



The Tripods ( public library) series of books by John Christopher is intensively captivating and easy to read - perfect for introducing kids ages 9-13 to science fiction. “It’s the history of ideas, the history of our civilization birthing itself.” The deeply creative world of science fiction literature first becomes accessible to children when they turn nine or ten years old. “Science fiction is the most important literature in the history of the world,” mused beloved author Ray Bradbury.
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The shining metallic Tripods with their strange hunting call and gleaming tentacles are haunting incarnations of power the ruined cities of the ancients are apt symbols of failed technology and the decay of human knowledge and the pastoral beauty of the village of Wherton recalls a simpler life made largely obsolete by technological progress.First published nearly 50 years ago, The Tripods series remains one of the very best introductions to young adult science fiction literature. The boys learn through bitter experience that they must struggle not only against the external forces that would oppress them, but also against their own selfishness, jealousy, pride, fear, and recklessness.Ĭhristopher has a gift for creating memorable and evocative images in his fiction. Freedom for them is neither comfortable nor safe, and its acquisition by no means guarantees happiness. The young protagonists of the trilogy must struggle painfully for the autonomy they desire. In The Tripods Trilogy, of which The White Mountains is the first volume, alien invaders of Earth have gained almost complete control over humankind. Still, he holds out hope that strong individuals, bound together by a desire to protect freedom of thought and free will, may yet save humanity from its own worst impulses.Ĭhristopher's brand of science fiction is less concerned with making fantastic scientific predictions than it is with exploring, in an imaginative way, very immediate human problems. Like most of Christopher's books for young readers, The White Mountains dramatizes painful truths about human nature and raises important questions about what makes life worth living.Ĭhristopher believes that human beings are inevitably flawed, and that technological achievement is a mixed blessing in the hands of fallible people.
