| In Short: | For anyone who ever wanted to smack that goody-goody Harry Potter upside the head. |
| Recommended: | Yes. |
| "I am Bartimaeus! I am Sakhr al-Jinni, N'gorso the Mighty, and the Serpent of Silver Plumes! I have rebuilt the walls of Uruk, Karnak, and Prague. I have spoken with Solomon. I have run with the buffalo fathers of the plains. I have watched over Old Zimbabwe till the stones fell and the jackals fed on its people. I am Bartimaeus! I recognize no master. So I charge you in your turn, boy. Who are you to summon me?" |
| -- The Amulet of Samarkand (2003) |
Have you ever wondered what the Harry
Potter books would be like if Harry were a raging asshole?
Wonder no more. Jonathan Stroud’s Bartimaeus books, like those
of J.K. Rowling, trace the rise of a gifted young British
magician as he is forced to battle evil forces (repeatedly), but
the similarities pretty much end there. But that’s okay. The
Bartimaeus trilogy is a ton of fun, and the genre-loving teen
should find room for both sets of books on his or her bookshelf.
The three books are set in an alternate universe in which the
British Empire, under the rule of a large-ish cabal of
magicians, is the world’s leading power. The Brits’ principal
rivals are the Czechs, and they’re having a spot of trouble over
in the Colonies (that would be the United States), which we hear
a little about but don’t really see. Their greatest hero is
nineteenth-century magician William Gladstone, whose tomb full
of magical accoutrements plays an important role in the later
books.
In Stroud’s London, the magicians rule through the use of their
magic – but, interestingly, they don’t seem to directly work
magic themselves; instead, they summon and enslave spirits from
The Other Place to do their bidding. It sounds as though pretty
much anyone, given the proper training, can function effectively
as a magician; we see at least one commoner become pretty good
at it simply through intensive self-study. The magicians do have
their weaknesses: For one thing, if a magician gets even a small
part of a spell wrong – stumbles over a word, say -- the demon
can’t be controlled, and all bets are off. Also, If a demon
learns a magician’s name, the magician is pretty much toast, so
most magicians use assumed names most of the time.
The Bartimaeus trilogy begins when young Nathaniel, an
apprentice magician, is publicly humiliated by a more senior
magician named Simon Lovelace. He vows revenge, and to that end
–and behind his tutor’s back – he summons Bartimaeus, a
mid-level djinni, to help him steal Lovelace’s most treasured
possession, the Amulet of Samarkand. But then Bartimaeus
overhears Nathaniel’s real name (he’s known to the world as John
Mandrake), and a frequently hilarious battle of wills is on. In
The Golem’s Eye, London’s commoners, including shopgirl Kitty
Jones, begin to rebel against the magicians’ rule, and young
Nathaniel/John Mandrake, now with the Government, is given the
job of crushing the Resistance. And in the third book,
Nathaniel, Kitty, and Bartimaeus are forced to team up to save
London – and possibly the world – from its most daunting threat
yet.
There’s a lot to like about these books. First of all, you
rarely encounter a protagonist as unlikable as John Mandrake.
He’s snotty; he’s arrogant; he’s imperious; he’s entirely sold
on his own abilities. Very bad things tend to happen to people
who dare to care about him in any way. But very slowly, almost
imperceptibly, he starts to evolve over the course of the
trilogy, and by the end you can see the making of a decent, and
even noble, man.
Of course, it helps that he has Bartimaeus to keep him in line.
Thousands of years old, Bartimaeus has both Been There and Done
That, and he has absolutely no respect for the callow Nathaniel,
a fact which he never allows Nathaniel to forget. His frequent
bitchy asides, often in the form of explanatory footnotes in
which he clues the reader in to what really happened,
are among the highlights of these books.
Kitty Jones – the commoner who becomes Nathaniel’s enemy, and
then his ally – is an interesting character in her own right,
although she’s not drawn as originally as the other two. I will
say that she and Bartimaeus, when they decide that their goals
align, make a heck of a team. Oh, and if you think you know
where the Kitty and Nathaniel story – powerful and lonely
magician + feisty and adorable commoner – is going: You’re
right. And then you aren’t. The story goes more or less where
you expect it to go, until it doesn’t.
And that leads me what I like best about these books: They are
interesting and entertaining, and they don’t talk down to their
audience in any way, or insult their readers by insisting on
taking the “easy” way out of things. I don’t want to give
anything away, but I will say that this book is probably the
most uncompromising ending I’ve seen in a YA novel in a long
time.
But it’s not altogether sad! I’ve recently learned that we will
be seeing Bartimaeus again, and soon: The Ring of Solomon: A
Bartimaeus Novel is expected in November. This is good news
for everyone, particularly magic-loving teens who appreciate a
complex, involving, and frequently funny tale.

The
Bartimaeus Trilogy
Visit our feedback form!
HOME