Dear Reader,
I'm sorry to say that the book you are holding in your hands is extremely unpleasant. It tells an unhappy tale about three
very unlucky children. Even though they are charming and clever, the Baudelaire siblings lead lives filled with misery and
woe. From the very first page of this book when the children are at the beach and receive terrible news, continuing on through
the entire story, disaster lurks at their heels. One might say they are magnets for misfortune.
In this short book alone, the three youngsters encounter a greedy and repulsive villain, itchy clothing, a disastrous fire,
a plot to steal their fortune, and cold porridge for breakfast.
It is my sad duty to write down these unpleasant tales, but there is nothing stopping you from putting this book down at
once and reading something happy, if you prefer that sort of thing.
With all due respect,
Lemony Snicket

When Lyra and her daemon Pantalaimon decide to spy on a presentation her uncle, the commanding Lord Asriel, is making to
the elders of Jordan College they have no idea that they will become witnesses to an attempted murder—and even less
that they are taking the first steps in a journey that will lead them into danger and adventure unlike anything Lyra's unfettered
imagination has conjured up.
Though she has been reised at the college in an atmosphere of benign neglect that has
allowed her to become a half-wild child of the streets, Lyra soon finds herself apprenticed to the elegant Mrs. Coulter—and
in possession of a strange device called the alethiometer, a "golden compass" that reads not true worth, but truth itself.
But
truth is a precious commodity, and before long Lyra and Pan are running for their lives, the object of an obsessive hunt by
mysterious forces who have been stealing children for dark purposes that no one understands. Lyra will need all her street-learned
wiles if she and Pan are to survive.