Current:Home > InvestI'm an adult and I just read the 'Harry Potter' series. Why it's not just for kids. -FundSphere
I'm an adult and I just read the 'Harry Potter' series. Why it's not just for kids.
View
Date:2025-04-18 04:06:32
My boyfriend will tell you I don't have that many flaws. Can I be impatient? Sure. Do I get hangry? Absolutely.
But my biggest one? I never finished reading the "Harry Potter" series.
I know, I know. Cue the gasps. The outrage. The shame. If you're a millennial reading this, maybe you've stopped reading. If you're Gen Z reading this, you're probably ready to cancel me for bringing up the "Harry Potter" author in any remote way.
In an effort to appease my new beau – and admittedly check an item off my bucket list, as I had been a devoted fan of the movies for decades – I decided to actually read the original seven-book series. So that's exactly what I did from January through March of this year.
What did I find when I was done? There's power in revisiting childhood tales and giving into a bit of magic. You shouldn't let anyone – not even one of the movies' stars, Miriam Margolyes, who recently told adult Potter fans they "should be over that by now," – tell you the stories are only for kids. Like anything else, enjoyment of Harry Potter books is far from being black and white.
Check out: USA TODAY's weekly Best-selling Booklist
In case you missed:'Harry Potter' is having a moment again. Here's why.
Why did I stop reading 'Harry Potter' in the first place?
When I was younger, I devoured the first four books in the series. Like, stay-in-my-room-during-Thanksgiving-when-all-of-our-family-is-over devour. Then at some point during "Harry Potter and The Order of the Phoenix," boredom took over so intensely that no spell could cure it. The movies fulfilled me enough, and I was OK not knowing the intricacies of the books vs. the films.
And then when critics slammed J.K. Rowling as transphobic – and I understood what they were talking about – I figured it's for the best I leave the books on their metaphorical shelf.
But something was always missing whenever "Harry Potter" whisked its way into a conversation. Someone would mention a scene in passing that wasn't in the movie. Someone would talk about staying up all night finishing the last book. I felt left out and there was only one way to correct that. I opted to listen to audiobooks instead and the reading (listening?) journey began.
Sigh:How trans 'Harry Potter' fans are grappling with J.K. Rowling's legacy after her transphobic comments
What Harry Potter means to me as an adult
Once I started listening to the books, I couldn't stop. The characters accompanied me on runs, train rides and while I cleaned my apartment. It was all-consuming. Magic flowed through my ears and into every part of me. I empathized with the woman on TikTok documenting her experience reading the books for the first time, who regularly entertains her followers with dramatic, dumbfounded reactions to various turns of the screw.
I grew up in hyper-speed with all the characters matriculating through Hogwarts, facing early problems like school pranks and Quidditch matches to confronting life, death and the unknown. I crashed into the Whomping Willow with Harry and Ron, heard the house elves' plight, accompanied Dumbledore and Harry in and out of the Pensieve.
This time around I paid even closer attention to the nuance. I felt compassion for everyone, even You-Know-Who sometimes. I recognized we're all a product of our upbringing, the friends (and enemies) that surround us and our teachers. While our inherent kindness, ambition, wit and courage can shine, these qualities take nurturing, too. When ambition envelops a person, it can spiral into greed and terror (Voldemort). Kindness can lead to your downfall (Cedric Diggory).
It's not enough to get sorted into Gryffindor and be blindly brave – as our heroes often learned the hard way. It means working with those around you and standing up for what is right even when it's scary.
Look, I get what Professor Sprout – err, Miriam Margolyes – is saying. I don't want my future wedding to be Harry Potter-themed. But that doesn't mean I can't smile thinking about Harry, Ron and Hermione walking about the Hogwarts grounds. I still get teary-eyed thinking about the sacrifices Snape made to secure Harry's safety. I wonder where I would've ended up at Hogwarts (Hufflepuff, probably).
While I don't understand Rowling's logic about, um, a lot of things, I can separate the art and the artist here enough to know reading and watching "Harry Potter" changed my life, again and again.
Now if only my boyfriend will finish "Grey's Anatomy," then we're even.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Carolina Hurricanes defenseman Jaccob Slavin wins Lady Byng Trophy for sportsmanship
- Nashville to launch investigation into complaint alleging police lobbied to gut oversight panel
- The Age of the Rhinestone Cowgirl: How Beyoncé brings glitz to the Wild Wild West
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Trump Media stock falls after Donald Trump convicted in criminal hush money trial
- Bird flu reported in second Michigan farmworker, marking third human case in U.S.
- Kansas City Chiefs Player Isaiah Buggs Charged With Two Counts of Second-Degree Animal Cruelty
- Who's hosting 'Saturday Night Live' tonight? Musical guest, how to watch Dec. 14 episode
- 'Star Wars' boss calls out 'male dominated' fan base's 'personal' attacks on women stars
Ranking
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- Over 40 years after children found a dead baby near a road, Vermont police find infant's parents and close the case
- Ex-mayor in West Virginia admits theft of funds from a hospital where he was CEO
- Imprisoned former Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder pleads not guilty to new charges
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- Trump Media stock falls after Donald Trump convicted in criminal hush money trial
- BLM buys about 3,700 acres of land adjacent to Río Grande del Norte National Monument in New Mexico
- With 'Babes,' Ilana Glazer wants to show the 'hilarious and insane' realities of pregnancy
Recommendation
California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
Chad Daybell guilty of murdering wife, two stepchildren in 'doomsday' case spanning years
Sofía Vergara Reveals How She'll Recycle Tattoo of Ex Joe Manganiello
Google makes fixes to AI-generated search summaries after outlandish answers went viral
Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
Another Michigan dairy worker has bird flu, the third US case this year
8 Northern California middle school students arrested for assault on 2 peers
Water main break disrupts businesses, tourist attractions in downtown Atlanta, other areas of city