| Midnight at the bookstore |
[Jul. 16th, 2005|04:36 am] |
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Busy night, I suppose. Kingston was a madhouse - the pubs emptying boozed-up lads and short-skirted slappers out onto the street outside the bookshop, while inside gleaming-eyed parents tried to pretend they were only there for their face-painted offsprings' benefit. Endless trollies stacked with the two different versions of the book, the brightly-coloured children's cover and the sombre adult cover. A beaming Borders spokesman braying into a mobile phone about the success of the evening. Small girls in cloaks or Hogwarts uniforms looking tired and - as the night wore on - increasingly fractious. Bookshop staff dressed in wizard costumes that could surely only have been designed by someone who wished them ill. A queue downstairs that snaked away from the tills and then three times around the main body of the store. A queue upstairs that was less frantic, less claustrophobic, and considerably shorter - but far, far slower as there was only one till at the head of it rather than the half a dozen downstairs. And everywhere people clutching green-jacketed books, stopped in their tracks, standing and reading as if hypnotised into doing so. And since we got home we've read a little, eaten, read a little, stuck photos up on Flickr, read a little - not desperately trying to finish the book in one sitting, but grazing it - taking time to chew it over where last time around we gulped down great chunks of it, until we had each read its 766 pages in a single weekend, but had been left with no clear idea of what we'd just read. Not so this time - we're taking it easy... There's photos up on Flickr here - I'll add some to this post later, at the moment Flickr's down and I can't. |
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| Full up of half blood |
[Jul. 16th, 2005|06:25 pm] |
Well, I've read the damn book and am now suffering a severe case of Harry Potter indigestion, to the extent that I don't want to see it or hear mention of it for the next month. At least.
Beloved Other Half, of course, is eager to discuss it in depth.
It's also already clear that the areas of the story we're interested in are wildly different, and I got a lot more satisfaction from the bits I'm interested in that she did from hers. This is likely to colour quite dramatically whether or not we think the book a success.
Oh - and we seem to disagree fundamentally about the true motivations of a particular character. So things could get a bit turbulent here for a while... |
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