It's not that I would ever stop her from reading them - I'd just rather delay it as much as I can. Just as I would put off getting a root canal for as long as I possibly could. (how can you compare reading Harry Potter to a root canal, you ask? They both cause me twinges of pain and go on for far longer than they should.)
I don't have anything against JKR - I just think that the blessed woman can't write very well and I think the hype surrounding her books is a tad undeserved. (That's not her fault, it's the fault of the people who lined up to buy them.) For me, her books are simply 'just okay'. I read the first book when a friend of mine started going on and on about it. A few pages into the book I was thinking "well this isn't all that great, but now that I started it I may as well finish it'. And this was before pottermania was well on the way - so I had no preconceived notions about the book. If you had grown up reading fantasy and mind you, I'm adding Enid Blyton to the mix here (anyone who has read the Faraway Tree series would be going 'hey now, that sounds familiar' when reading about the magical sweets those Weasley twins conjure up) I don't think the Harry Potter series would offer up anything as amazing as Potter-heads would have you believe. More than the story itself, the writing - that's what really got to me. The sentences are poorly structured, nothing happens for chapters on end just because each book has to be longer than the one preceding - I'm surprised that at least one of the books weren't titled Harry Potter and the Unnecessary Sequel.
Another thing that bugs me is when I tell people that I don't like HP, their immediate response is "oh, so you probably like Lord of the Rings then". Well, no, Those are not the only fantasy series in existence. Besides, as much as I love them, the LOTR books are not what I would choose if I wanted an easy read. There are more books in the world people. A LOT more.
If I wanted to introduce a child to a world of magic - honestly, I'd start with Enid Blyton. Okay so she tends to get a bit repetitive, but if you wrote that many books you'd be wont to reuse a plot element here and there I bet. For slightly slightly older kids you have C S Lewis, Lloyd Alexander, Philip Pullman, look I can't list them all here. Suffice to say that there's a fairly large supply of easy to read fantasy books with a strong story, and excellent worlds and characters.
The point of my whole rant is - pretty much what I said before. When it comes to reading, I'd rather any child of mine start off by knowing what good writing is. After that, a little bit of gunk here and there can't mess up the cogs.
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