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Title: The Tripods Trilogy
WonderClub
Item Number: 9780020425717
Number: 2
Product Description: The Tripods Trilogy
Universal Product Code (UPC): 9780020425717
WonderClub Stock Keeping Unit (WSKU): 9780020425717
Rating: 5/5 based on 2 Reviews
Image Location: https://wonderclub.com/images/covers/57/17/9780020425717.jpg
Weight: 0.200 kg (0.44 lbs)
Width: 4.350 cm (1.71 inches)
Heigh : 7.300 cm (2.87 inches)
Depth: 1.820 cm (0.72 inches)
Date Added: August 25, 2020, Added By: Ross
Date Last Edited: August 25, 2020, Edited By: Ross
Price | Condition | Delivery | Seller | Action |
$99.99 | Digital |
| WonderClub (9290 total ratings) |
Joseph Hardisty
reviewed The Tripods Trilogy on February 29, 2012I read this as a young teenager and was driven by my passion for H.G. Well's The War of the Worlds. It is a gripping read for the younger reader although I found it a little simple when I re-read them in my late 30's. It is a series of 4 books with the initial trilogy written in the late 60's and the 4th novel being a prequel written 20 years later. All of them are a great read and introduce confronting situations that every teen has to face although these are in a rather unusual setting - namely the future Earth (circa 2100) after an alien race has invaded and suppressed/enslaved humanity.
I bought the series for my teen daughters who enjoyed them. I recommend reading them in the order they were released with the prequel (when the tripods came) last.
The series consists of:
The White Mountains
The City of Gold and Lead
The Pool of Fire
When the Tripods came
Plot ***Spoilers***
The White Mountains
In the year 2100, the world is controlled by machines called Tripods. Life goes on largely as it had in the pre-industrial era, as all of humanity is subject to mental controls which prevent anyone from challenging the established order. Will, a thirteen year old living in the small English village of Wherton, is looking forward to the transition to adulthood which will take place on the next "Capping Day", until a chance meeting with a mysterious Vagrant named Ozymandias sends him on a quest to discover a world beyond the Tripods' control. He is accompanied by his cousin Henry, and a French teenager named Jean-Paul, nicknamed "Beanpole" for his height and slimness, and punning similarity to his real name.
On their journey the boys have many adventures. The novel climaxes with the discovery that earlier on Will was captured by a tripod and implanted with a tracking device and that the tripods intend for the boys to unwittingly lead them to the human resistance (an organisation which the boys have been seeking). Harry and Beanpole remove the device which causes a nearby tripod to attack the group. The boys defeat the tripod and eventually reach, and offer their services to, the resistance, located in the titular White Mountains.
The City of Gold and Lead
Will, Henry, and Beanpole have spent a year living among the free men in the White Mountains. The Resistance now charges Will, Beanpole and a German boy, Fritz, now wearing realistic yet harmless caps, to infiltrate a Tripod city by competing in a regional sporting exhibition: the winners of the events are always offered to the Tripods for service. Will, a boxer, and Fritz, a runner, win their respective contests, while Beanpole fails to win in the jumping events.
The winners are taken by Tripods, which they discover to be machines operated by living creatures, to the Tripod city, which is located in a sealed, pressurized dome that sits astride a river. Inside the city, the boys are confronted with the actual aliens, which they refer to as the Masters. Human males are made servants for life inside the cities, while beautiful females are killed and preserved in museums of sorts, for the Masters to admire. The Masters themselves live under environmental conditions lethal to unprotected humans, and even with the breathing masks the slaves are provided with, the artificially increased gravity inside the cities rapidly wastes them away; hence the annual sporting competitions to select the fittest and most resilient of the human stock to attend the Masters' needs.
While Fritz is severely abused by his Master, Will's Master turns out to be rather benevolent. From him Will learns much about the Masters' origins and habits, and eventually the Master trusts him so much that he reveals an upcoming operation in which the Earth's atmosphere is to be replaced by the Masters' toxic air, eventually killing off all life on Earth and enabling the Masters to assume full control of the planet. Will meticulously records every piece of information in a diary. When the Master one day finds that diary and confronts Will, the boy kills him with a punch to a sensitive nerve cluster in order to maintain his secret.
