Tobias Hunter
Tobias Hunter asked:

This question contains spoilers… (view spoiler)

To answer questions about The Amber Spyglass, please sign up.
Boy Blue The temptation was knowledge. Just as in the garden of Eden, Eve is tempted by knowledge. In Lyra's case this is knowledge of love and the other adult emotions she is yet to experience. The tempter is Mary and the Fall is Lyra becoming aware of love and adult desire. The allegorical feeding of Will by Lyra again echoes the garden of Eden. This is all matched by the falling away of her innocence. Lyra goes from being an innocent child oblivious to the world around her, to a courageous young women with the ability to make a difficult moral decision about what window to leave open. The fact that she can't easily read the compass at the end of the series is also another sign that she has lost that spiritual purity or innocence. In its place she has been given the opportunity to actually learn how to use it, to gain knowledge through hard work and determination. In this way Pullman presents the Fall as a natural and good thing to happen, which is in stark contrast to the biblical version. He doesn't say it's easy but he does believe it's right.
Jose Luis
This answer contains spoilers… (view spoiler)
Sofia Mary was the temptress. She told Lyra the story of her falling in love, which opened Lyra up to understanding her own feelings and attraction to Will. Mary also technically gave the fruit to Lyra, which she then fed to Will, which opened him up his feelings for Lyra.

When they realised they had fallen in love, their dæmons became fixed and they became adults (or at least, their journeys to adulthood had begun). Suddenly, Dust became attracted to them, as it is to all adults but not children (we learn this in the first book, when we see the images of the adult surrounded by Dust, but the child without it). Dust is consciousness and knowledge, and its attraction to Will and Lyra changed its course from flowing out of the universe to flowing like normal again. That is the "Fall".

From a religious and Magisterium perspective, the temptation and the Fall are bad, which is why the Magisterium sent the priest to try and assassinate the temptress (Mary). In the Christian story of Adam and Eve, we are taught to believe that the Fall was a bad thing. Eve gained knowledge and lost innocence, which was apparently bad for humankind. In reality though, it's a good thing, just like Lyra receiving knowledge and losing her innocence was a good thing, because it changed the course of Dust. This is why the "good" side in His Dark Materials is really counting on Lyra to be tempted and to fall. The only people who perceive the temptation and the Fall as a bad thing are the Magisterium.

Lyra was tempted, she fell and she saved us from living in a world with no consciousness and knowledge (which is what the Authority, Metatron and the Magisterium wanted). If she had not been tempted and fallen, Dust would have continued pouring out of the world and we would lose it forever.
Niels Bugge
This answer contains spoilers… (view spoiler)
Marilyn
This answer contains spoilers… (view spoiler)
Mana
This answer contains spoilers… (view spoiler)
Eric
This answer contains spoilers… (view spoiler)
Image for The Amber Spyglass
Rate this book
Clear rating

About Goodreads Q&A

Ask and answer questions about books!

You can pose questions to the Goodreads community with Reader Q&A, or ask your favorite author a question with Ask the Author.

See Featured Authors Answering Questions

Learn more