By Katharine Boswell on 7.24.07 @ 12:08AM
Live from Georgetown, a midnight release party.
WASHINGTON -- I'd like to start by clarifying: I am not one of
those rabid Harry Potter fans. I'm not a member of one of those
online fan communities, I am not one to dress up in costume and,
until Friday, I had never been to one of the fabled midnight
release parties.
A midnight release party, for those of you who have been living
under a rock for the past ten years, is a festival held at
bookstores the world over for Potter-philes who can't wait until
morning to get their fix of the boy wizard. With each release, the
books are embargoed and don't go on sale until a set date.
Booksellers take that literally, and at 12:01 a.m. July 21, copies
of the seventh and last Harry Potter Book, Harry Potter and the
Deathly Hallows, went on sale.
My roommate and I are casual Potter fans, and we decided a few
weeks ago that it would be fun to go to the party. It was the last
one, we reasoned, and though I tend to think the books are a bit
over hyped and overrated, it seemed like the event was a cultural
phenomenon not to be missed. Besides, we would have the added fun
of watching all the little kids compete for the best costume
prize.
When we arrived at the M Street store in Georgetown at 10:40
p.m., crowds were already milling about. But, to our surprise, most
of the audience was our age, with the exception of a few dozen
middle schoolers accompanied by their long-suffering, Pottered-out
parents.
"So much for our idea of watching all the little kids," my
roommate muttered to me.
Most people were in costume, even if it was only a pair of
Harry's trademark glasses, which a Barnes and Noble employee was
handing out, or a sticker shaped like the hero's distinctive
lightning bolt scar.
There were some, however, who had taken their costumes to a
whole new level, like Reagan from Arlington and her neighbor,
Jeremy. Reagan was costumed as the witch Bellatrix Lestrange
(played in the Potter movies by Helena Bonham Carter). Her costume
was a lacy, sophisticated black dress paired with gloves and
stockings that she said she'd been working on all week. Jeremy,
meanwhile, decided to come to the party as the Harry Potter series'
friendly giant, Hagrid. In addition to wearing a wig and giant
beard, this entailed his creating a set of homemade stilts out of
$30 worth of supplies from Home Depot.
"I try not to walk around too much," he said as he wobbled above
our heads. "I did make it here from the parking garage,
though."
AFTER ABOUT AN HOUR of waiting around, reading magazines, and
feeling out of place as people rushed around playing a Harry Potter
scavenger hunt or engaged in Harry Potter trivia, we heard the
woman in charge announce that it was almost midnight. There was a
raffle to see who would receive the very first copy of Harry
Potter and the Deathly Hallows. The little girl who won began
jumping up and down with excitement as she was escorted to the
front of the line, despite glares from the parents of the not so
lucky children. One especially venomous gaze came from a mother
with a child dressed as Draco Malfoy, the school bully of the
Potter stories. I didn't feel any sympathy for the two of them,
however, since I had seen her shoving kids aside during the
scavenger hunt to ensure her son's victory.
We began to get restless, shifting in our spots as cashiers and
store employees began shouting aloud the countdown to 12:01, that
magic minute when the cash registers would open and the pre-bagged
books would be handed over the counter into our eager arms. By that
time, even I had succumbed to the spell cast by the boy wizard, and
I was counting aloud and smiling at strangers.
What exactly happened? I'm not sure, but I expect it had
something to do with letting go of my pretensions and admitting
that I, too, couldn't wait to find out what happens to Harry in the
end of these novels.
Say what you will about Potter (and I've said plenty,) but let's
face it: where in this day and age do you see such excitement over
a book? When was the last time something on the printed page caused
such a stir, with everyone praising the joys of the written
word?
Is Harry lowbrow? Of course. Is he cliche-ridden? Absolutely.
Driven almost entirely by plot? Unashamedly. But there's something
jubilant and mystical about these books, and therein lies the
appeal. If, like me, you've been hungrily reading since you were
old enough to walk, the Harry Potter mania will remind you of those
nights you stayed up with a flashlight far past your bedtime,
turning page after page until you couldn't keep your eyes open any
longer or some well-meaning adult came in and told you to go to
bed.
What were you reading? You probably don't remember -- some
adolescent drivel, the details of which have now become blurred and
irrelevant. In a way, it doesn't really matter what you were
reading, because that was not what those late nights were about.
Long summer afternoons with Anna Karenina may have yielded
up more sophisticated pleasures, but those late nights I remember
for teaching me about the more basic delights of the written word:
not the appreciation of a wittily turned phrase or the human truths
of a great novel, but simply turning page after page to find out
what happens to the hero or heroine.
This may explain why, at 12:17 Friday night (or rather, Saturday
morning) my roommate and I skipped home down a dark street, books
clutched to our chests. I no longer have a set bedtime and my
parents live halfway across the country, but I still read in bed
with my lamp on until the wee hours, held spellbound by the
pleasure of learning what happens next.
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