Knowledge Base Glossary    Contact Us
Search  
   
Browse by Category
Knowledge Base .: Archives Fiction and Non-Fiction Reviews .: Childrens & Young Adult Books .: Reviewers- Bookpleasures Team .: Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix by J.K. Rowling

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix by J.K. Rowling

The following Review was contrbuted by PAULA BARDELL

REVIEW TITLE: Harry Potter and the Gargantuan Page Turner

DESCRIPTION: A review of ""Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix"", J.K. Rowling's fifth book in the phenomenally successful wizarding series.

Three frustratingly long years after the publication of Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, J.K. Rowling’s legions of fans were rewarded for their patience with the release of Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix – launched simultaneously in Britain, the USA, Canada, Australia and in other English-speaking countries at one minute past midnight on 21st June 2003.

This fifth book in Rowling’s incredibly successful wizarding series is a challenging 766 pages long, containing over 255,000 words and weighing in at 2.8lb (1.3kg). In Britain alone, it sold 1.8 million copies in the immediate hours following its release - a Nielsen Book Scan estimate revealed that one person in every 28 possessed the Order of the Phoenix. In the US, five million copies were sold during the same period. There can be little doubt that Harry Potter is a global literary phenomenon.

Trivia aside, Potter is no longer the awkward 11-year-old boy wizard that readers were introduced to in the first book. Phoenix sees the tangle-haired Harry in his fifth year at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. He is now an angry adolescent, a survivor of various hair-raising escapades who often finds it difficult to control his emotions. He frequently finds himself ""consumed with anger and frustration, grinding his teeth and clenching his fists"", and occasionally takes his ""growling resentment"" out on his best friends Ron and Hermione.

Phoenix is an enormously harrowing adventure for Harry and definitely not ideal bedtime reading material for the squeamish or fainthearted. He is attacked by dementors, threatened with expulsion from Hogwart's, banned from playing Quidditch, discredited among much of the magical population, haunted by dreams, visions and stories of his dead parents, accused of being a liar by the atrocious Dolores Umbridge, forced to endure the loss of a dear friend – and all this before his destiny is finally revealed to him by Dumbledore, who sits Potter down in his office and tells him “everything”.

The book is considerably darker than the first four novels as Voldemort begins to spread his evil influence, opposed at each stage by the Order of the Phoenix, a protective circle of benevolent witches and wizards.

Once again, serious issues such as slavery and racism are touched upon in subplots such as Hermione Granger’s quest to liberate the long-suffering House Elves and in Malfoy’s fascistic hatred of “mud bloods” and ""filthy half-breeds”.

Rowling’s books reflect rather than condone prejudice and Harry continues to take people at face value. Indeed, in their steadfast determination to shield the weak against the evil forces of Voldermort,characters like Professor Dumbledore quite clearly advocate open-mindedness and empiricism at great personal cost to themselves.

Unsurprisingly, Phoenix, like earlier books in the series, has been subject to intense political and moral analysis. Since Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone (the Sorceror’s Stone in the US), first took the American reading-public by storm in 1997, there have been vicious attacks by Christian fundamentalists who believe the series is cultivating a generation of “evil-doers”. Indeed, the more extreme of these groups have accused Rowling of deliberately “spreading witchcraft”. After the release of book four, the Minnesota Star Tribune reported that a New Mexico town had actually held a book burning, and the People Magazine informed its readers that parents across the country were seeking to ban the book from their children's school libraries. Mercifully, the vast majority of American families have taken Harry to their hearts and Phoenix has broken all US sales records, outselling even the biography of former first lady, Hillary Clinton.

In a far more agnostically inclined Britain, critics have tended to complain that Potter and his palls are a tad too “Middle-England” for their liking. However, I can only surmise that there must be a distinct lack of humour amongst present-day literary commentators because Rowling is quite obviously being ironic when she writes of the curtain-twitching residents of Privet Drive and the Minister of Magic in his pinstriped robes.

The Order of the Phoenix is by far the most sophisticated and mature book of the series so far; it is also a more confident work than its predecessors. Although the earlier books were far more comedy-driven, there are still many hilarious scenes in Phoenix that will amuse children and adults alike. The narrative moves at a cracking pace as Harry struggles to convince the wizard world that Voldemort has returned, and the book's prodigious size allows Rowling to weave in serious themes.

With two books to go, it remains to be seen which direction Rowling’s storytelling will take, but it seems likely that the link between Harry and Voldemort will lead to ever more elaborate plot-twists and sensational revelations. In the meantime, Pottermania will continue to inspire children across the globe to read – a truly magical achievement in itself.

Related Articles

article Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince
Author: J.K. RowlingISBN: 0439784549The following review was contributed by: John Walsh & CLICK TO VIEW John Walsh's ReviewsThe annual launch of the new Harry Potter episode is now of major international significance as people around the world are united in a cultural celebration of storytelling and the triumph of hope over despair. It is a time to bring families together as parents and children can enjoy the same book and film. No matter the stylistic limitations or the foolish people...

(No rating)  8-1-2005    Views: 15999   
article Meet Harry E. Gilleland Jr., author of Poetic Musings of an Old Fat Man
 Click Here To Purchase Poetic Musings of an Old Fat Man Today, Norm Goldman, Publisher & Editor of Bookpleasures.com, is excited to have as our guest, Harry E. Gilleland Jr., author of Poetic Musings of an Old Fat Man. Harry is a retired professor of microbiology from the Department of Microbiology and Immunology at Louisiana

(No rating)  5-29-2008    Views: 4669   
article Phoenix
Author: Richard Satterlie, Ph.DISBN: 1593745702 The following review of the ARC copy was contributed by:  NORM GOLDMAN:  Editor of Bookpleasures. CLICK TO VIEW  Norm Goldman's Reviews  To read Norm's Interview with Richard Satterlie CLICK HERE     The world of Richard Satterlie’s Phoenix

(No rating)  5-27-2006    Views: 5299   
article Interview: Harry Pariser Author of Explore The Virgin Islands
If you are interested in knowing more about the Virgin Islands, you may want to read what travel expert and author Harry Pariser had to share with Norm Goldman, Editor of Bookpleasures.comClick Here To Read The Interview

(No rating)  7-12-2005    Views: 4757   
article Phoenix Tales: Stories of Death and Life
Author: Gregory Bernard BanksPublisher: Lulu Press (February, 2005)ISBN: 1411620356 

(No rating)  5-4-2005    Views: 7856   
article Interview: Richard Satterlie Author of Phoenix
Author: Richard Satterlie, Ph.DISBN: 1593745702                                        The following interview with Richard Satterlie was conducted by:  NORM GOLDMAN:  Editor of Bookpleasures. CLICK TO VIEW  Norm Goldman's Reviews  

(No rating)  5-27-2006    Views: 5877   
article From the Ashes Flies the Phoenix:Creating a Powerful Life After A Suicide
Author: Gretta KraneISBN:  978 097775430 4 

(No rating)  12-25-2006    Views: 5271   
article A Conversation With Gretta Krane Author of: From the Ashes Flies the Phoenix: Creating a Powerful Life After a Suicide.
Author: Gretta KraneISBN:  978 097775430 4                          

(No rating)  12-29-2006    Views: 6271   

User Comments

No comments have been posted.


.: Powered by Lore 1.5.2