When I was 8 years old, my mom bought me my first Harry Potter book. I’d always been a reader – I knew how to read at age 3, and have been devouring books ever since. I used to go to the library 3 times a week to take out new books to read. So when my mom heard about this smart and interesting children’s book series, she snatched it up for me.I instantly fell in love with the magic and adventure of Harry Potter. I made every stick a wand, I chanted spells, I used my imagination. I did book projects on it, and even made friends because of it. For every book, I went to the midnight release party; wand in hand, lightning bolt on forehead.When the first movie came out when I was 11, and had just entered middle school, I was beyond excitement. My mom ordered me and my friend Kim and her family tickets to the 8 PM show the day it came out, and we had to wait in line for two hours before it started. Every kid in town was there, and we all left discussing at length the differences between the book and the movie.Harry, Hermione, and Ron were there for me throughout all the difficult times in my childhood. The books were released, it felt, almost parallel to my life experiences. When Harry started at Hogwarts, he was 11, and when I read the first book, I was 9. It was only a couple of years of difference; but due to inevitable gaps of time between the books, Harry and I both found ourselves completing last year of high school (his being Hogwarts, mine being Schreiber High School on Long Island) at the same time. The 7th book came out when I was in my summer between my senior year of High School and my freshman year of college. So on July 21, 2007, I stood in line with all the other Muggles and Wizards at my local book store’s release and once again, started reading the minute the book was placed in my hand. I stayed up until 4 AM just reading.Now that I’ve graduated college, it feels like once again, Harry and I are completing our journeys hand-in-hand. When I arrived at American University, I learned that everyone loved Harry Potter in some regard – they read the books, or saw the movies, or (usually) both. This past November, I saw the 7th film at midnight with my three roommates – and everyone else from the American University community in the theater. We laughed and cried together, and left chatting excitedly about the choices of the movie versus the books and what the opening scene would be in the 8th and last film.
That – right there – is the first reason of why I fell in love Harry Potter. There is a real community of Potter fans – we go to the
But that isn’t the only reason I love Harry Potter. I love it because it turned a whole generation on to reading. When I asked my friends to just talk to me about Harry Potter, they sent me back wonderful paragraphs in droves.
Some talked about how their movie crushes changed over time:
“Yes, Rupert Grint got totally hot somewhere around #5, but can we please take a moment to focus on the Neville actor? He was looking pretty feminine in those first few films, Frankensteinish in #3/#4 (those teeth…) and boom!!, suddenly Neville is smokin’ hot! His hair has a Justin Bieberish sweep, someone had the decency to fix his teeth, and suddenly baby-cheeks-Longbottom is tall, dark, and handsome. Neville Longbottom: the Unrecognized Hottie.”
Some came to it late, but once they did, they never regretted it:
“I just didn’t see the appeal so I coolly ignored the books for a while. Until the third one came out, I decided, “Why not? I got a gift
Some bonded with family members…
“A while back, when I was still too young to read chapter books, my family was visiting second cousins a couple states away. My mom recommended this random British book to my mom, and suggested it would be great for her to read to my younger brother and I. The three of us would curl up together, and travel to Hogwarts and other places that would soon become so familiar to many. Halloween 1999, my kindergardener brother Harry Potter, complete with a plastic table cloth robe, and a real broom my mother had written Nimbus 3000 on. Now, they sell those costumes in bags, but back then he got many inquisitive stares.”
Some were disappointed in the condensed nature of the movies, but they loved the books because they grew up with them:
“I feel like I generally watch them out of obligation (and at this point, just so I can feel like there’s still some Potterdom to look forward to). I feel like I probably will like the seventh movie best when I eventually get around to watching it, just cause the main reason I don’t like the movies is that they’re too condensed. [...Part of what I love so much about the books is that I feel like they matured with me. The books start off fairly basic and by the end of the series, there's a whole (for lack of a better word) mythology to them, along with some major symbolism and allegory... They have such a broad appeal, even if you aren't into literature and reading for symbolism and things, the story is still massively entertaining and there's plenty to keep track of."
And one friend waited on the edge of her seat for new Potter material (books, movies) and talked about how strange it was that this was the last film... but she still has HP material to look forward to:
"It seems strange to me, though, that it is all coming to an end*. When I graduated high school the 7th book came
out. And now that I have graduated college the last movie will premiere. It has almost been my security blanket through these years letting me know at these crossroads in my life that things, people, stories do live on even when the chapter ends. I could be one of those people that says they do not know what to do now that it is gone, but I know that the Harry Potter universe will never leave this Muggle. It will live on in her dreams, imaginations, and huge-ass library that will one day be my house. .... *LEGO Harry Potter Years 5-7 coming out in December!!! Boo-Yah!"
Everytime I read the books today, I get something more out of it. The emotional moments are raw and real, and I can appreciate them now more at age 21 than I ever could at age 15. It means something different to every Potterhead, but these books changed our lives - they turned us onto reading, or gave us a community, or even just made us smile.
Only just getting started! Below the cut:
- The Movies
- The best characters (and a teeny bit of Feminism! Of course. This is me we're talking about.)
- A Very Potter Musical & Fan Fiction
- J.K. Rowling/Pottermore and the future of Potterheads
Of course, Rowling is to be credited with creating such realistic, timeless, and wonderful characters. I'm not going to say each one is
So, what's next? Rowling has said she will not write another Harry Potter book, and frankly, I believe her - sadly enough. She has, however, just announced her new site Pottermore, which will unite fans in a new, interactive reading experience with Rowling herself; who will reveal new details about the Harry Potter universe never before told. Of course, all of the Potter fans will continue their voracious appetite for reading, and their love of the characters and stories that got them hooked on the first place. (For 3 books for the Hogwarts Grad on NPR, click here!)
Here's to the magic and wonder of the world of Harry Potter. When the lights dim in the theater at my midnight showing, my heart will soar at the final music and I will laugh and cry and forget, just for one second, that I am a Muggle. But the story of Rowling's impact on this generation and beyond isn't over yet - in fact, it's only just beginning.
(Special thanks to my friends who gave me the material at the top of this piece - Sarah Thornbourough, Erica Sailor, Molly Freidman, Lauria Chin, and Melanie Davidoff. You guys are as fabulous as Harry is angsty in Book 5.)