Friday, 8 May 2026

The Great Nobility of Harry Potter

 


I am of the view that there is no pursuit that is more noble and no task that is more worth doing than writing novels. Call me romantic; call me deluded; call me a fuddy-duddy; call me a pseud. I will stand by this statement and only nuance it by adding that the most noble type of novel-writing is fantasy fiction. The real world will look after itself. Factories will be built, medicines will be administered, trucks will be driven. But the ability to complete a story in 400 pages which provides an avenue to escapism and wonder is something which we need great talents to provide for us. 

JK Rowling is not a great writer in the strict sense. But she is what I would call a brilliant one. She has not defined an era or created a distinctive style or influenced the way in which novels are written - she is not William Golding or JRR Tolkien or Marcel Proust. Yet she has done something equally as important and impressive: she has given people space to imagine and dream. 

One resorts to The Shawshank Redemption with great trepidation. But I will do it: the scene in that film in which Andy says to Red that people need to know that 'There are places in the world that aren't made out of stone' is I think, here, apt. People, in other words, need hope. And really good fiction provides that. It says: people can do great things, and don't have to be bound to the humdrum, the mundane, the quotidian. They can live beyond and above. 

It does this on two separate levels: in substance and in the proof of its own existence. A really good fantasy novel tells the reader two things. That great things are possible in the world of imagination (a hobbit really can bring down the Dark Lord; a boy from suburban England really can bring down the..er, Dark Lord). But also that great things are possible in the here and now (a woman writing in a cafe can produce something as good as this just by trying). There are two layers of inspiration nested together, and the result is powerfully explosive.

I am a latecomer to Harry Potter. The first books came out when I was about 15 of 16 and I was too old for them. I was also snooty about anything popular (a trait I still have). I have only read them all because my daughter was interested and it was something for me to read to her at bedtime. They are all flawed; the plots don't quite make sense; the writing can here and there be clunky. But it doesn't matter - the heart of the project is good. It is the right kind of story to be telling, and it is told well enough (and with wonderful charaterisation and dialogue) that it fits the bill for what brilliant fantasy fiction requires.

Earlier this week I was at the Warner Bros Studio Tour in Tokyo, which is dedicated to the Harry Potter film. And I was gratified on JK Rowling's behalf to see so many people from all around Asia (mostly Japanese, of course, but many from Thailand, the Phillippines, China, etc.) who were embracing her world and her creation. I found it very moving; what a thing it must be to write a story which transcends borders in that way and can unite people from across a vast continent in sheer pleasure. Good for her. 

I don't suspect that the great Crocodile Memory Palace novel will ever have its own Warner Bros Studio Tour in Tokyo - or Timbuktu. But one can nonetheless dream. Good luck to you, Ms Rowling. And thanks for the inspiration. 

79 comments:

  1. It's 2026. What the hell is wrong with you?

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  2. Gross. What a shame.

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  3. This post is so vacuous that it's hard to read as anything else except for a dogwhistle.

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    1. It’s genuinely funny to me that I just wrote a positive post about fantasy fiction inspired by a visit to a Harry Potter theme park in Japan without even realising people would be upset about the JK Rowling thing. That’s how out of the loop I am when it comes to such matters.

      You can interpret it as a dog whistle if you like but the truth of the matter is I stopped giving a shit about the culture war years ago and sort of forgot about it. I wrote this entirely in good faith.

      In a way it’s kind of quaint to realise people are still invested in these things either way. I really, genuinely couldn’t care less what JK Rowling’s opinions are about anything. She wrote some great kids’ books which inspired some good films and my kids like her output. Why on earth wouldn’t I thank her for that? She could be a Maoist for all the difference it makes to me.

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    2. It's just pure virtue signalling. Vice signalling. Something like that. It would be pathetic even if he didn't mean it.

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    3. I want to be a little more specific. This post amounts to "Harry Potter! What a wonderful achievement (although I have my reservations about the writing) and magnificent international transmedia phenomenon!"

      That's a fine (if vacuous) thing to say, and something that has been said, repeatedly, for about 29 years now. But, as you seem to realize, it's a little out of character for your blog. And the lack of any more specific or novel analysis or observation, combined with the explicit praise for JK Rowling, does make it seem like that praise is the real point of the post.

