Nonfiction!
The Buffista Book Club: the Harry Potter iteration
This thread is a focused discussion group. Please see the first post below for the current topic and upcoming book discussions. While natter will inevitably happen, we encourage you to treat this like a virtual book club and try to keep your posts in that spirit.
By consensus, this thread is reopened specifically to discuss Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. It will be closed again once that discussion has run its course.
***SPOILER ALERT***
And yet there are special wizarding fairy tales. You'd think that there would be wizarding kids adventure stories.
Okay, reading DH a second time has made me decide to read them all again. So far I've got the Philosopher's Stone and Chamber of Secrets done. Chamber of Secrets is a lot weaker than I remember.
Chamber of Secrets is a lot weaker than I remember.
Yeah. The first two books are fun and all, but the series doesn't take of until PofA.
JKR's growth as a writer is evident as you read them in rapid succession.
There is also some truth to the concept of sophomore slump, but she got past it.
I don't even know if it was a sophomore slump so much as an illustration of the difference a good editor makes. By her own admission, GoF and especially OotP were barely edited, whereas the editors were able to take a stronger hand in HBP and DH, which are by and large stronger books.
Part of the weakness of CoS is that there's a lot of exposition and recapping of what went on in PS, and it get really irritating. Philosopher's Stone gets a bye because all its exposition was world building. I really like how the later books pretty much assume the reader has been along for the ride and jump into the action.
Also, I found that Rowling seemed to be writing for an audience that was growing up. The first two books really feel like kiddie lit. I'm going to start Azkaban tonight, and I wonder what it will read like. I remember not liking it much when I read it, but we'll see how it goes in retrospect.
Part of the weakness of CoS is that there's a lot of exposition and recapping of what went on in PS, and it get really irritating.
There was a bit of that in PoA too, but the story itself was so much richer that it didn't ping me the way it did in CoS. I think GoF was when she finally let the recapping go.
I think she'd have been better served by having a preface with "our story up to now".
I remember how thoroughly impressed I was with the (IIRC) second chapter of "Half Blood Prince", with how much she did with it, in just the one chapter. The first one was with the prime-minister, right? And the second was the one in which Narcissa begs Snape for help.
In that one chapter, she had a great "this is where we're standing" re-cap of the situation at the end of the former book, broke my sappy little heart with the motherly love of a so-far bad-guy (well, girl) to her child (and all the lovely comparisons to Harry's own mother), raised all the burning questions about Snape's alliance (practically everything he said could be interpreted both ways), started what ended up being one of the major plot-points for the whole book, and did it so quickly, the chapter was over and done with and we went over to Harry, before I could grasp even a fraction of all that.
I didn't re-read any of the HPs before "Deathly Hallows" (all my copies were at my sister's, because she wanted a thorough re-read beforehand), so "Half Blood Prince" is the only one I remember now. It's been quite a long time since I read any of the others. So, well, I guess it means I'm only using too many words to say that I don't really have anything to say.
So far I've got the Philosopher's Stone and Chamber of Secrets done. Chamber of Secrets is a lot weaker than I remember.
See, I initially read the first three when PoA came out and I remembered CoS as being much weaker than the other two. Re-reading (the first 3 1/2, then DH, and I'm now well into OotP), CoS didn't seem nearly as bad. I got really bogged down in GoF (which I liked originally) and am now enjoying OotP (which I hated initially).