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With this post, I hereby commence my charging through the entire Harry Potter series. Today was Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, since my housemate
risu owns the UK editions of books 1-4, and I wanted to read those; got in the reading today on the bus to and from going to a movie.
Once I got into the story I started remembering the various plot details, most of which I'd recalled from the film version, with one or two smaller exceptions. So there weren't any real surprises here for me. Prose-wise, I found it mostly a quite accessible read, though Rowling's propensity for ellipses and all-caps screaming towards the very end got a little over the top. Plot-wise, it's a nice little story, with just enough dark adventure to it that I can see why everyone went agog over it when it came out.
What really makes the book for me, though, are the smaller details: the various strange things that happen to Harry before he gets the word to come to Hogwarts, the wave of endless letters and their changing addresses, all the little touches and descriptions of the layout of Hogwarts (like the staircases that go different places on Fridays), the Weasley family's accountant cousin that they don't talk about, the individual crafting of every student's wand, and more. It's all these things that not only put the story on a real-seeming foundation, but also give it not just a sense of wonder, but an outright rush of it. All these details are the things that make a magical world magic. Three and a half stars.
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Once I got into the story I started remembering the various plot details, most of which I'd recalled from the film version, with one or two smaller exceptions. So there weren't any real surprises here for me. Prose-wise, I found it mostly a quite accessible read, though Rowling's propensity for ellipses and all-caps screaming towards the very end got a little over the top. Plot-wise, it's a nice little story, with just enough dark adventure to it that I can see why everyone went agog over it when it came out.
What really makes the book for me, though, are the smaller details: the various strange things that happen to Harry before he gets the word to come to Hogwarts, the wave of endless letters and their changing addresses, all the little touches and descriptions of the layout of Hogwarts (like the staircases that go different places on Fridays), the Weasley family's accountant cousin that they don't talk about, the individual crafting of every student's wand, and more. It's all these things that not only put the story on a real-seeming foundation, but also give it not just a sense of wonder, but an outright rush of it. All these details are the things that make a magical world magic. Three and a half stars.
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Date: 2007-11-25 10:57 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-25 07:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-25 09:19 pm (UTC)6 & 7 I thought were the most seriously flawed, but still enjoyed them both anyway.
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Date: 2007-11-30 03:56 am (UTC)