      More generously, maybe you had a nice time at a theme park while on vacation and in a good mood and in your feelings about genre fiction and just felt moved to post even though you didn't have much to say.

      But it doesn't hit that way.

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    4. OK, I gave you the benefit of the doubt earlier and wrote a good faith response to your comment.

      Now I’m going to tell you what I really think: you’re a pompous, sanctimonious arse and I don’t give a shit how you think the post ‘hits’. Fuck off and don’t comment here again. Do you think I write this blog to be insulted? Vacuous? Do one.

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  4. Well, since you missed it, she's gleefully using her wealth and fame to attack a vulnerable minority, to the point where her money and mates have been forcing groups like the women's institute and girlguiding to change the policies they chose to have under threat of endless litigation funded by the books and films that made her rich. She's attacked everyone in reach, she's shut down women's shelters, she's literally become a holocaust denier and enthusiastically teamed up with and celebrated neo-nazis and wife-beaters, because they hate the same minority she does.

    She's also been very clear that promoting her works funds and supports this campaign.

    But I'm sure you didn't know any of that, and just posted this little innocent pile of words to say… what, exactly? She sold a lot of books? "Excellent characterisation?" Vapid blithering padding out the word count so you can claim it was sincere?

    Yes, I know, I've fallen for your master plan by getting upset at you. Oh ho, what a loser I am.

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    1. JK Rowling is a holocaust denier!?!? I feel like that would have been in the news…

      I’m sorry to have to tell you that I had no master plan. I had a nice time at Warner Bros Studios Tour and wanted to post about it. Sometimes people just like things.

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    2. Yeah, Joanne feels like certain parts of the holocaust don't count because she thinks the nazis had a few good ideas. Posted as much on twitter, but the entire British media loves her and her hate campaign, so why would they cover it?

      Weird that you don't like this post being called vacuous. It wasn't a word I would have chosen, but damn if it doesn't fit well.

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    3. When you start claiming a woman famously known as both a survivor of and outspoken opponent against domestic abuse has "enthusiastically teamed up with wife-beaters", you just know you're a few knuts short of a sickle...

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    4. J K Rowling breezily denied (on Twitter, naturally) that the Nazis persecuted transgender people. She was wrong and I don't think she's ever admitted she was wrong. Calling that Holocaust denial is rather misleading though.

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  5. To me, Harry Potter was a sort of "gateway drug" into fantasy, folklore, and mythology. For example, it's got things like a werewolf being called Remus Lupin, which is far too on the nose when you're an adult, but as a kid it felt like depth and niche referencing to me. It felt clever in a way that other kids books weren't. It put me on the trajectory of learning more about what she was referencing, which no other books (except LotR and primarily The Silmarillion) have done since for me.

    I think I was 9 or 10 when the Goblet of Fire book came out, and the dragon on the front cover caught my attention at a school book day, so I read that first, then loved it so much that I had to get the first (sadly smaller) three as well. It hooked me. 4 years later, I was actually an extra in the film version of that same GoF book, standing 50ft in the air on a half-built arena set in the freezing cold, pretending that same dragon was swooping about and breathing fire (and they really did shoot fire out of a cannon thing towards us).

    It's influence on me has never dulled. Sure, the writing is fairly tacky, repetitive, and a tad twee, and it's clear she took a whole lot from other authors (particularly Jill Murphy's The Worst Witch series), but the overall impact was a cultural phenomenon, and it cannot be said that her stories weren't and aren't still beloved by many. That's a hell of an achievement for a sub-par writer.

    I've been to the studio tour twice (built just beside the actual studio they'd filmed at when I was there), and despite being a grown man, I still got a little choked up when I walked into that bit with the big model of the castle, with all the windows lit up and the music swelling. All because Rowling had planted a seed of hope when I was a kid, that I'd get a letter through the post one day inviting me to Hogwarts.

