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Barry Trotter And The Unnecessary Sequel
by Michael Gerber
pub: Gollancz. 328 page small hardback. Price: £
6.99 (UK). ISBN: 0-575-07558-9.
check out website:
www.orionbooks.co.uk
Not
normally one for parodies but I wanted to see whether this managed
to successfully take the mickey out of the Potter phenomenon. I
didn't have high hopes of a coherent story and, of course, that's
the whole point here.
Cheap plot contrivances are the unashamed order of the day. This
book is recognisably in a magic universe originally created by -
ahem - Ms Rowling. Instead of an 11-year-old boy, we have Barry
Trotter, a 37-year-old with the brain of an 11-year-old.
He
has a wife called Ermine and a son called Nigel. Nigel is due to
start at Hogwash School for Wizardry and Witchcrap very shortly.
Unfortunately, despite coming from a superior magical family, Nigel
is not magical at all. He is quite frankly crap and is more than
a little disconcerted by the prospect of a school for magic.
He would prefer to go to a Muddle School and become a holistic
dentist like his maternal grandparents. Barry and Ermine accompany
him to school but are unexpectedly called into service as joint
Heads when the Headmister, Dorco Malfeasance, dies. Being magical,
of course, he doesn't just die, he hangs around and haunts the place.
Further mayhem ensues when it is discovered that Barry has been
cursed by a spell that makes him younger and younger as the days
pass. As Barry reverts to his juvenile self, nobody can tell the
difference. Of course, he helps Nigel 'settle in'. One of his major
achievements seems to making Quiddit a more vicious game than the
original.
Michael Gerber has produced a nicely paced and funny book that
picks up the background of the Harry Potter novels turning them
in on to themselves in a malevolent and twisted way. Thus the boat
ride for the First Years is not a pleasant experience, in this scenario
several are drowned.
At Hogwash, the moving staircases often trap unwary Muddle visitors
and a game of Quiddit results in multiple deaths and the odd exploding
student. Unpleasant things happen to a great many people in this
book and, as a result, this has become a popular book with the young
readers of the original despite being displayed in the adult section
of the book shop.
That turns the tables on Harry Potter being read by adults I guess.
On a parental warning note, there are one or two references to sex
but far less than make it worth buying. This is a sequel and yes,
it is quite unnecessary but when did that stop anyone.
It's an amiable read and occasionally quite funny. Useful as a
reminder that despite everything that might be said or wrote, the
boy Potter really is quite exceptional.
Sue Davies
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