I won't lie and say that I was excited to blog about Harry Potter. When the books came out I read and enjoyed them. I tried to keep up but the third book was actually the last one I read. My mom continued to make an event out of each new book release, standing in line at midnight at the Barns and Noble to buy each new one. But something about the fourth book, I can't really recall what it was exactly, turned me off to the series. Then the movies started...and I was done. Those first two really didn't look like the world of Harry looked in my head. While I appreciate what J.K. Rowling has painted for me, my mother, and my niece and nephew, I'm way over the Harry hype.
I just needed that off my chest.
So, I've decided to blog about what I appreciated about Harry Potter this go round:
1. character- Rowling is always introducing interesting characters, my favorites in this book are Aunt Marge, mostly due to the way Rowling describes her as looking like Harry's Uncle Vernon-fat with a mustache, and Professor Trelawney who is described as, "a large glittering insect." Rowling's characters are extreme caricatures with hilariously fitting names.
2. Names of persons, places, things. "The Knight Bus," "Dementors," "Levitating Sherbet Balls,"Buckbeat."
3. Honeydukes and everything described inside of it.
4. The Weasley family-each of their specific personalities and their relationships with one another as well as with Harry.
To me, what makes this book better than The Wizard of Earthsea, is the world Rowling has created. It's full of cleaver details all of which enchant children and adults alike. Each time Hogwarts main dining hall is described, I feel inspired to host a huge party with floating candles. I need those floating candles!!! Le Guin's overall tone seems very solemn and serious compared to that of Harry Potter. After refreshing my Harry knowledge, Earthsea seems dull, lonely and far less magical than the Harry world. That being said, Le Guin's messages ring loud and clear at the end of the book, whereas Rowling seems to be more concerned with creating adventure for her readers. I put done the Earthsea book with a full understanding of the argument Le Guin was making, appreciating the moral of the story and understanding it's merit for children. I put down Harry Potter and immediately want to eat sherbet and play make-belive. I'm not too happy with the primary world and am grabbing my wand and heading back to a secondary one.
This makes me realize that as an adult reader, I can push through Earthsea and easily find something meaningful. But after our discussion with Sarah, it was apparent that children may not make those connections based on their dissatisfaction with the secondary world presented. Harry Potter, on the other hand, gives children a wonderfully imaginative and creative world that they are continusly drawn back into. The themes are more easily understood and more reading is encouraged.
So I'll back off on the Harry Hype.
Purpose for Imaginative Literature
14 years ago
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