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    1. Great comment - thanks. And an extra in the Goblet of Fire film! We are in the presence of greatness! ;)

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  6. I have read the Harry Potter saga twice. The first time was in 2009ish (when my daughter was first reading the saga) so she and I could talk about it. The books--which I had expected to be shallow--immediately impressed me as morally weighty and profoundly Christian (making it ironic that certain sub-sets of Christians inveigh against the books without, of course, having read them).

    A theme that runs throughout the series that I find particularly edifying is that every man is defined by his actions. He is not defined by his genetics nor by his environment nor by both together. "Nature" and "nurture" are merely sirens tempting each of us to act in ways beneath us. What makes us who we are is our use of our free will. Tom Riddle ("Voldemort") and Harry Potter had similar "nature" and similar "nurture", but by their choices Tom damned himself and Harry made himself into a hero. The same stark choice confronts every man every day of his life: Will I be righteous, or will I be wicked?

    An excellent examination of the Harry Potter books is John Granger's (yes, that's his real name) How Harry Cast His Spell.

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    1. Ignoring everything else going in the comments right now, I'm not sure your point really bares out in the writing. Tom Riddle was literally a rape baby who's magical parent was a scion witch of an infamously foul and racist family while Harry, despite the circumstances he grew up in, is the son of two heroic, noble-hearted, well-loved Gryffindors and is described as being just like his parents despite never meeting them. Add that everyone's magical powers are literally determined by their genetics, and it's pretty clear that your fundamental nature is a huge part of defining you in the Wizarding World of JK Rowling.

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    2. Yes, I would agree with anonymous. Geoffrey, I like what you describe but I don't think it is the world JK Rowling created...

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    3. I can understand anonymous's counter-points. What I was getting at was how often others and even Harry himself noticed how similar he and Tom Riddle were--even so far as the Grey Lady thinking that Harry was in fact Tom. That's what I referred to as "nature". For "nurture", I was referring to the fact that both Tom and Harry had abusive upbringings (with Harry's physical growth literally being stunted by the Dursleys not feeding him properly).

      So both Harry and Tom started with basically the same "raw material", and both were abused as children. Tom chose to become Voldemort, and Harry chose to become a hero.

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    4. I think you're fine on the 'nurture' point. But I do think there is a huge dose of 'nature' in there which is hard to ignore. You could read the entire series as a meditation on the importance of genetic factors in determining life outcomes. Harry has magical parents who were also wonderful human beings and turns out to be...a magic-user and wonderful human being.

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  7. I was already an adult when the books were published. I enjoyed books 1-3 and very much enjoyed books 4-6, but I found the final book unsatisfactory. I thought the films were well done, and I liked the pictures in the recent illustrated versions. She is a talented writer, although, as you say, not a "great" writer.

    I've read the books many times but I have no desire to reread them now, because I've come to dislike J. K. Rowling as a person. It's not her specific views on transgender people that annoy me so much as the fact that she pig-headedly believes that anyone who disagrees with her - on any issue - must be either be brainwashed or have bad motives, and also that she sometimes seems to get a kick out of being mean and petty. She claims to be an advocate of free speech but I'm sure she'd love to be able to "cancel" everyone who disagrees with her. I think it's partly just her natural character and partly the result of her spending so much of her time on social media.

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    1. This may be true. I honestly don't massively care. I find the views of most authors, artists and musicians repugnant and silly. But it doesn't stop me appreciating what they produce for the most part.

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  8. Id suggest deleting this blog post and moving on. She is a stain on everything she touches and would hate to see this blog get caught up in her poison.

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  9. "The real world will look after itself. Factories will be built, medicines will be administered, trucks will be driven."

    Also, I strongly disagree with you that the real world will look after itself. Sometimes, good things don't happen unless clever and determined people make them happen, or stop bad things from happening. Societies can stagnate, or go backwards, or fail disastrously. There are novelists I hugely admire, but I do believe that doing things that save or significantly improve large numbers of people's lives is more admirable than writing a book, even if it's an amazing book read and loved by millions. Who knows, maybe The Lord of the Rings would never have been written if someone in the past hadn't invented Norfolk four course crop rotation or something?

