Thursday, July 26, 2007

End of an Era

I guess the cultural phenomenon that is Harry Potter is as good as any a reason for a first post. I finished reading The Deathly Hallows over the weekend, and subsequently fell into a semi-funk over the next few days. It's just sad to think that we won't be getting any more new adventures of Harry, Ron and Hermione, that we won't get to share their world anymore. Sigh.As for the book itself, I mostly loved it, but have a few complaints of course. The main one, which I've seen many raise, is the rushed ending and crappy epilogue! Children's book or not, Harry Potter is rightly considered an epic, and thus, requires a thorough enough ending to provide closure. Jumping from defeating Voldie to 19 years later was too abrupt. There needed to be an additional chapter between. It could be set immediately after, or a few days, or months. Something where we see Harry and gang dwelling on the fact that they've finally done it. Someone who has cursed his life for 17 years has been vanquished, surely we ought to have some reflection of that? LOTR is obviously the main comparison - Not that it had to be as long-winded and meticulous as that, but it's been such an arduous journey, we need to see how it's changed them, how life would never be the same again, like how the Ring quest has so profoundly changed Frodo, Sam, etc.

And what of the Ministry? Of the issue of class warfare between elves, goblins and wizards? Of the fact that Harry just found out the man he hated his entire school life was actually a hero? Of Snape's vindication? And we don't even get to see Ron and Hermione actually getting together? All the build-up to a kiss, and then it's 19 years later and three kids?

One area of writing where I think J.K Rowling is not quite adept at is definitely romance. Lupin/Tonks get together in the background, pop out a kid, and then die in the background. Point of it being (besides the so-what parallel between Harry and Teddy Tonks)? I love Lupin, but hardly give a shit about the couple. But the main failure is Harry/Ginny. It is such a shallowly depicted romance, more telling than showing, that I have a lot of problem believing Ginny is his one true love. It doesn't help that Ginny, from a shy girl in books 1-3, suddenly pops out of nowhere in 5 with a personality transplant to become a Lily Evans clone who is of course sassy, kick-ass, beautiful and popular, and Harry. similarly out of nowhere, just likes her in 6. Again, telling rather than showing. I think Luna would even be a better fit for Harry. Or better, get rid of love interests, this is a adventure/fantasy story and we don't really need romance sub-plots.

And the saccharine, sappy ending was more than I could take. Albus Severus? Seriously? For future re-reads, I've decided I will stop before the epilogue and pretend it doesn't exist.

Also, Harry's seemingly free and easy access to Voldie's thoughts? Reeked so much of convenient, lazy plot device. Just highlights the overall rushed feeling of the book, I think (which is what the ending does as well). It's as if J.K couldn't be bothered to think of a way to show what Voldie was doing, so she just repeated the mind-reading thing over and over.

Ok criticisms aside, I still really loved the book.

- Neville's character arc from 1 through 7 has been well-fleshed, and to see him become a hero in Hogwarts, leading the resistance in the trio's absence is really heartwarming. Him lopping off Nagini's head was one of the best moments of the series.
- Hermione - love her. So resourceful, so smart, and so loyal. She wiped her parents' memories - that's hardcore.
- Dumbledore - interesting to see the fleshing-out of a flawed DD.
- "The Ministry has fallen. Scrimgeour is dead. They are coming." - The most chilling line of the book.
- Harry and Ron's discussion after Ron retrieved the Sword heroically. (Paraphrasing here) "It's not as cool as it sounds." "I already told you before that it wasn't." Really shows the full-circle journey from Ron's jealousy of Harry initially to understanding him now.

I can't wait for the movie. It's gonna be action-packed, and WB better break the bank and give us an all-out effects extravaganza. Let's see: Flight from Privet Drive, Gringotts' breakout, the massive Hogwarts battle with moving knights, tables and chairs, flying crystal balls, plants, et al - these sets are gonna be amazing.

Sigh. The end of an era. Let's hope J.K gets bored sitting around her billions of dollars, changes her mind eventually and comes out with new books of the HP world.

6 comments:

ronaldisthewan said...

Totally agree on the whole romance failure part.

Luna Lovegood would be a better candidate.

Liking Ginny is bad enough. But marrying with three kids named after parents and headmasters. Tragic.

You're right. It's been 7 years and feels damn sad while picking it up. I didn't want to stop reading. I didn't want to finish reading. I bet you had the same sentiment.

Well, the good thing is, I can't wait to introduce the books to my kids next time.

Hermione totally rocks my world! My kind of girl!

Ciao,
Ronald Weasley

the only living boy in new york said...

Yeah, I kept pausing sporadically between chapters, like some sub-conscious force was willing me to never ever finish the book...

dustmite said...

Joy! Rowling said more to be revealed with the encyclopedia!

http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/19959323/

:D

the only living boy in new york said...

Haha yeah, so she did. But that still doesn't excuse the woeful job she did on the ending!

crease. said...

it could be because cho put on quite a bit of weight in the order of phoenix(at least the movie).

I havent even finished half-blood :/

the only living boy in new york said...

Even if Cho (Katie Leung) had put on weight (which I don't think so. I've seen candids of her at OOTP premieres, and she looked slim), she's still much prettier than Ginny (Bonnie Wright)!