Writing on Harry Potter is a daunting task. So much has been written already both in support and against. For every person who loved the novels and the world they created, there are just as many (just like the person opposing me in this argument) who find the series over-rated. But despite all this, let’s wade once again into the mire that is writing about Harry Potter.
First things first. Of course Harry Potter is over-rated. This has nothing at all to do with the series itself and everything to do with the hype surrounding it. It is a publishing house’s job to create publicity around a product and just like everything else in the history of marketing there was some exaggeration (no, Coca Cola will not make you cooler). So claiming that Harry Potter doesn’t live up to the hype is a non-argument – it can’t, the second coming of Christ couldn’t.
So the question is really whether or not Harry Potter the series is any good at all – or more specifically, does the good outweigh the bad. And I think the answer to this is very strongly in the affirmative.
Let’s start with Harry Potter as a character. Harry is not
the most gifted wizard but he is the guy who comes through
in a pinch. When it’s balls to the wall, Harry time and time
again finds a way to survive. He’s often lucky -- and he
always has excellent support -- but at the end of the day
Harry has that unshakeable self-belief and determination
which is common to all great heroes. He isn’t the Spiderman
‘sit around and feel sorry for myself’ type; he’s the Batman
‘use any trick that works’ type. And with that comes a fair
amount of hubris. When Harry gets thrown into the Tri-Wizard
Tournament and doesn’t try very hard, it’s because he’s
Harry Fucking Potter, doesn’t everyone remember that he
killed a basilisk with a sword? And this is one response I
find entirely credible. At the age of 10 Harry is thrown
into a world where he’s Jesus Christ, where he is, really,
more important than those around him. Now when sportspeople
are put in that position they become self-centred arrogant
twits (hello, Tiger) and across the4 th and 5th books Harry
does the same. It’s hard not to be a narcissist when
everyone tells you every single day that you’re better than
everyone else. But it never gets out of control. His crush
on Cho and his awkwardness with her is the perfect example.
Then there are the support characters. There are so many
amazing characters in this series that it’s near impossible
to select just a few for special mention. The stand out
though is Hermione Granger. More than anyone else in the
entire series, Hermione really demonstrates the
possibilities of magic and how incongruous that is with the
Muggle world. Hermione begins the series with large buck
teeth despite her parents being Muggle dentists but after
Draco Malfoy curses her and makes the teeth grow longer and
longer, Hermione has Madame Pomfrey shrink the teeth down to
a normal size. Her parents would be horrified. Hermione’s
shining moment for me, though, comes in the final book.
Everyone important is at the Weasley’s house for Bill and
Fleur’s wedding when Death Eaters attack and everyone
scatters. Hermione disapparates with Ron and Harry, the two
boys have nothing with them but the clothes on their backs
and they wonder how they will get back to the Burrow to
collect everything they need for the quest ahead.‘Undetectable Extension Charm,’ said Hermione. ‘Tricky but I think I’ve done it OK; anyway, I managed to fit everything we need in here.’ She gave the fragile-looking bag a little shake and it echoed like a cargo hold as a number of heavy objects rolled around inside it. ‘Oh damn, that’ll be the books,’ she said, peering into it, ‘and I had them all stacked by subject…’
It’s brilliant and so is Hermione. Sure, Harry’s name is the
one of the front of the book but Hermione’s awesomeness is
hardly an argument against the greatness of the series. The
same goes for all the other marvellous support characters.
From Hagrid to Professor Trelawney, Grawp to [my personal
favourite] Gilderoy Lockhart. They are all masterful
creations, each believable within the logic of the series,
always hitting just the right level of strange and
extraordinary.But far and away the shining achievement of the Harry Potter series is the creation of the perfect fantasy world. For every child who reads that first book, when Hagrid breaks into a far flung shack on a rocky island and tells Harry that he’s a wizard there’s the same excitement that magic could one day appear in their world and spirit them off to the most wondrous of schools. Harry’s world is so close to ours that the possibility of the one spilling into the other is always tantalising.
The most impressive thing about Hogwarts and the entire
magical world in Harry Potter is the way that it blends the
real world into the imaginary. It isn’t just that Hogwarts
is the most exciting place to go to school on the planet or
that flying on a broom and repeatedly saving the wizarding
world (sometime around the end of each school year) is
fantastic, but rather that it all seems so possible and
well, so British. It seems, in the context of the novels,
perfectly obvious that British wizards would drink cups of
tea and eat bread and butter pudding. They could have the
house elves prepare anything in the world, real or
imaginary, but they stick to what is widely recognised as
one of the worst cuisines in the world. God love ‘em.Sure, the novels go from being simple children’s fiction to more dramatic young teen fare and that along the way things get longer and darker, but the consistency throughout the series is not lost. The blend of crazy and mundane stays well balanced and I particularly love the wizarding version of a police state that we get towards the end of the series. Umbridge, for example, is at once surprising in her cruel punishments and penchant for pink and at the same time entirely predictable as the archetype of the
government
agent who takes her job too far and too seriously. At every
stage she is an imaginative creation and a carbon copy of
South American fascists.No writer in any genre has managed to create such a complete, coherent and compelling world. The rules of magic are set out very early on and consistently applied (unlike the disaster that is the His Dark Materials series) and we are never provided with random new rules that we are just expected to accept (à la Artemis Fowl). The wizarding world is at all times simultaneously fantastic and completely believable, and that is a feat not to be sneezed at.

GEEK
VS GEEK
Visit our comment form!
HOME