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    1. Ha, I like that idea. Yes, you're right in a sense. What I meant by the real world looking after itself was that yes, we can take it for granted that clever and determined people will try to make things better in the material world because the rewards will be obvious.

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  10. I think that what you're getting at here is a that a lot of "brilliant" fiction is a sponge. That means that it's full of holes in which a reader's imagination can fill, just like a sponge fills up with water. This means that everyone's experience reading a book like Harry Potter is different since everyone fills it up with their own imagination and it's hard not to look back on your experience reading a book like Harry Potter (if you come at it at the right age, which doesn't apply to me, I was too old at the time) with fondness since a lot of what you're looking back on is your own imagination. Even things like Harry Potter (the character's) blandess can be an advantage here since the very holes in his personality allow the readers to seep into him better.

    And this is harder than it looks, getting the right balance between having a sponge full of holes but also the structure to not be just an empty mess isn't easy the books that hit that balance right aren't that common. And it is easy to do all of this with text than with film since text leans on your mind's eye to fill in the details while film gives you an unbroken surface of visuals (although this isn't a hard and fast rule, see Star Wars for example, where the first movie goes out of its way to carve out holes for the viewer's imagination to fill).

    I find J.K Rawling to be an odious bigot, but she's not STUPID. Lots of bigots are smart.

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    1. I see what point you are making but isn't all fiction (brilliant or otherwise) a 'sponge' in that sense?

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    2. Yes, exactly, but some fiction is better at being a sponge than others. Written fiction is generally better at it with film (with exceptions like the original Star Wars movie which NAILS this) and Harry Potter is better at it than most written fiction.

      Often having a fairly bland main character (like Harry and whatsherface from Twilight) helps with that since a fairly bland main character is more of a vessel for the reader to pour themselves into.

      Also all of the little bits and rituals by which Harry moves from the normal world to Hogwarts are really drawn out to the point where they really delay the main narrative but they really help to make the series more sponge-y, especially when Harry makes one choice but the reader could imagine themselves making another choice (wand selection, sorting hat, etc.).

      Meanwhile, something like (to choose a random example) Vance's Dying Earth doesn't really strike me as especially sponge-y, much of what makes it great is me just sitting back and enjoying the wonderful creativity and all the weird shit he introduces. Me thinking "what would I do in Cugel's position?" doesn't really enter into my enjoyment of those stories in the same way as imagining "what would I do in Harry's position?" is a MASSIVE part of what makes Harry Potter enjoyable.

      Part of this is that it's harder for me to extrapolate off of Dying Earth to imagine more books and crannies of that world (since I'm not as creative as Vance) but fairly easy for me to do the same thing with Harry Potter.

      This is not a knock on Vance at all, he's an amazing writer, he's just trying to do a very different thing than what Harry Potter does.

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  11. I was assigned the first Harry Potter book for Fantasy studies in my first year of university. An odd inclusion among such luminaries as Tolkien and Ursula LeGuin, but I guess the lecturer wanted to get something modern in there that wouldn't be the size of the phonebook. I liked it well enough, but I can distinctly remember that when our lecturer said that Rowling was planning 7 books, one per school year... I scoffed and said "Yeah, but what are the odds of that happening." Fast forward a few years, and I was proven very wrong. Jumped back on with the release of Book 4 (which I loved), thought the series dipped a bit for books 5-6, but brought it home strongly for the finale. Odds are good that this series will enter the canon and far outlive its author and her political views, as many great fictional works have done before.

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    1. I was mystified by the success of the series having read the first one a few years ago, for the first time. It was...ok. Nothing to write home about though, I thought. It improves a lot from Book 2 in my view.

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    2. I felt much the same at the time. I enjoyed that first book just fine, but I really was taken by surprise when it blew up. For me it's Book 3 where it really jumps up in quality.

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    3. The amazing part is she wrote each year for the same audience, incrementally increasing the complexity. I don't know if that was a result of her getting better as she went or not but I don't think any author's have ever done that before.

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  12. I feel torn about posts such as this one, but will attempt to engage in good faith. I don't know if you didn't know noisms and are that out of the loop (which is weird and kind of hilarious to me as I think you live in the UK?). But J.K Rowling has become much loathed for her anti-trans activism. It should be noted that I don't just say 'opinions', I say 'activism'.

