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The last Potter

What does the end mean for Harry’s strange Boston disciples?
By SHARON STEEL  |  July 24, 2007

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Wizard bits: Odds and ends on the occasion of the final book's release. By Sharon Steel

Potter in the Phoenix
"Breaking the spell: Harry Potter’s story comes to an end — but will readers, or reading, ever be the same?" By Joyce Millman.

"Potter-schmotter: 25 fantasy films that lock horns, swords and wands with Harry Potter."By Ellee Dean and Maddy Myers.


Potter redux: The Chamber of Secrets steps up. By Carolyn Clay

There’s something about Harry: Evangelicals who are all worked up about Harry Potter's celebration of magic and the occult are on to something. The kid may just be queer, in the broadest sense. By Michael Bronski

Growth Spurt: Harry Potter Comes of Age. By Joyce Millman

Wild about Harry: Predicting your Weekend Reading. By Joyce Millman

Harry and the Potters: Rock in a Hard Place. By Elisabeth Donnelly

Lift Your Glass: Mike Newell’s Goblet of Fire. By Joyce Millman

Blood, Felt, and Rock and Roll: On the road with Harry and the Potters and Uncle Monsterface

Weird Science: Could be verse: poetry ripped straight from the headlines. By James Parker

Hairy Potter: Hormones submit to dreary Order. By Michael Atkinson

The end is never easy, is it? When it comes to the July 20 midnight release of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows — the last book in a series of seven that has taken author J.K. Rowling a decade to parcel out to her utterly whipped readership — the end is absolute agony.

Because, for some, the final period isn’t simply a punctuation mark, it’s the head of the final nail on the coffin — or the crucifix. Because Harry Potter isn’t simply Harry Potter. He’s also Odysseus, Don Quijote, Huck Finn, Peter Pan, Elvis, Luke Skywalker, Michael Jordan, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and Jesus Christ rolled into one. With a scarf and a British accent.

And Harry’s classic boy-versus-baddies monomyth, cliché as it may be, so resonates with some — from the white-hot fan-core to the farthest fringes of the Pottermonium — that, when the last page is turned and the book is placed, reverentially, in its hermetically sealed humidor, it will mean so much more than just the end of the series: it will be the end of a way of life. Seriously.

There are no mere readers of these books anymore: only heretics and disciples. And, for whatever reason, many of those most prominent wizard followers live in and around Boston. Now that he’s gone, what are they going to do next?

Harry’s blue helmets
The unfortunate victims of the Darfur conflict have been ignored by President Bush, the United Nations, and, aside from a few well-meaning celebrities and local activists, the rest of the world, too.

But now Harry Potter is on the case.

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Related: Can't escape Snape at LeakyCon, Review: Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, Wizards and masterpieces, More more >
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