My review of the fifth and earlier books is here.
In this sixth book, The
Half-Blood Prince, the whole wizarding world knows that the Big Baddie
Voldemort is back. They are getting
pretty nervous about it too, and the odd mysterious death is not helping things. Security at Harry’s school is beefed up, but
the school remains open and life goes on.
Harry and his classmates are now in their 17th
year. In the wizarding world, the 17th
birthday is the important milestone when they gain the legal rights of adults. For one thing, at 17, teenagers may sit the test
for the wizarding equivalent of the car drivers’ licence, the licence to magically
travel by disappearing and appearing at will.
Harry’s classmates are very excited by this, and the freedoms that it
will give them.
Clearly, then, the main theme of this book is the transition
from teenager to adult, and the consequent good and bad things that this
brings.
We learn of freedom in another sense, too. An important part of the ongoing story has
been a prophecy made about Harry. In one
of the teaching moments, Harry learns from Dumbledore that, in the wizarding
world, people have the freedom to turn their backs on prophecies. Prophecies are not set in stone, and they
don’t dictate what will happen.
Clearly, this is intended as a teaching moment from author
to reader as well. Rowling is telling
her readers, too, that we don’t have
to do anything, and what we do in life is always our choice. We have our moral freedom. This is even if, as Harry notes to himself,
the choice is only between holding our head up high as we face death or meeting
it while being dragged kicking and screaming.
But we are informed that this is not a trivial choice, and there is all
the difference in the world between one and the other.
There is also a deeper message in this book. This is that adulthood, and freedom, is not
merely a liberation. The other side of
the coin is the loss of certainty.
Harry has learnt that as long as he keeps returning each
summer holiday to his uncle and aunt’s house, and treating it as his home, he
is protected. But at 17, as an adult, he
loses that protection. He loses the
certainty of his childhood home.
With adulthood, too, comes the loss of certainty that a
parent, or mentor, will be there to have the final say. This is a chilling freedom to have. As an adult you have got equals—friends and
advisors, but you no longer have the reassurance of an ultimate corrector to
step in and take over if things go too horribly wrong. There is a sense in which you are on your
own. Without giving the story away, the
final hundred or so pages of the book hits this message home pretty hard. As always, Rowling does an awesome job of
telling a can’t-put-down story, while simultaneously teaching her message.
The answer to the mystery of who is the Half-Blood Prince
hits quite hard, too. It is a lesson
about the perspectives we might have of other people. Seeing someone in writing can be very
different from seeing them in person.
I’m starting the seventh and final book now (review here). If the other books are anything to go by, I
imagine it will be about young adulthood.
About having to do things for yourself, and not having the certainties
and protections of childhood. I’m sure
it will be a great read, too.
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