    I am pretty sympathetic towards your views of wanting to separate the artist from the artwork. There are many artists whose work I own who have problematic views or have done problematic things in the past that I enjoy.

    J.K Rowling has become a little bit different in recent years not because of her private anti-trans views or opinions but her anti-trans activism. That is, spending millions of her own personal fortune to setup anti-trans foundations and funds and use her platform to engage in anti-trans advocacy. This isn't just an artist with problematic private opinions who has been lambasted by the media because they've let them slip or expressed doubt at liberal views at times. This is someone who has made it part of their core mission to use their power and money to advocate in the social and political arena against a marginalized group of people. These aren't just opinions. They are actions.

    This article is a pretty good timeline: https://theweek.com/feature/1020838/jk-rowlings-transphobia-controversy-a-complete-timeline

    To this end J.K Rowling tends to rile up people more than other authors who are problematic.

    I personally think that it's fair that if someone is going to become an activist (for or against whatever cause) and going to spend their time and money to engage in the public sphere in a way where you're literally trying to change laws and reshape society, it's pretty fair to criticize them and no longer really see their views or opinion as merely 'private' and something that can be overlooked.

    Artists are complicated people, perhaps more so than your average person. They leave complicated legacies. Every artwork is a product of it's time and author, I don't think anyone would deny this. There is also no true objectivity or way to avoid bias in the analysis of art either. While I do think it's okay to like complicated and problematic things, I do think it's impossible to truly separate the art from the artist in the discussion of their works, even more so with complicated problematic artists. It's kind of like pretending you are analyzing or writing from a purely objective unbiased view when such a thing is impossible.

    Even if a person claims to not be bothered by an artists thoughts or actions, to be able to truly separate the artist from the art, the fact that they are and so many people are not, says a lot about a persons socioeconomic status, their life, what they value, their personal history, their political opinions etc.--in general their bias. Trying to claim objectivity in this case just feels kind of disingenuous, like a person is trying to claim they don't have a bias and are an objective authoritative viewpoint instead of just acknowledging their bias and maybe interrogating why they like a certain work and don't have as many problems with it despite the fact that others clearly do.

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    1. That's fair - we all have issues that we care about enough that it becomes impossible to separate art from artist. But for me, the bar is extremely high. Quite a few of my favourite authors would describe themselves as Marxists and some would even be politically active in that cause. Actually existing Marxism has contributed to the deaths of millions of people around the world. Yet I can still enjoy their work.

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    2. Actually existing capitalism has that much and more blood on its hands. Get a grip and stop looking for excuses to prop up a transphobe.

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    3. Haha, well, all else aside, I don't think JK Rowling particularly needs me to prop her up!

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  13. It seems that HBO agrees with you. The Harry Potter TV series does not air until December 2026 but it has already commissioned a second series. If the TV show works it will mean that the story will have crossed generations. So the timing of your post would be spot on.

    SJB

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    1. I'm not banking on the HBO series' success. My best guess is that it'll be a lot like the Netflix Amazon show: basically competent but with a lot of the humor drained out and treating the viewer as dumber than the movies or book did.

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  14. Nothing to do with Harry Potter, sorry, but I just read this book review and think it's the sort of thing you might like:

    https://www.thepsmiths.com/p/review-50-years-of-text-games-by

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    1. Oh, thanks for this. It is indeed the sort of thing I like, and I did like it!

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  15. Love the monster ecology you have built here. It is the kind of detail that makes a world feel lived-in.

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    1. Thanks! But I wonder if this comment was for another post?

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  16. You can talk about separating the art from the artist all you want but wishing a person who is spending her money and fame on trying to get trans people in line for the ovens is disgusting.

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    1. In line for the ovens? Are you possibly exaggerating just the teeniest, tiniest bit?

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    2. No I'm not exaggerating. I happen to live on the country with the highest trans mortality rate in the world, I know what JK's discourse does. Do you have trans friends or family members? If so, please talk to them. Get a grasp on reality.

