Posted on 08/21/2007 8:45:27 AM PDT by Antoninus
Having read Harry Potter and the Sorcerers Stone, I dove into Book 2, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets anxious to see where J. K. Rowling was going to take the story. I also wanted to see if my criticisms of the first book would stand up or get flattened as the story progressed.
Well, as for the story line, it really wasnt a whole lot different from the first book. A mystery is introduced: the Chamber of Secrets has been opened by the mysterious Heir of Slytherin and whatever was locked in the Chamber has been attacking, but not killing, certain students who are not of pure magical blood. Harry and his friends sleuth around to figure out the mystery, breaking a myriad of school rules in the process and nearly (of course) getting expelled. When Hermione is attacked, Hogwarts is on the point of shutting down for good. Its up to Harry, Ron, and the famous but useless Professor Gilderoy Lockhart to discover where the Chamber of Secrets is located and defeat the evil that lurks within.
I have to say I enjoyed reading this installment in the series quite a bit less than the previous book. The character of the self-promoting Gilderoy Lockhart, while resonating with the publisher in me, was too overdone to be funny--like a Monty Python skit that is shown over and over again until all the humor is thoroughly beaten out of it. Also in this category was the scene with Ron vomiting up slugs. Several pages of such imagery is more than enough for even the most scatologically-inclined juvenile reader.
On the other hand, I did like the character of Ginny Weasley, Ron's younger sister. In fact, I think that a lot of homeschool families would find the Weasleys very sympathetic. They've got seven kids--six boys and a girl. They're poor, so their forced to make due with hand-me-down robes and second-hand wands. And they're ridiculed by their social "betters" for their financial straights. The fact that Ron and his brothers are quick to resort to fisticuffs rather than hear their family demeaned may also resonate with some.
One thing that particularly irritated me about The Chamber of Secrets was the introduction of some alternate history taken directly from wicca 101. "Hogwarts was founded over a thousand years ago by the four greatest witches and wizards of the time," the ghost of Professor Binns lectures. "They built this castle together, far from prying Muggle eyes, for it was an age when magic was feared by common people, and witches and wizards suffered much persecution" (pg. 150). I've heard similar nonsense bandied about by real, modern, historically-challenged wiccans, so when I saw this, I just shook my head. Not good. To my eye, this looked like a seed planted by Rowling and it seemed to substantiate Amy Welborn's observation:
"There's only one reason the Harry Potter books are in the least bit controversial. Just one. Wicca. That's it. If we didn't have this ridiculous little "religion" bustling around, forming "covens" in dorm rooms and getting army chaplains, I doubt one parent in a million would even think to waste even a minute being concerned about these books."But it is a concern. For the record, there is an excellent article in the Catholic Encyclopedia that gives a capsule scholarly history of witchcraft from the Catholic perspective and it is very effective in debunking wicca and its ridiculous alternate history. I hope that the future books in the series do not contain other such seeds--I'll certainly be looking for them.
Not to mention Harry having a big knife at school. You’d think zero-tolerance would have something to say about that.
Free enterprise is a marvelous thing. I'm a library user, myself.
I spent $80 to get the history of the Catholic Church in Alaska for my birthday. Maybe I'll get it by my next birthday, as they've shipped it Book Rate from Alaska ...
We wouldn't have any of the HP books, except that my husband ordered "Deathly Hallows" for me for the aforementioned birthday. I'd have been content to wait my turn at the library. It's just one of those things ... I'm a borrower, and he's a buyer.
If we both bought everything we want (and everything the teeming offspring want) we’d have to give the house to the books and live in the yard. This would get us in trouble with the county.
Don’t feel bad. I make all sorts of typos when I am posting in a hurry.
Overdone? Perhaps. But as far as "scatalogical" humor goes, it's exceptionally mild. Given the age of the students involved, it's a mild thing to wish upon one's enemy. And here's where you can either infer "Do unto others ... " or "live by the wand, die by the wand". And it's a magical inversion of Johnny making Susie eat a bug. (I never ate bugs nor forced anyone to do so ... actually, I don't personally know anyone in either category, but we always hear about it.)
In either case, it's an important foreshadowing for the showdown with Lockhart at the end. The only gap in logic is how Ron managed to progress as well as he did that year with a dysfunctional wand.
My excuse, other than I wanted to read it, was that I knew that I'd have to wait until she was done (and she possibly would've passed it onto our son or daughter first) and, at the time, I was pretty sure she hadn't finished rereading book 6 (actually she hadn't started yet.)
You can donate a copy to the library when you’re all finished.
Are you reading Rowling's companion books, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them and Quidditch through the Ages?
Yes, they exist. They are: From the Library of Hogwarts: Fantastic Beasts and Where To Find Them, Quidditch Through The Ages by J.K. Rowling and J. K. Rowling (Hardcover - Nov 1, 2001)
I found the first one particularly helpful as I read the books-Gotta keep those grindy lows and kappas straight in my head...Also, there are some red herrings...demiguise, being one that comes to mind.
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