ivyblossom: (Default)
ivyblossom ([personal profile] ivyblossom) wrote2003-06-22 01:43 pm

OoTP: one more reaction

Well, I've read a lot of divergent opinions on The Order of the Phoenix so far. A lot of people hated this book, apparently. Well, I did not hate it. Not at all. I felt while I was reading that for once this was really JKR talking to us, not her lawyers, not her publishers, not the PR machine, but JKR herself. That was a heady experience, after all the time I personally have invested in her universe. I giggled over Dudley asking Harry if Cedric was his boyfriend. It probably wasn't, but it felt like a shout out.

I felt as though she had been listening to our criticisms. First off, this book was far, far better written than any of the ones that came before it. It's still in the same general style, but she seems to be taking her own story more seriously...there are no more jokey people are plot points. This is serious, the irony is real when it's there, and the humour is beautiful.

"Both buttocks in place?"

One of the major problems with the series to date was the pitiful female characters. We had Hermione and that was about it. Well, no more. She gave us Luna, who I think is a stroke of brilliance. We needed 'the weird girl' anyway, and I think JKR finally decided to break out of the 'I will only write Gryffindors seriously' bubble she had been in. I love Luna. I can't quite see Harry/Luna, but I almost can. He is very comfortable with her, and I like that. I like Harry branching out and connecting with more people. McGonagall kicks ass. Umbridge is the most villainous villain ever. Her pink cardigans and her lacy office, her plates with kittens on them, the lines that cut into Harry's hand...brilliant, all brilliant. And she has a real motivation, unlike Voldemort of previous books. We never really understood why he did the horrible things he did. Umbridge we understand. She is worried about rebellion, she wants control, she feels righteous. It was beautiful. Hermione was still Hermione, but Ginny got a serious turn-around. I liked that. It made sense. She had a crush on Harry but it's over now. She's her own little person with her own talents. I am pleased, I liked her.

Tonks. Hey, we needed another lesbian in these books. And the shape-shifting is just damn cool.

Cho. I actually really liked the Cho parts. She managed to write that relationship totally not working without actually making Cho a complete idiot. At first I was like, why is Cho flirting with Harry when her boyfriend just died? But JKR didn't drop the ball there. Cho's doing it because she wants comfort, she thinks Harry is the only person who understands her. Of course she cries a lot, her boyfriend is dead and she's sixteen. And then they both just move on from each other, it works.

Harry/Ginny seems kinda dead, but I could still possibly see it in the future, at some point. More now than I could before. Ginny has to not be a fangirl to hook up seriously with Harry. But we'll see.

Molly Weasley. She is a very passionate woman. Passionate and bordering on abusive, if you ask me. But her presence is welcomed by me here. She's scared and she loves her children. Also, Harry.

Petunia. Oh Petunia. I was so thrilled with the first part of this book. Even the Dursleys aren't given short shrift here. They have become real people at last.

So characterwise I personally am very pleased with this book. I think she did a great job, worthy of, dare I say it, fanfiction.

Plotwise: I like the Umbridge bit, as I've said. It's not, excuse me for saying so, a stupid plot like CoS. It makes sense. The ending kind of lost me, though. I liked the idea that Harry's heroics really do bite him in the ass in the end, but I think it would have been cooler if no one around Harry heard that prophecy. Stupid prophecy though it was. Why Voldemort wanted it so badly is a mystery. Sirius's death didn't phase me at all. I hated Sirius in this book. He was moody and more immature than Draco (almost). I have a mean plot bunny for a dastardly and abusive Sirius/Harry where Sirius molests Harry and keeps calling him James. So I was actually very glad when he died. I don't want a guy like that being a father figure to Harry.

I really, really love Harry.

The ending was a bit disappointing. We didn't end with any real sense of victory, and we didn't get a normalizing scene there to show us how things proceed directly after all this. Dumbledore's story was too long and seemed more like JKR's apology to us for all the dumb plot tricks she's used in the past. The prophecy needs work. It should have actually been a weapon, it should have been something we can feel relieved that Harry kept away from Voldemort. But after all the heroics that stupidly worked for Harry, I'm glad to see him fuck up.

I liked that Dumbledore calls Voldemort "Tom".