      (I hope) I can assume you wouldn't be so sympathetic towards JK if she was an outspoken racist or homophobe, so why turn a blind eye to transphobia?

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    3. This tranny ain't afraid of nor is ever going to go in an oven, hon. It is always time to chop wood, carry water, touch grass, laugh, hold your loved ones close and no matter what, always return with love. We are here for such a short time. Joy and peace m'dear

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    4. @MattieMoose I wonder why trans people are here for such a short time... What is it again? 33, 35 years of life expectancy? But yeah keep spouting your suburban white mom bs, that solves it

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    5. @Nemo -- Try not to other, or demonize, or give in to division, esp those of us who are Oppressed. We need to be united. Embrace and help those you can.
      I wish you well, hon.

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    6. In other words, division is what they want and thrive on. Then we are less able to help when help is needed. I've got fam and friends in USA. Strength and courage m'dear.

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  17. Amen, awoman, anit :)
    ""...the notion that inspired play (even when audacious, offensive, or obscene) enhances rather than diminishes intellectual vigor and spiritual fulfillment, the notion that in the eyes of the gods the tight-lipped hero and the wet-cheeked victim are frequently inferior to the red-nosed clown, such notions are destined to be a hard sell to those who have E.M. Forster on their bedside table and a clump of dried narcissus up their ass. Not to worry. As long as words and ideas exist, there will be a few misfits who will cavort with them in a spirit of approfondement--if I may borrow that marvelous French word that translates roughly as "playing easily in the deep"--and in so doing they will occasionally bring to realization Kafka's belief that "a novel should be an ax for the frozen seas around us."

    -"In Defiance of Gravity" by Tom Robbins, Harper's Magazine Sept 2004

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    1. Tom Robbins is brilliant and one of those artists I like going to -- they Lighten and Uplift.

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    2. I've read Skinny Legs and All and Even Cowgirls Get the Blues. There are sections in Skinny Legs and All which had me laughing so hard I was in agony.

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  18. I remember that Half-Blood Prince book getting popular because the movie came out about when I was about 15 and having no game that whole summer because all the girls were reading it but I couldn't be assed.

    Apparently - and I bring this up because I think you've spent some time in Japan - that Naruto manga was pushed into what it was because its editor wanted a Japanese Harry Potter, with the magic school and suchlike.

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    1. That's interesting about Naruto. It's amazing how many 'kid goes to wizard school' books were spawned in the aftermath of Harry Potter, although as many point out JK Rowling definitely stole the idea from the Worst Witch books (which are great).

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  19. Honestly ur getting some flack for this but I definitely have similar thoughts. As a trans woman I uh.. obviously don't particularly love jk rowling n ill get into that but the books were coming out when I was very young and in retrospect I do think they helped cultivate a sort of.. magic in things for me, and for essentially all of my friends. not to mention their worldwide impact is something that's really fascinating, like the fact people EVERYWHERE were reading these books added to this feeling of a diverse and international world, at least.. when I was a kid. It sucks cause i really did love those books when i was younger, and i think they helped me learn to love reading, and pushed me to discover more and read more and yet... the things she says are scary, like.. I don't think a lot of people realise that trans people are ALL she talks about, dozens of comments and reposts a day, close to 7 days a week, every single week, like I'll check in occasionally and it's frightening, and it hurts seeing someone I used to look up to become someone who hates me and my loved ones, idk..
    Anyway sorry for rambling lmao I kinda just wanted to say that I appreciate ur post and aspects of it resonated with me. to the point that i wanted to leave a comment, so.. thanks david !

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    1. Hi Willow,
      My heart goes out to you and I am sorry that it seems that you are in an awful emotional position. I was going to say double-standard position, however I don't think that is the correct definition of double-standard.
      Anyway, take care of yourself.

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    2. Thanks, Willow, for the open-minded and open-hearted comment.

