Darren
Active Member
I see that JK Rowling wrote some Harry Potter Schoolbooks. HAs anyone read these? Are they any good?
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I wholeheartedly agree. I think the stories are as much about Harry learning about himself and his relationships with his friends, as it is about sorcery. I think the sorcery is "window-dressing", if you will. It could just as well have been set in medieval times about a young lad learning to be a knight (...well, almostOriginally posted by Dawn
It is, indeed, a series about a group of children in school to become warlocks, but it's more than that. ... It's a coming-of-age story about a boy who learns about himself and the worlds(s) around him through a series of adventures. He learns about friendship and loyalty, the importance of family, about dealing with adversity, and about self worth, self esteem and self sacrifice. Yes, sorcery is a large part of the story, but only a part.
If you think you ought to preface an opinion with a disclaimer like that, you probably already know it's going to be controversial.Originally posted by SilveryChris
I don't want to create any controvery here unless you all enjoy controversy.
Well, actually the school is for wizards. I'm not nitpicking semantically here. The two words are very different. Warlock has actually had its origins bastardised by pejorative usage as "male witch", but that aside it remains a fact that "witch" and "warlock" carry strong overtones of black magic and, well, stuff we shouldn't be advocating to kids. Now, perhaps the author wasn't thinking outside the box when she used broomsticks in Quidditch, nevertheless the word wizard is much less identifiable with "satanism", and has a children's literary heritage going back countless ages. If JK Rowling is a viable target for allegations of child corruption on these grounds (and she has been (bizarrely!) accused of this by some groups in America and the UK) then so are the likes of CS Lewis, L Frank Baum, Philip Pullman, and Lewis Carroll.... if I understand correctly the Harry Potter Series of books is about a boy training to become a warlock
I agree with you up to a point. It's important that people - not just kids! - realise they can't solve their problems, big or small, by waving a magic wand (metaphorical or not!). However, kids operate on a different platform to adults, and the kind of series you're talking about would be less likely to carry garner the adjective "popular" because they wouldn't be hitting the platform well enough. Even so-called realistic creations like The Babysitter books and their ilk feature a healthy tone of escapism. Without that, books edge ever farther from being kids' books.It bothers me some to think that we are encouraging an entire generation of young boys to believe that perhaps the best way to handle life and its myriad of problems is through sorcery. I would prefer to see a series of popular books that encourages them to look within their own hearts and their own minds to handle life's surprises rather than sorcery...