I couldn't agree more with the last few posters. How can grown adults take so much perverse pleasure in belittling and sneering at a childrens/teen book? It wasn't written for you, and while I have nothing against any age group reading any book, (within reason of course), I do find it ridiculous that people are debating over the truth of the physics of a fiction book!!!!!! All I can say is you must have too much time on your hands, to take exception to a piece of work which brings enjoyment to many. Okay, you see it as flawed. What piece of work isn't? It's not great literature, but as far as I can see, no-one's claiming it is, but the detractors just sound like a load of soulless whingers. All I hope is that none of you have any input into encouraging kids to read, because if you were teachers, or like me, librarians, who were tearing your hair out trying to encourage the reluctant readers, or trying to teach the big percentage of kids who can barely read when they reach secondary school, you would so obviously be in the wrong job. Are you expecting them to read War and Peace, or Proust perhaps, when the actual act of getting them to pick up a book as opposed to playing on a computer is a big achievement? And I expect the rebuttal to that will be but there are better children's books. Everyone knows that, but I think that even if they picked up the so-called "better" books, certain people would find fault with that, and would be expecting more. Well, if they can read x why aren't they reading y......it's infinitely better? I agree with Lima, it's a circular argument, and the detractors will never let it lie. If you don't like HP, as it's your right to do, fine, but to keep an argument going about petty, nit-picking flaws in a work of juvenile fiction, (I'll say it again in case certain people didn't get it), A WORK OF JUVENILE FICTION, NOT A NON-FICTION SCIENCE BOOK ABOUT PHYSICS, then that's just very sad.


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