)
- USA: 2005 ALA Best Book for Young Adults (Golem's Eye)
About the Author:
Jonathon Stroud was born in 1970 in Bedford, England and began to write stories at a very young age. He grew up in St Albans where he enjoyed reading books, drawing pictures, and writing stories. Between the ages seven and nine he was often ill, so he spent most of his days in the hospital or in his bed at home. To escape boredom he would occupy himself with books and stories. After he completed his studies of English literature at the University of York, he worked in London as an editor for the Walker Books store. He worked with different types of books there and this soon led to the writing of his own books. During the 1990s, he started publishing his own works and quickly gained success.
In May 1999, Stroud published his first children's novel, Buried Fire, which was the first of a line of fantasy/mythology children's books.
Among his most prominent works are the bestselling Bartimaeus Trilogy. A special feature of these novels compared to others of their genre is that Stroud examines the stereotypes and ethics of the magician class and the enslaved demons. This is done by examining the perspective of the sarcastic and slightly egomaniacal djinni Bartimaeus. The books in this series are The Amulet of Samarkand, The Golem's Eye, and Ptolemy's Gate, his first books to be published in the United States. An Amulet of Samarkand movie is being made for release in 2009.
Stroud lives in St Albans, Hertfordshire, with his two children, Isabelle and Arthur, and his wife Gina, an illustrator of children's books.
Stroud occasionally visits the Bartimaeus Trilogy Forum to answer frequently asked questions. He is currently in the editing stage of a new novel slated for release in the UK and US in January 2009. The title is currently "Heroes of the Valley", although Stroud notes in his journal that this may change before publication.
Trivia from "The Golem's Eye"
- In one part of the book Bartimaeus speaks of a hermit who lived in the Jordanian desert and ate honey and tubers. This is supposedly John the Baptist.
- When in the British Museum, Bartimaeus describes the rock he is going to throw at the Golem as being old and having inscriptions on one side in two or three different languages. He makes an inference that the writings are to instruct museum visitors about museum rules. His description of the stone matches that of the Rosetta Stone, which is in the British Museum. One of the characters mentions the loss of the Rosetta Stone when describing the damage done to the museum.
- The cover of the book is Bartimaeus in his Minotaur guise.
- Nathaniel's master(Jessica Whitwell), is the one who trapped Bartimaeus in the London tower in Book one, The Amulet of Samarkand.
- On the UK paperback version of The Golem's Eye, it features Honorius, the afrit whose essence is tied to Gladstone's bones.
- In The Amulet of Samarkand, Bartimaeus is said to be a djinni of the fourteenth level. But, in The Golem's Eye, it says that Bartimaeus is a djinni of the fourth level. Jonathon Stroud has admitted this to be a mistake.
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