Thursday, July 19, 2007

NY Times reviews Deathly Hallows [non-spoiler excerpt]

From nytimes, "J. K. Rowling’s monumental, spellbinding epic, 10 years in the making, is deeply rooted in traditional literature and Hollywood sagas — from the Greek myths to Dickens and Tolkien to “Star Wars.” And true to its roots, it ends not with modernist, “Soprano”-esque equivocation, but with good old-fashioned closure: a big-screen, heart-racing, bone-chilling confrontation and an epilogue that clearly lays out people’s fates. Getting to the finish line is not seamless — the last part of “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows,” the seventh and final book in the series, has some lumpy passages of exposition and a couple of clunky detours — but the overall conclusion and its determination of the main characters’ story lines possess a convincing inevitability that make some of the prepublication speculation seem curiously blinkered in retrospect.

J. K. Rowling has created a world as fully detailed as L. Frank Baum’s Oz or J. R. R. Tolkien’s Middle Earth, a world so minutely imagined in terms of its history and rituals and rules that it qualifies as an alternate universe, which may be one reason the “Potter” books have spawned such a passionate following and such fervent exegesis. With this volume, the reader realizes that small incidents and asides in earlier installments (hidden among a huge number of red herrings) create a breadcrumb trail of clues to the plot, that Ms. Rowling has fitted together the jigsaw-puzzle pieces of this long undertaking with Dickensian ingenuity and ardor. Objects and spells from earlier books — like the invisibility cloak, [deleted] — play important roles in this volume, and characters encountered before, like [deleted], resurface, too."

2 comments:

DKC said...

Sooo excited!! Thank you for the non-spoiler edition, although I expected no less.

Octopunk said...

Ditto! That was just enough for me to see. I expect the talk about the pre-pub chatter being "blinkered" is a way of saying "of COURSE Harry doesn't die," but I'm glad it's oblique enough that I don't really know.

Tomorrow at midnight! I already paid for my copy!

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