by cheimon on Wed Jan 22, 2003 11:53 am
but if we lose Dumbledore, Harry won't have mentoring father-figure type, always a necessity in these sort of things. Unless, as someone said (lol, by the way) that he'll pull a Gandalf.
On the semi-unrelated note of Philip Pullman: I've been a huge fan of his since I was a child and I read his Sally Lockhart trilogy, which begins with A Ruby in the Smoke and ends with Tiger in the Well. There's also a companion book called the Tin Princess, which isn't as good but still cool. Rae, I'd advise you to read the first 2 of that trilogy, b/c Tiger in the Well becomes so much better when you do.
I also find it interesting that religious conservatives find HP more objectionable than His Dark Materials, which has quite a lot of religious speculation in interesting directions. So, I asked a born-again Christian friend of mine, who although not of the Mrs. Ross/crazy evangelizing type, does believe the Harry Potter books are wrong, and her little brothers aren't allowed to read them. She said that it's b/c HP is set in the real world that religious people find it evil, because it supposedly makes witchcraft real in our world, unlike fairy tales or most fantasy, which is set in a different, made-up world. Of course, in HDM, our world plays a role as well. So I would have to theorize that this may be the reason, but the only reason there's so much vocal anti-HP people is because they're so much more popular than HDM ever were.
Although if you ask me, they ought to just be happy their kids are reading anything at all.