So when she created HP, she had the entire series worked out and planned before she ever started writing Book 1. Is the mystery and the unknown behind HP what drives us to stand in line at the local Wal-Mart to buy the newest book at midnight? We get little morsels of information with each volume, and can't wait for the next fix-- is that Jo Rowling's true talent? I mean, I am a grown woman with a household of kids, and I am just chomping at the bit for Books 6 and 7.
Any opinions or comments about the HP phenomenon? Just curious...
As for the mystery, well, that is part of what I like. But to be honest, I love the stories. There is something to be said for a more simplistic style.
LDS
But to put what I know into a few simple words:
It is new, it is light, it is thought-provoking, it is unpredictable (the world I mean), and the prose has a sort of attitude to it that we like. Oh-and we can all relate with it to some extent. It's like taking our old junior-high school days and merging them with our old junior-high school daydreams ...
Ok I lied, it's more than a few words ...
Well, I don't know, I guess.
1--sport story (Quidditch has the added benefit of being a magical sport and way cool)
2--boarding school story (Hogwarts has the added benefit of being a magical boarding school)
3--archetypal story (young protagonist finds out that he is really someone very special who has had prophecies made about him--see Joseph Campbell's HERO WITH A THOUSAND FACES)
I think another strength the series has, is the fact that this fun, fantastic world is a hidden part of the real world. The histories are similar and parallel-- I really want wizards to exist! (I've found letters my 10 year old daughter has written to Harry Potter c/o the Dursleys! )
I admit, I am a huge J.K. Rowling/HP fan. I see many things in her writing that I have heard are "against the rules of good writing," but I can't see how they harm her works in the least! I am still new at creating stories, so this can be confusing to me at times. Any thoughts?
~L.L.
If you think you should break a rule of writing, make sure you understand clearly _why_ breaking this rule is important to your story, why the rule exists in the first place, and what you can do to avoid the problems that the rule was intended to prevent.
I think what is so great about HP is that Rowling does tell a good story, in bits, that keeps you turning pages and caring about the characters and what happens. I think it benefits from planning, yet doesn't feel heavy-handed. We know what we need to know, when we need to know it, and we are enticed by other bits. I know I sucked the books down pretty quickly, and didn't want to put them down until I was done.
We didn't stand in lines for the last book - there was a palette-full at Costco!
Rowlings loved her work. Loved it enough to do what it took to finish. There's no cheap trick to it, just one Herculean gut check.
-L