Want to know J.K. Rowling’s own hints? Hear opinions on who’s the worst villain of them all? Find out about other Harry Potter theories? See previous posts, below this one.
I asked some newsroom volunteers who didn’t care whether they learned the ending to read the two reviews and give advice. Here’s what I asked them:
Do the reviews reveal any key plot points: Does Harry die? Who else dies? Is Snape hero or villain? Who marries whom? Do they give any other hint? I.e. “happy ending” or “darkly powerful” etc etc.
This is from Kerry Bean, editor of the Observer’s Neighbors of Southern Mecklenburg section, who replied to my query for volunteers:
“I am guilty of wanting to know the ending before I read a book because I don’t like to get too attached to characters who aren’t going to make it. (I already read the final pages of the book that were posted online and can’t wait to find out if they were accurate. … I just reread Book 6 last week in preparation. And because I don’t know anyone else who wants to know, I told my husband all the details of the ending I read online (he only read two of the books).”
Kerry read both reviews. Her verdict: “Don’t read either of them. They give away too many clues (and it appears as if the pages I read online were the real thing). The NYT one is better than the Baltimore one, but it needs a few lines edited out to be OK for fans who don’t want to know anything.”
She adds, “If you hear from anyone else who wants to know the ending, let them know I am so eager to talk about it.”
Here are the fateful links. Read them at your own risk:
New York Times review
Baltimore Sun review
Here’s an online article about the two papers’ breaking the embargo, and what other papers say they’ll do, from Editor & Publisher. Warning: At the end it quotes from both of the reviews. If you don’t want to read even a snippet of the review, either don’t read this link or stop reading before the end.
Here’s a tirade from Rachel Sklar of the Huffington Post, who’s mad at The Times for its review.
And finally, here’s an online discussion about Harry Potter, reading, and publishing from earlier today with Bob Thompson of the Washington Post. About two-thirds of the way down you’ll get Thompson’s opinion of the newspaper that ran reviews today.