Wednesday, 6 August 2014

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix - the plot darkens

In Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, the fifth outing for the boy wizard with the scar on his forehead, things are getting tougher and more dangerous. The book opens as usual, with our hero struggling through the summer vacation from Hogwarts school at the home of his aunt and uncle. He is feeling isolated, with no one to talk to about the battle which took place at the end of the last book, in which his arch enemy, Lord Voldemort, came back in bodily form and killed one of Hogwarts' pupils. Then, one evening, Harry and his cousin are attacked by Dementors. Harry uses magic to save them - but it is forbidden to use magic outside school and Harry lands himself with the threat of expulsion. He is rescued by his friends and taken to the house owned by his godfather, Sirius Black, which turns out to be the headquarters of the Order of the Phoenix - a secret society of wizards and witches determined to rid the world of Lord Voldemort. Harry escapes expulsion with the help of Professor Dumbledore and heads back to Hogwarts, but all is not well - as there are attempts by the Ministry of Magic to interfere, for they do not believe that Voldemort has returned at all! And so we see the appointment of Dolores Umbridge - a ministry stooge - as the new Defence Against the Dark Arts teacher. Her teaching method is to get them to read the textbook and just learn the theory, without any practical lessons at all. In desperation, Harry is persuaded to teach fellow pupils jinxes and hexes to protect themselves against the dark forces. In the meantime, Dolores becomes headmistress and Hogwarts becomes a place of restriction and regulation. Harry is dogged by nightmares and his scar is hurting all the time. It becomes apparent that he is emotionally linked to what Voldemort is feeling. Afraid that when Voldemort realises this, he will try to influence Harry's actions, Professor Snape is commissioned to teach Harry the skill of "Occlumency" - which would build a barrier against this possibility. During the lessons, Harry learns why Snape hates him so much, and the lessons end somewhat abruptly - leaving Harry dangerously exposed, with devastating consequences. Once again, JK Rowling has produced a book full of action and interesting characters, whose back stories are continuing to develop, helping to explain why people are the way they are. I did think that a bit of judicious editing would not have gone amiss - some elements felt a bit repetitive at times and I wanted things to get moving more quickly. However, there is peril, and humour and you are left eagerly awaiting the next instalment. High literature this is not, but a good, solid page-turner it definitely is.

My STAR rating: THREE.

Length: 768 print pages.
Price I paid: free - borrowed from the library.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio CD; unabridged audio download; ebook.

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