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Adventures in Harry Potter
In the wake of Ros' Harry Potter obsession, I picked up the first book this week. We're now three chapters in, and I have to say I'm enjoying reading it aloud far more than I did reading it to myself back when it first came out.
Having an appreciative audience probably helps. Ros giggled through the entire chapter of Harry getting all those Hogwarts letters. And she let out a long dismayed "nooooo" when the chapter was over.
Having an appreciative audience probably helps. Ros giggled through the entire chapter of Harry getting all those Hogwarts letters. And she let out a long dismayed "nooooo" when the chapter was over.
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I'm hoping this will be Ros' gateway drug to reading. And I suspect, based on the movies, that Azkaban will also be my favourite.
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Incidentally, The Hobbit is a good readaloud with that age group too.
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HP does seem to work rather well as a read aloud experience. I've been debating trying The Hobbit soon. (I was about Ros' age when my mom read it to me.) But Ros has been resistant on the grounds that if her parents like it, it can't be good. *g* (The teenage years are going to be sooooo interesting.)
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The books do age with Harry - the first few are really great for younger children, the latter ones get longer and darker, as you probably know. I was 11 when the first one came out, and read the last one on the day of its release when I was about 21. I do wonder what it would be like to read them all close together, and at the same age...
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Hee! I knew Hermione from The Winter's Tale long before HP came out, but the computer science major Sweetie thought it was pronounced Herm-Me-Own until he saw the first movie. Which of course, I cannot let him forget because I'm evil that way.
I've been wondering about what we're going to do if Ros keeps with the books and wants to read the later ones. This is the kid who made me stop reading The Wizard of Oz because she was convinced the lion died in the poppy field and wouldn't be convinced otherwise. It will be interesting.
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It's going to be such a great memory for the pair of you anyway. My mother always read to us but what sticks in my mind are the books where we got to the "chapter a night" ones.
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This year she'll have to be content with the London Potter studios and a visit to the 9 3/4 platform at Kings Cross station.
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Fortunately, in Canada we always get the British versions! Benefit of being part of the Commonwealth. ;-)