I finally finished Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (which my lovely
plumtreeblossom gave me) last night on the T. Spoilers and commentary in my first comment below. (I didn’t want to just put them behind a cut-tag, since some people have LJ configured to auto-expand cut tags when they go to somebody’s journal directly.)
There are spoilers in the comments.
There are spoilers in the comments.
Re: HERE THERE BE SPOILERS!
Date: 2007-08-14 15:13 (UTC)dei ex machinis
Amen, and this point deserves a discussion all its own. Deus ex machina was so overemployed that it became predictable and at times almost embarassing to read. It's a literary tool that, if applied very sparlingly, can be effective and as showy (or not) as a skilled writer wants it to be. But put frequent narrative dependence on it, and it becomes a sheepish crutch; a cheap trick that becomes less forgivable with each subsequent use.
Thinking back on as many literary instances of deus ex machina that come to mind (and taking us out of the Potterverse for a minute), the most effective and impressive use of it that I can recall happens during the climax of Jurassic Park. It comes without foreshadowing from an entirely unexpected but ultimately plausable source, and it happened only the once, not repetedly until becoming a routine band-aid for narrative Oh Noes. JKR used it like duct tape, jury-rigging any situation that might have otherwise taken time or tangents to get out of. I lost trust after a while, for the first time in the whole series.
Something else that has always baffled me about the Potter wizarding world is an apparent lack of higher education. A young wizard or witch graduates from wizarding school at 17 or 18, and unless I've missed something very big, their formal education ends there and no such thing as college exists; the young graduates (and drop-outs) tend to marry off promptly and begin breeding posthaste. This is an authorial choice that I've no right to bash because the culture within her universe is hers to dictate. But for a story that takes place in the developed world during modern times, having people begin full adulthood while still in their teens seemd jarringly anachronistic to me. (But maybe I'm over-Americanized).
The Epilogue...oy vey. I think this will go down in history as one of the biggest mistakes in English language publishing. Among other problems, she introduces a fat handful of brand new characters (annoyingly named after other characters) who will never see development. I don't care about those characters. I want to know what happened to the characters I've spent the last 10 years caring about. I want to know what happened in the years immediately following the war with Voldie.
But in spite of all, I consider the series something of a miracle in the way it brought back enthusiasm for reading among young people. Nothing can take that credit away, and the literary world is better for having this series added to it. And I'm glad you're done reading, so we can discuss it more. Love you, my wizard!
Re: HERE THERE BE SPOILERS!
Date: 2007-08-14 23:18 (UTC)I felt the exact opposite, not because it happened more than once, but because Crichton uses it the exact same way in so many of his later stories. Andromeda Strain, Congo, Sphere... they all had the same first chapter and the same last chapter, filled out like mad libs with the middle not much more original. But I think I read too many of his books in too short a time as an adolescent. I was so disappointed when I saw the man behind the curtain for the first time...I guess I still blame him.
But from a single mother? Ouch.
I totally agree. I'm not a fan of JKR, despite the fact that I've read and enjoyed all of the earlier 6 and eagerly begun the seventh (thanks to you, since Jay lent it to me:) ). The fact that people (like my family) started reading and talking about books totally impresses me.
Re: HERE THERE BE SPOILERS!
Date: 2007-08-15 03:24 (UTC)The wizarding population isn't big enough, apparently, to support colleges and universities. Last week I read a rather exhaustive analysis (to the point where I, a fan, was yawning and wondering whether they didn't have better things to do) of the population and economy of wizarding Britain; it made a pretty convincing case that they couldn't afford higher education. If you want to wade through it, it's http://www.redhen-publications.com/WizPopulation.html ...