With time running out, Will and Fritz prepare their escape via the river which flows through the city. With his mask sealed airtight, Will manages to escape, though he nearly suffocates but for the timely assistance of Beanpole, who has been waiting hidden in the ruins surrounding the Tripod colony. The two wait for Fritz, but he does not appear, and in the end the coming winter forces them to return to the White Mountains without him.
The Pool of Fire
Will returns to the headquarters of the Resistance after several months in the City of Gold and Lead, where he and Fritz (who has escaped the city some time after Will and found his way back to the Resistance) travel to Eastern Europe, the Caucasus region, and the Middle East and set up resistance cells with young boys who question the power of the Tripods. The cult of the Tripods is strong in the Middle East; the Masters via the Caps have replaced Islam with a religion worshipping the Tripods - with some similar features.
The resistance then ambushes a Tripod and captures a Master. Upon the discovery that alcohol has a very strong soporific effect on the Masters - and that, unlike other incapacitating agents which are tried, is undetectable by them - the Resistance schedules simultaneous commando attacks on the cities. Will is one of the leaders of the attack on the European city.
By introducing alcohol into the city water system, the raiding party is able to incapacitate all of the Masters and ultimately to destroy the integrity of the city's sealed environment, killing all the Masters. The attack on the second city, in eastern Asia, is likewise successful, but the attack on the last city, in Panama, is not. Assuming that the Masters in the city will have killed all their human slaves, thus precluding a second attack by infiltration, the Resistance attempts an aerial bombing using its newly constructed aeroplanes. This attack also fails — because the Masters can disable the motors from a distance, presumably with an electromagnetic pulse. Fritz then leads an attack launched from air balloons, which succeeds, although at a terrible cost to the friends: after all the other bombs have been deflected away harmlessly by the city's impregnable dome, Will's cousin Henry lands his balloon and detonates his bomb by hand.
The world is liberated from the Masters' thought control and technology is rediscovered rapidly. The Masters' spaceship finally arrives, only to launch nuclear devices that destroy the remains of the cities, presumably to prevent the humans from reverse engineering the Masters' technology and using it to launch a retaliatory expedition against them, and once this happens the captive Master abruptly dies. Humanity is saved, but the saga ends with a renewal of nationalist sentiments, Europe being once again divided into rival nation states and tensions building up towards war.
When the Tripods Came
When the Tripods Came is set in the late twentieth century.
In the second book of the main trilogy, one of the Masters tells the main character about the Masters' conquest of the Earth. The plot of the book follows the description of the conquest previously given. It is revealed that the Masters were afraid of the technological potential of Humanity and decided on a pre-emptive strike. Unable to defeat Humanity in a conventional war, the Masters use their superior mind-control technology to hypnotise part of Humanity through a television show called The Trippy Show, and then use the caps to control them permanently when they eventually land. The tripods then cap other people until the capped are in control in most places.
Like the narrator of the original trilogy, the narrator of When the Tripods Came is a young English boy, known as Laurie. As society slowly falls under the control of the Masters, he and his family escape to Switzerland, which has adopted an isolationist stance in order to hold out against the initial invasion. Eventually it is invaded by France and Germany, who have fallen under the subjugation of the Masters, and the narrator is forced to flee into the Alps with his family as the Swiss are also enslaved by the Masters. Here, they establish the "White Mountains" resistance movement that features heavily in the original trilogy, and the book ends on a hopeful note.
Mark Hansen
reviewed The Tripods Trilogy on December 08, 2010I absolutely love this trilogy. I discovered it via the BBC Television adaptation of 1984/5. Unlike the TV series (which I do like very much), the story rattles along at a pace. The idea of people being Capped so as not to question the status quo has always resonated with me. The Tripod city in the books is a much harsher place than the one depicted on screen. For a children's trilogy, the issues concerning one's freedom to think and speak are handled in a mature way. It's told in the first person from the point-of-view of 14-year-old Will Parker. The other main characters are Will's cousin Henry, French would-be inventor Beanpole (Jean-Paul), and the taciturn German youth Fritz. It is not without reason that the Tripods trilogy is described as "almost unbearably exciting".
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