For instance, I mentioned I was reading P.G. Wodehouse a lot recently. I won’t learn much probably from reading books about a clueless British aristocrat (Bertie Wooster) whose valet Jeeves gets him out of silly predicaments through humorous schemes. However, when Bertie’s friend Gussie Fink-Nottle is in love with Madeline Basset but can’t find it in him to propose to her because he is a frightful chump with no spine at all, then the hilarity that ensues in trying to solve the problem is good times indeed.
Yes hilarious it would be, and a chump he certainly is, I suppose reading for some is a kind of escapism.
My wife is into soaps, and if she misses them she records them and sometimes sits through 5 hours of recorded stuff,:hypno: (not all at the one sitting ) like I say different people have different ways to escape the hum-drum, thats hers, a long with her cigs.
To be honest, I think the best of the series is the final book. However, there’s a lot of development of characters that has gone on in books 2-6 that would make it very difficult to skip there. Although I’d really recommend reading the entire series if you are so inclined, I would say to read book 4 (Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. Skip the movie version, though–I found it intensely disappointing (well, movie-PoA & GoF are both very disappointing compared to the books, OotP was too short by far but at least didn’t annoy me).
Thanks for the info, actually in-case you don’t know I live in Ireland, and I meet a lot of people, I have never heard one person mention HP let alone see a book.
My children 4 adults don’t have them amazingly,

what tha hell is wrong with them, are they normal ?
A lot of our TV comes from England you see so this is where we see a lot of the HP hype.
Sorry about the second hand third hand info, I don’t care one way or the other, I was just fishing to see what the truth was from the Vatican.
Start at the begiining-the first two books are short and not as well written as the rest but you need to follow the character development all the way through.
I do and if you look at those defending the books in CAF you will find they do also. I firmly beleive that the near hysterical attacks on theses boks by some Catholics makes it much, much harder for us to defend our Faith. One does not have a lot of credibilty in defending the “Real Presence” after they have been observed throwing a hissy fit about a fictional boy who send letters via Owl.
Thanks, I might suffer one

yes I know you defend the faith, I’ve read a lot of your posts, and a fine job you do too.
To Mag:
I would suggest starting at the first book. The 7th (Deathly Hallows) is the best, but you would ruin the ending of the series for yourself (although, you’ve probably read all the spoilers already).
And thank-you too, I seem to have left my childhood too quickly, my son has The Lord of the Rings Cd’s, I sat through some of them only because he had them on in the living-room.
Seriously they didn’t tickle my fancy, it just looks like more of the same to me, I’d rather rather watch Clint Eastwood in the Outlaw Josey Wales catching all the bad guys, I suppose those old films and black & white movies do it for me.
What I would like to see is an acknowledgement of ‘the rest of us.’
There are some of us who are reasonable, well read people who can find Harry Potter just not ‘great literature’, have no problem with other people reading it, who can, in effect, disagree with the many who find it ‘wonderful’ AND with the many who find it ‘excreble’, giving good, respectful reasons for their personal decision and their review of the series.
Our voices, however, do not seem to be heard. Quite often, there seems a knee-jerk reaction where if any person finds any ‘fault’, **he or she is labelled as a vile, bigoted, censorious donkey. ** Even worse, often our ‘voices’ are simply ignored, and thus there is a continual ‘polarization’ with people either coming out with wild kudos or fervent damnation.
Thanks,

you certainly are “well read” well you do seem to have a way with words.
Surely the public is more nuanced than this thread would have us believe. Surely there is a middle ground where people can speak their minds and not be called upon to either ‘only’ praise or ‘only’ condemn.
Anyway my final word on this trivial subject that has got out of hand, I have never been a “follow the crowd” type person, just because the masses follow it, doesn’t meant I have to.
People are different and we get off on different things, it would be a pretty boring world if we all liked the same things, we aren’t clones of each-other, well not yet ?