All in all...great book. I didn't feel the stupid plot holes as I usually do, though I'm sure someone will point them out. We didn't have a series of locks that Harry and his friends miraculously break through in spite of being only 11. We don't have a giant snake slinking through the school that miraculously manages to never kill a single person. We don't have harebrained schemes. When Harry and his friends manage to defeat the Death Eaters it's because they've been practicing hard. Yes, this book is bleak. There were definitely points when I didn't want to be at Hogwarts anymore. But I felt that in GoF and PoA as well; Hogwarts has never been a totally wonderful place for Harry.

I disagree with what a lot of people are saying, that this book is about Harry turning on the system that has supported him. The system has never supported him. It has used him and abused him, it has pointed and laughed at him, it has made him feel like a freak. And by system I mean a) the general public, b) the government, c) the political (student) system at Hogwarts. There has only ever been one thing that supported Harry, and that would be, as we now know, The Order of the Phoenix. Dumbledore, McGonagall, Sirius, Remus, and the Weasleys. There is nothing else in Harry's world that has supported him, and nothing is different in this book on that score. What's new here is that Harry knows that he can't solve things by himself, that he can fuck up, and that things are very, very serious. This isn't a day trip, this isn't an outrageous journey and adventure he can come back from and curl up in his four poster bed. Nowhere is safe anymore, unless he makes it safe.

I would also like to point out that I am still very much an Harry/Draco shipper, and that Draco did nothing in OoTP that I would not have expected him to do. Except for bragging about writing poetry, perhaps. There are, actually, a few things I would have expected Draco to do that he didn't, but that just makes my ship feel more and more alive. More on the non-deadness of my ship later, this post is too long as it is. :)

[identity profile] potterwitch.livejournal.com 2003-06-22 11:15 am (UTC)(link)
Tonks. Hey, we needed another lesbian in these books.

*blinkblink* Who's the first?

I don't think JK has killed thew H/G ship, far from it. The way i see it... well, I started reading it and saw how Ginny progressed from an eleven-year-old (because that's what she's been, books two through four. You don't notice her, she's away with her own group of friends, she doesn't develop past "the girl who got possessed by Voldemort") to a funny and mature teenager. I loved her telling Harry off for not talking to her about being possed when he was worried about it. The fact that Ginny was going out with other boys just... loosens her up, I think. Maybe she will start fancying Harry again, maybe Harry will start fancying her... there's definitely a lot there that could be filled in with fanfic, ways to go. It's only with this book I've actually started liking the idea of Harry/Ginny, which, I suppose, is rather ironic.

I agree about the teachers--I think there was a lot of development for everyone there. I keep thinking about McGonagall and the biscuits and her tartan tin. For the first time, I imagined her with a Scottish accent, and I liked what I heard.

The way I see it, OotP isn't the best book plot-wise, but it is the best characterisation-wise. It's just a shame one of the best characters had to die. *ponder* I wish it hadn't been Sirius. She could have done so much with him... then again, I was banking on Dumbledore dying and he's turned back into Book One Dumbledore--funnier and feistier than in two-three-four.

[identity profile] all-ahoo.livejournal.com 2003-06-22 11:25 am (UTC)(link)
I think the "first lesbian" would be Madam Hooch :-) Love her.

Re:

[identity profile] potterwitch.livejournal.com 2003-06-22 11:27 am (UTC)(link)
Ooh yeah! *grin* Hey, I've just realised I think of Tonks looking just like a young Madam Hooch--at least, Zoe Wanamaker as Madam Hooch. In my head she's very different. I have problems keeping my imagination separate from the films now, which is a bit of a shame, but... I like film-Madam Hooch. She's cool.
zorb: (Default)

[personal profile] zorb 2003-06-22 11:51 am (UTC)(link)
I had that problem as I was reading, too - every time I tried to picture Tonks, I got an image of movie!Hooch with colored hair.

[identity profile] stresskitten.livejournal.com 2003-06-22 12:02 pm (UTC)(link)
I suggest casting Tonks with that woman who played Tank Girl -- Lori something.

[identity profile] marysiak.livejournal.com 2003-06-22 02:25 pm (UTC)(link)
No no no. Pink! She should be played by Pink.

[identity profile] madamblue.livejournal.com 2003-06-22 03:28 pm (UTC)(link)
Random comment from left field, but your icon made me cry.

[identity profile] versinae.livejournal.com 2003-06-23 09:31 am (UTC)(link)
Good god, that would be excellent. *g*