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  20. Don't really know how to think about this post. I agree with your statements about how it is good to give people space for imagination and that novel/fiction writing is a good thing.
    However, I am not too keen on Rowling, especially her actions and how she is using her wealth to make life hell for other people. It's hard to wax poetic about how great it is to be a novelist when the person in question is a person who once wrote and now lives in an ivory tower meanwhile there are millions of other writers, including trans people, living on the streets and/or being abused and don't have anything.
    It's kind of like saying "Oh, how great Hasbro is for making the latest edition of D&D." all the while ignoring all the great independent rpg material like Yoon-Suin.
    Yeah, I went there, sorry if that's inappropriate.
    Trying to see your perspective, I can see your annoyance of writing a post that says "oh, I enjoy this writer, I went to their theme park and I want to inspire people like they did." and having a whole bunch of people angry at you because of said particular writer. Though I am a believer in responsibility for our actions, even to consequences that you didn't foresee.
    Also, I have to be honest, the picture of a statue that shows people struggling and suffering under a stone slab that is going to crush them makes for an uncanny, odd feeling to the post for me. I know it's the bad guy statue but still.
    My heart goes out to Willow and I hope they are doing well.
    I'm attempting to interact with this post in good faith, if I'm failing and people think I'm a jerk, then think that I am a jerk.

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    1. I don't think you're a jerk at all.

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    2. I'm not doing too well right now, so I apologize if this comment sounds despondent or weird.
      Trans lives matter.
      Hope you are doing well as well, Noisms

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  21. It's astonishing how incapable some people are of enjoying fiction without getting bogged down in the purple mud of the culture war. Thank goodness we're no longer in the 2010s!

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    1. Beliefs inhabit us, not the other way around. Hold those you care for close and help those you can and no matter what, return with Love. We are all quirky, mad, crackers in some way, thank goodness :)

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  22. Periodically making non-inflammatory posts about proscribed topics to root out mutants, perverts and communists so they can self-purge is excellent practice which keeps one's comment section healthy and vigorous and I applaud your elan and composure in managing the process of their exodus. Even if they stick around, everyone else can now just ignore or shame them.

    'It does this on two separate levels: in substance and in the proof of its own existence. A really good fantasy novel tells the reader two things. That great things are possible in the world of imagination (a hobbit really can bring down the Dark Lord; a boy from suburban England really can bring down the..er, Dark Lord). But also that great things are possible in the here and now (a woman writing in a cafe can produce something as good as this just by trying). There are two layers of inspiration nested together, and the result is powerfully explosive.'

    I won't quibble that all great fantasy fiction necessarily must illustrate that great things are possible for the protagonists, after all, the works of C.A. Smith, Arthur Machen or H.P. Lovecraft don't conform to that mould and I'd argue some work, like Lee's Flat Earth or Dunstany's Gods of Pegana achieves its greatness through something I'd term 'Mythopoetic resonance', which is a power that subsumes and transcends a mere protagonistic Hero myth.

    I think acknowledging Rowling as a sort of epic level working class hero for aspiring literati in the vein of Tanith Lee (who was also unschooled) is apt, and even a treatment as an icon of british cultural influence is correct. She is one of the last examples of someone who is truly self-made via meritocracy in an age where almost everything is fake, propped-up or carefully stage managed. I don't expect her work to endure like Tolkien has but if her estate plays its cards well it can make it into the next generation.

    The question is ultimately, is all great fantasy aspirational and inspirational in both the mundane and the imaginary realms? I don't think this is necessary although it applies often. In the world of publishing is (or should be) room for grand and singular talents with sublime dedication that ordinary men can only marvel at. In the realm of the fantastic, there is room for material that expands our horizon of what can be, thoughts we have never had before, places we have never visited in a way that is separate (but often accompanied by) protagonism.

    Contemporary politically correct media is so unpalatable and putrid that even materials from the recent past, demi- and quasi-deities, are like a breeze of fresh air.

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    1. This whole "culture war" thang; that's the internet for yas (where for the first time humanity's nervous system is connected in more or less real time, so what used to be limited by geography now isn't) and beliefs have us. USA I believe is still the largest consumer of Internet so its beliefs, movements, etc are very influential (I suspect their general low trust society has spread outside its birth country and the 24/7 news cycle invented by CNN has been a real detriment to human well being)

      What a fascinating time to live in, hey?

