In Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, the summer after Harry's first year at Hogwarts has been his worst summer ever... the Dursleys more distant and horrible than ever before. But just as he's packing his bags to return to school, a creature named Dobby the house-elf announces that if Harry goes back to Hogwarts, disaster will strike. And it turns out, Dobby is right. Harry and Ron miss the Hogwarts Express, so they fly to school in a blue Ford Anglia, crash landing in the notorious Whomping Willow. Soon other worries accumulate: the outrageously stuck-up new professor Gilderoy Lockhart; a ghost named Moaning Myrtle, who haunts the girls' bathroom; the strange behavior of Ron's little sister, Ginny Weasley; rumors about the "Chamber of Secrets," a cavern buried deep below Hogwarts; and a magical diary owned by Tom Riddle, a Hogwarts student of long ago. Harry is also shocked …
In Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, the summer after Harry's first year at Hogwarts has been his worst summer ever... the Dursleys more distant and horrible than ever before. But just as he's packing his bags to return to school, a creature named Dobby the house-elf announces that if Harry goes back to Hogwarts, disaster will strike. And it turns out, Dobby is right. Harry and Ron miss the Hogwarts Express, so they fly to school in a blue Ford Anglia, crash landing in the notorious Whomping Willow. Soon other worries accumulate: the outrageously stuck-up new professor Gilderoy Lockhart; a ghost named Moaning Myrtle, who haunts the girls' bathroom; the strange behavior of Ron's little sister, Ginny Weasley; rumors about the "Chamber of Secrets," a cavern buried deep below Hogwarts; and a magical diary owned by Tom Riddle, a Hogwarts student of long ago. Harry is also shocked to discover that he can speak Parseltongue, the language of snakes - a rare ability that Lord Voldemort also possessed - and that anti-Muggle prejudice exists in the Wizarding world, even affecting Harry's friend Hermione. But all of these seem like minor concerns when someone starts turning Hogwarts students to stone: an evildoer said to be the fearsome Heir of Salazar Slytherin, on of the founders of the school. Could it be Draco Malfoy, Harry's most poisonous rival? Could it be Hagrid whose mysterious past is finally told? Or could it be the one person everyone at Hogwarts most suspects: Harry Potter himself?
Review of 'Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
On a par with the previous book, although as most of Hogwarts and the wizarding world has been explained there’s more action and less exposition. Gilderoy Lockhart is amusing (and superbly cast in the film), though one wonders how he got a job at Hogwarts as I cannot imagine Dumbledore failing to see through his charade (there’s background information elsewhere about this, but not in the book).
The only downside is that Hermione is out of action for a chunk of the book. Fortunately Ron and Harry are coming into their own, because if this had happened earlier they would probably be lost without her.
Review of 'Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
This might be my second favorite HP book after The Halfblood Prince. The plot is simple and the kids make decisions that kids might make in those circumstances. I like the reveal about Riddle and Jenny at the end, and I love Lockhart as the bad guy because of his ineptitude. This one is fun.
Review of 'Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets' on 'Goodreads'
5 stars
So, where were we in my recollections? I'd finished Philosopherh's Stone in a single sitting on the radio, if you'll recall. Fast forward to what must have been early January 2001, as I can't imagine our little local library had it readily to shelf for the few days they were open between Christmas and New Year.
Memory, like fame, is a fickle friend. Though I remember a lot of my first reading of Philosopher's Stone very well, this one is more clouded. I have a very clear picture of walking upstairs to my bedroom (at my grandparents) with the box of cassettes in my hand. I remember the thrill of Dobby and the pudding, the escape in the car and, most vivid of all, Molly's tirade about the stolen car. I imagine later scenes in the same room; in the book shop, Lucius Malfoy's "clearly", which sticks with me to …
So, where were we in my recollections? I'd finished Philosopherh's Stone in a single sitting on the radio, if you'll recall. Fast forward to what must have been early January 2001, as I can't imagine our little local library had it readily to shelf for the few days they were open between Christmas and New Year.
Memory, like fame, is a fickle friend. Though I remember a lot of my first reading of Philosopher's Stone very well, this one is more clouded. I have a very clear picture of walking upstairs to my bedroom (at my grandparents) with the box of cassettes in my hand. I remember the thrill of Dobby and the pudding, the escape in the car and, most vivid of all, Molly's tirade about the stolen car. I imagine later scenes in the same room; in the book shop, Lucius Malfoy's "clearly", which sticks with me to this day.
I also have hazy recollections of finishing it, or at least reading some of the darker parts, at the family home. I think it was for this reason that, after the first reading, I didn't think much of the Chamber of Secrets. I wasn't happy at home at this point in my life and, I think that coupled with the fact that I had other obligations meaning I couldn't devour the book in a sitting and was forced to listen in an environment of hostility and abandonment really put something of a negative spin on the text.
Subsequent readings of the work picked me up, for there was nothing in the book to warrant me not liking it. I'm sure I checked it out from the library more than once and I know for a fact that when I bought all titles in the series on CD (there were 6 at that point), I read it yet again. And now here we are, over a decade later, and I have read it once more, this time, taking a little under three hours of reading time with an EBook edition from Pottermore.com.
And do you know, I really liked it? Not just because of the nostalgia, but I got to see that it's a very good work in its own right. Stephen Fry's elocution is of course sublime; his Lockhart is one of the most memorable characterisations of the series thus far. I also appreciated the foreshadowing, it's something Rowling's very good at and weaves its way through the work in ways subtle and obvious. The humour is also there, a lot more noticeable to me now that I'm not so deep in the story.
And, one of the things that stuck out at me this time around was the contrast between Ron and Hermione. Under the castle in the Philosopher's Stone, we have the whole "Hermione's lip trembled and she suddenly dashed at Harry and threw her arms around him" touching emotional scene as the friends part. This time around, when it's Ron... "There was a very pregnant pause. 'And, Harry -'"
Something about that calls to me,it seems to capture so well the boy boy girl thing of their ages.
So, another monumental installment. I utterly loved it this time around. Next up is my favourite of the series!