Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Paulo's Book Club: Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows

I'm going to try to do this like a real book review, I'll discuss some plot points but I won't give away the ending. If you haven't read the book by this point then you are not really a fan and deserve to have the ending ruined. But if you plan to read it and don't want to be checkered by my opinions then don't read past this picture.

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows

First off, the book is 759 pages. It might have been 150 pages or so too long.

The first 300 - 350 pages of the book dragged on. It seemed more like it belonged in the Lord of the Rings series, not Harry Potter. For several months and hundred pages they were camping out along the English countryside on a quest for a powerful object. That sounds just like Frodo and Samwise. And the chapter called "The Battle for Hogwarts" was also atypical of what we've come to expect from the Harry Potter novels.

Also, the tone of this book was decidedly darker. There was no quidditch (and therefore no "Weasley is our King," my favorite part of any of the books), there were not funny names for spells or books or old wizards. All the book was about was the quest for the Horcruxes and the impending attacks from He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named.

And the search for Horcruxes was very vague because we didn't know what the Horcruxes were which made it very confusing to try to follow along.

But once the book got going and Harry started progressing towards his goals, the book was an absolute page turner. Most of the long-standing mysteries were explained in satisfactory fashion and everything made perfect sense in the end.

And the last chapter provided a very fitting ending to the series of books that I've loved so much for the past 7 or 8 years.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I just finished this the other day. I had to wait till the library (K's sister) was done with it.

I loved pretty much the whole thing. Being that all these books read quickly...even the 'drawn out' parts are fine. The camping in the woods helped to build up the idea of desperation.

The Horcrux search didnt bother me. We knew what they were, just not what the actual item was, whatevs.

****Semi SPOILER for someone who hasn't read it**** One of my favorite things was how in the end, Neville turned out to be all hardcore. It was a good use of a non major character.

The real question is....will J.K. 1-retire and never write again, because there's no way to duplicate this success, or 2-write random stuff, or 3-take off a few years...then have Harry Potter: The College Years?