Starring Nicole Kidman and Daniel Craig, The Golden Compass is slated to be released Dec. 7 in theaters nationwide. Published in 1995, Northern Lights was the first book of Pullman's wildly popular "His Dark Materials" series.
In an e-mail message this week, Taylor, who lives in Scarborough, England, said that the reason he wrote Shadowmancer (Charisma House/Penguin Putnam) and the other books in the series was because of Pullman and "the damage that his books were likely to do to the Christian church."
Shadowmancer was a book that "answers everything Pullman tries to destroy," said Taylor, whose fantasy novel reached No. 1 on the New York Times Children's Chapter best-seller list in 2004 and has been translated into 48 languages. "(It's) a book that offers children hope in a God who is powerful and loving and able to intervene in the human life."
A former policeman and Anglican priest, Taylor has written other novels, including Wormwood and Tersias the Oracle (both Penguin Putnam), and The Shadowmancer Returns: The Curse of Salamander Street (Realms/Penguin Putnam).
In his letter, Taylor said "many things will come and try and destroy the Christian heritage of the American nation."
"The Golden Compass is yet another salvo against (Christians)," he wrote. "We must never forget that God is supreme and when the works of Pullman.... are forgotten books, the Word (of God) will be still alive. I only hope that in writing Shadowmancer and my other books, children and young people will get an alternative view of a great God."
Meanwhile, the Catholic League has launched a boycott of The Golden Compass and Pullman's work, calling it "atheism for kids." "While Roman Catholicism is the evil force in Pullman's writings, his real goal is to put a positive face on atheism, getting children to buy his message," Catholic League President Bill Donohue said in a statement.
The Catholic League has also published the booklet The Golden Compass: Agenda Unmasked, which features snippets of what reviewers have said about the film and Pullman's books as well as comments made by Pullman.
|
February 9, 2009
|
||||||||||||||||
|