| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
Recordatio ViaAn original editorial by DementomI was, I am somewhat embarrassed to say, one of the few people in my eighth grade class who enjoyed A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens. I had read widely by that age – although mostly children’s fantasy (like the Oz books), comic books, and series like the Hardy Boys – but had never encountered any type of writing like this. Disparate plot points and characters, seemingly unrelated, all turned out to be interwoven and relevant in the end. It seemed like magic to me. On the other hand, it was eighth grade and I was a hapless, scrawny nerd, so, “it was the best of times, it was the worst of times.” Fast forward to 2007, and I, like a few hundred million or so other people, am reading Deathly Hallows. I was hoping for a satisfying end to the tale with various loose ends tied up. What I got was something even more: a transcendent tying together of seemingly every detail and character from all of the previous books, and a vital reorientation to the rich thematic material that has marked this series from the first. It is a feat to match any in English literature for plot construction on a grand scale.
I had the very great fortune of having MuggleNet post seven editorials of mine in the one year span between August 2005 and July 2006 (the links are posted below). In them I made a number of predictions or observations, each of which I can now evaluate in light of the finished story:
Let’s pretend you were given the following challenge: construct within your own imagination a world, supposedly existing side-by-side with our real world, which will captivate people of all ages all over the world in a story of ulimate good versus ultimate evil, which is also a coming-of-age story, which is set to take place over seven key years within a thirty-six year time period, which incorporates mythical elements from cultures all over the world, which incorporates hundreds of characters, and which takes place over seven novels, some of considerable length. You also need each story to contain elements of fantasy, mystery, and adventure, and keep each book in the series logically consistent with the others, while aging the characters believably. You should have romantic themes which launch hundreds of thousands of fan fictions. You also need to have elements of mystery or ambiguity within the series not resolved until the last few chapters of the last book. Do this in a lucid literary style which shifts easily from comedy to drama to fantasy and deals with every theme known to mankind, such as death and life, love and hatred, family and friends, race, science and magic, government and civil disobedience, the press and the abuse of the press, sports, fame and obscurity, war and peace, the mistreatment of animals, growing up and growing old, giving up and perseverance. Oh, and while you're at it, rediscover the joys of reading for an entire generation, reinstitute the lost art of parents reading to children, doing so in a way that only the snobbiest and most misanthropic of critics can find fault with. And if you don’t mind, invent some of the most memorable characters in all of literature, and throw in making a few billion dollars for yourself, your publishers and a movie studio. And do all of this, if you don’t mind, during a seventeen-year time period that begins while going through some of the most trying times of your life, and ends after having gone through a type of fame that few people have ever experienced. And try to stay sane and focused during the entire period. And throw in having a baby or two. Does anyone else think that, in Joanne Rowling's Harry Potter series, we have a witnessed not only a once-in-a-lifetime feat, but a once-in-forever one?
1. Neville Longbottom: Future Hogwarts Professor (8/2005) 2. Miserabilis Praefero (8/2005) 3. The Hidden Archway (9/2005) 4. The New Ship at the Heart of Harry Potter (12/2005) 5. The Trio and the Three-Part Soul (3/2006) 6. Why Love? (1/2006) 7. Telling Stories (7/2006)
Discuss this editorial.
MuggleNet is an unofficial Harry Potter fan site. Please email us if you have any questions or concerns. MuggleNet's original layouts were designed and created by Navy. All subsequent layouts by Dylan Spartz. © 1999-2009 MuggleNet.com. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy | COPPA Policy | Feedback | Credits
|
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||