Monday, 28 October 2013

Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (24) - I'm warming to this wizard!

I have surprised myself by warming to the Harry Potter books. I felt that Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban by JK Rowling had greater depth to it than the previous books ... maybe that's natural and right in books where the characters age by one year each time. There is no getting away from the fact that this is a good story - with this third installment, the characters are familiar and there isn't too much time required anymore to set the scene. This means that the book starts at a run and maintains its pace pretty much the whole way through. Harry, once again, gets into trouble at his aunts and uncle's home and flees after he inflates his aunt like a balloon. He is surprised to find that instead of being banned from his beloved Hogwarts for practising magic out of the school boundaries, he is welcomed back and those in charge are being very protective towards him. On the train back to school, Harry encounters The Dementors - he goes weak, hears screaming and eventually slips into unconsciousness. It turns out that these are the guards at Azkhaban - the dreaded prison of the magical world. They suck the joy out of everyone around them. They are on the hunt for an escaped prisoner - Sirius Black - who, Harry is told, helped to kill his parents and who is now after him. But, as always, things are never as simple as that! As Harry and his two best friends, Ron and Hermione, start their new school year, the action really gets going and keeps going - including a werewolf, a hippogryff and a smidgen of time travel. If I hadn't already seen the film, I think there would have been some super twists and turns in this book. And you know what, I am actually looking forward to the next installment!

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 320 print pages.
Price I paid: Free - borrowed the ebook from my local library.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio CD; unabridged audio download; ebook

Sunday, 13 October 2013

Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (23) - spells, potions and beasts

Harry Potter is a total, worldwide phenomenon. The books, the films, the games ... on and on it goes. When the first book came out, I thought I would find out what all the fuss was about, and read it. I thought, at the time, that it was okay ... not spectacular and certainly not deserving of the ridiculous following that it created. Maybe because I had also read the first of Phillip Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy around the same time - now THAT was a book that made me want to find out more and keep on reading. So, it was with a bit of trepidation that I embarked on Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, one of several of JK Rowling's series on the Top 100 Reads list. Weirdly, my thoughts about the actual quality of the writing haven't really changed ... there are much better written books out there, but I have to admit that there is something compelling in the stories themselves. You do want to keep reading despite the occasional jarring (in my opinion) of the actual words. There is no denying that they are page turners. In this book, the second outing for our schoolboy wizard, Harry has had a miserable summer at his aunt and uncle's house, and thinks his friends from Hogwarts have forgotten all about him. With the arrival of Dobby, an elf, comes a warning for Harry not to go back to school - but when Ron Weasley and his brothers come to rescue Harry from the clutches of his relatives, he can't wait to get back to learning more about becoming a wizard. However, danger stalks the corridors and when people start to be attacked, Harry and co are determined to find out what is going on. And so the adventure begins ... I did enjoy this book, but it's very much forgettable fluff - good while it lasts, but doesn't stick in the mind. And maybe sometimes, that's exactly what we need.

My STAR rating: THREE

Length: 251 print pages.
Price I paid: £0.00 (borrowed from my local library)
Formats available: print; unabridged audio CD; unabridged audio download; ebook

Thursday, 10 October 2013

Watership Down (42) - don't go "tharn" on me

A book about rabbits ... surely this couldn't be exciting in any way? Well, you would be wrong. Watership Down, by Richard Adams which I read in print, is full of incident from page 1 until the very end. Our hero is Hazel, a brave rabbit with a bigger brain than most, who trusts the instincts of his best pal Fiver - who is a bit of an oddity amongst their home warren in that he has a sixth sense. When Fiver tells Hazel that they all have to leave the warren, Hazel tries to persuade the leaders ... but to no avail! Only a handful of rabbits join them in their escape, and those who stayed behind befall a deadly fate at the hand of man. The small band of escapees, including Bigwig, my favourite character, then begin an epic journey to find somewhere new to set up home. Dangers and perils abound but they eventually end up at Watership Down. All seems good until they realise that the lifespan of their warren is limited, as they have no does ... so there will not be a second generation! Hazel hatches a plan to secure prospective mothers for the warren, but this means facing the danger of approaching a huge warren that is run by a despot called General Woundwort. This book is an odd mixture - it's an action adventure at its heart, but it is also a bit of a wildlife manual with a bit of rabbit religion thrown in too. For me, it's at its best in the adventure elements - the characters are well written and individual, with clear goodies and baddies and a few who might have a paw in each camp! The bunny theology kind of left me a bit cold, and the special rabbit words were totally unnecessary - I didn't feel that it drove the story forward in any way. The only phrase I liked was "going tharn", which describes how a rabbit is transfixed by danger and can't move ... a rabbit in the headlights! Even though this is primarily for children, it's quite adult in style and there are some dark moments. I enjoyed it, but wouldn't feel that it is a MUST read book by any means.

My STAR rating: THREE

Length: 478 print pages.
Price I paid: £0.00 (borrowed from my local library)
Formats available: print, audio CD, audio download, ebook.