      Keep producing stuff, ideas, good riffs :)

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    2. US is only low trust compared to some european countries (and some asian ones like Japan), and even many of those have been in trust free-fall as they transition from culturally and ethnically homogenous societies into fractitious multi-ethnic ones drained by de-industrialization, rampant state spending and predatory social programs. People underestimate or are deceived about the evil, barbarism, hypocrisy and tribalism that prevails in much of the world. I'm sure it will all be resolved decisively over the decades but in the meantime, its going to be a while. It is, however, very satisfying to see that the same trickery and word magic that caught so many in the mid 10s is now ancient technology that is no longer very effective.

      I do completely agree that the key to a healthy mind is a balanced and frugal information diet. I would add frequent exercise, contact with relatives, outings into nature, the honing of a craft or skill and edifying work life balance. The affirmation of the real in the face of pervasive artifical hyper-reality.

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    3. Yes, everything is relative (or to.put it in Buddhist terms, Dependent Origination. A candle.flame doesn't exist by itself)

      I posit that as you say aboot some European countries and Japan being more lacking in trust is due to the Internet which automatically transmits USA culture which has I believe the biggest marketplace of ideas still?

      And we unconsciouslly transmit our own culture, so its not as if we have a choice lol

      Mix that with 24/7 news, internet advertizements, addictive technology, and what seems to be an increase in melding the Real world and the world of the internet (which is becoming more multicultural by definition imho) ans the enshittification of platforms, we have the current global situation

      The USA I think isn't really a country, it is rather unique and has had unique influence upon the globe. For weal or woe (praise Gygax!)

      One USA cultural trait I adore is criticism of authority

      Who knows where this is all going to go

      Tot Morgen

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    4. "Mutants, perverts and communists" honestly, thanks for saying the quiet part out loud. The one thing fascists are good for is exposing what the logical conclusion to right wing thought is.

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    5. Nemo, PrinceofNothing's point was about getting "Mutants, perverts and communists" to leave the blog comment section alone (in a non-inflamatory way). That's your saying the quiet part out loud? That's what makes him an implied fascist? You hammer his message home perfectly with your example.

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    6. In this instance, who are the mutants, perverts and communists?

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    7. Nobody was specifically targeted. You can obviously read, so your question is just troll bait. Maybe you should try reading comments without looking for a fight and trying to guess at some dark intent that isn't actually there, try to understand their point and if you disagree type out your counter argument.

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    8. You seriously don't think its at least a little weird how, in a post about today's most notorious advocate for systematic transphobia, a user is referring to the people who are upset about said post as "mutants, perverts and communists"?

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    9. It is highly likely that those are the people that are perpetually upset and come into comments sections to troll. Any provocative subject will draw them out if they are related to it or concerned on behalf of those people, or just vile people unable to allow others to have opinions.

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    10. I think you're mistaken: the OSR is largely white, older, conservative etc. but there is a significant portion of the community who is queer or progressive. I mean we've been Jaquaysing our dungeons, haven't we? These people are not upset just for being upset, they are upset because this type of thing has a direct impact on their lives or the lives of their friends and loved ones. I for one can assure you I'm not trolling or being upset for the sake of it. As I said in another comment my country has the highest rate of trans homicide in the planet; I am upset because I see daily how Rowling's discourse can impact the lives of people who just want to be themselves.

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    11. And you are stereotyping a large community to justify your position. The comment did not say anything about the trans community, it was about commenters.

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    12. Ignoring everything else going on in this comment section, I do think it's worth pointing out that JK Rowling's narrative about her ascent is kinda bullshit in an Elon Musk way. She was never impoverished, and the diner she started writing the first book in was owned by her parents who employed staff. She was effectively able to free-write and eat on their dime.

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    13. I don't know where you got that from, but it isn't true. I mean, you can read her biography on wikipedia.

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  23. JK Rowling is akin to George Lucas. Both are great worldbuilders and mediocre storytellers. But in both cases that is more than enough.

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    1. They are both great at creating a mood. And both come up with great characters. I think JK Rowling's skill as an author is a bit underrated. No, she's not the world's greatest prose stylist but she writes good dialogue and decent set pieces. Lucas's dialogue is dreadful!

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