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Old 06-20-2003, 02:48 PM   #1
Franklinnoble
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Talking Harry Potter and the Corked Broom

Harry Potter and the Corked Broom
By Jim Caple
Page 2 columnist


Readers around the globe will rely on TiVo to record "Stargate SG-1" tonight so they can line up outside their local bookstores for the midnight release everyone has been eagerly awaiting for three years -- the new Ichiro bobblehead doll.

Ha! Just kidding. They'll be lined up for the fifth book in the Harry Potter series, the 768-page, $29.95 "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix." And what delights await readers inside its pages? No one knows for sure, because author J.K. Rowling and her publisher have gone to extraordinary lengths to keep the plot secret. Not only are copies being kept under lock and key, Rowling and Scholastic sued the New York Daily News for $100 million over the unauthorized publication of a section from a stolen edition.


Such measures couldn't stop Page 2's fearless staff, however, which obtained its own advance copy. And as the following chapter demonstrates, the modern world is creeping into Hogwart's as the teenage wizards grow a little older and deals with that other little bit of magic we Muggles call puberty ...


Chapter Five: The Broken Broom
Harry rose from his knees and held the Snitch triumphantly high above his head for all to see. After his miraculous Quidditch match-winning catch and stunning crash, Harry expected to receive a thunderous ovation, so he was surprised when he heard not a single clap, not even from his fellow Gryffindor housemates. Instead, their reaction was similar to his own that day over the summer when he discovered Dudley prancing about in Aunt Petunia's knickers. What a curious sight that had been!


Now, the entire Quidditch crowd stared silently at Harry and the Nimbus 2000 that lay broken around him.


"Look! Cork!" Draco Malfoy shouted, cruely snuffing out his hand-rolled cigarette on the reproductive organs of a small white bunny that had misfortunately hippity-hopped within his reach. "Potter corked his broom! That's why he's able to fly it so fast! He cheats!"


"What?!? I did no such thing," Harry cried and turned around to see to his horror that the broken pieces indeed revealed a cork interior to the broom. He looked back helplessly as Professor Dumbledore and the rest of the Hogwart's faculty strode toward him.


"And what do you have to say for yourself, Mr. Potter?" Professor McGonagall asked in the sort of accusing tone obtained only after decades of sexual abstinence spent in a stiflingly repressive English public school.


"I don't know how it could have gotten there," Harry howled. "All I know is that I didn't put it there."


"Perhaps you accidentally picked up the wrong broom," Hagrid offered lamely. "Maybe you mistakenly picked up yer B.P. broom because you likes to put on a show fer fans before the match."


Harry's mouth dropped open, revealing his horrible dentistry as Dumbledore shot Hagrid the sort of withering look that only someone who has endured a life of low pay tutoring the pampered offspring of rich, thankless and self-satisfied parents is capable of. "You've said an astounding amount of idiotic things in your time at Hogwart's, but that is the dumbest thing you've ever said, Hagrid," Dumbledore scolded. "If you can't think of a more believable explanation I suggest you go back to the guardhouse before you get Harry in any further trouble. Now, bugger off!"


Hagrid grumbled something under his breath, let loose the most extraordinary fart and stomped away. Dumbledore waited until Hagrid was out of sight and his odor had finally drifted away before turning to face Harry.


"This is rather serious, I'm afraid," he said ponderously. "If you can't provide a logical explanation for how the cork got inside your broom, I'm afraid we shall have to suspend you for the next three matches."


"But I'll miss the match against Slytherin!" Harry sniveled.


"Can't be helped. It's what comes of cheating," Professor McGonagall snapped, with the sort of reproving tone gained only from a life spent in a subservient role in a male-dominated academic system. "I'm very disappointed in you. This places all your Quidditch achievements into doubt. Now, clean up your mess and return to your room."


Hermione and Ron rushed to Harry as he began to pick up the pieces and examined the cork.


"Wow, Harry! I never would have guessed that you would cork your broom!" Ron exclaimed, picking his nose. "I guess it just goes to show you how clueless I am! Sometimes I'm surprised I even remember to go to the bathroom without wetting myself. In fact, now that I look at my fly, I can see that I didn't. Fancy that!"


"Don't be such a silly git, Ron! You know Harry wouldn't do such a thing," Hermione said, then gave him a friendly hug while wishing she could do so much more. "But Harry. How do you think the cork got into your broom?"


"Someone must have placed a magic spell on it," Harry bawled.


"But who could do such a thing?" Ron asked, sniffing his armpit.


"Honestly, Ron, you are as thick as figgy pudding! We've only attended a school for wizards for five years -- it could be one of hundreds!" Hermione said, then kissed him sympathetically on the cheek and felt an odd (but pleasant) tingling in the private area of her body that We Must Not Name. "Who do you think did it, Harry?"


Harry pushed his glasses up on his nose to get a better look at Hermione's full red lips, but for some reason he could only picture Tony Curtis and Laurence Olivier in "Spartacus" instead.


"I'm certain it was Malfoy," Harry whimpered. "He knew Slytherin couldn't win if I played, so he put the cork in my broom so that I would get suspended."


"That would be just like him," Hermione said. "He's been taking anabolic steroids and human growth hormone all term to get ready for that match, so I wouldn't put anything past him."


"Steroids!" Ron yelled in excitement, wetting himself again. "How do you know?"


"I've felt the acne on his back with my own fingertips!" Hermione retorted breathlessly, then turned crimson in embarrassment. "Errr, I mean, I'm told he has acne on his back. I've never actually seen it. And I certainly haven't touched it. I mean, really. Ewwwwww, gross!"


There was an awkward silence as Harry thought of Draco's back, and Ron looked jealously at Hermione while digging a fingernail of wax from his ear.


"Anyway," Hermione said, nervously fingering her wand. "If it's true about Malfoy and the cork, there's only thing we can do."


"Right," Harry sniffed, wondering whether the corked broom would damage his 90 million galleon endorsement deal with Nimbus. "We'll have to kill him."


Jim Caple is a senior writer for ESPN.com.

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Old 06-20-2003, 02:56 PM   #2
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Wow, I can't wait the read the rest. I think I'll go spend the night at a book store.
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Old 06-20-2003, 09:13 PM   #3
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My 8yr old son and I have read the first 2 books as well as some of the 3rd. While we both enjoy them, we BOTH agree they are vastly overrated. Not even in the same class as classics such as Oliver Twist, Huckleberry Finn, or Chronicles of Narnia. Why wait in line for a $30 book when there is a century of great children's books available for free at the library?
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Old 06-20-2003, 10:03 PM   #4
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I've recently been re-reading the Narnia Chronicles again, a favorite from my youth.

in fact, going to go finish the last few pages of the Dawn Treader
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Old 06-20-2003, 10:12 PM   #5
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Quote:
Originally posted by Draft Dodger
I've recently been re-reading the Narnia Chronicles again, a favorite from my youth.

in fact, going to go finish the last few pages of the Dawn Treader

As it turns out, CS Lewis also happens to be a first-rate Christian philosopher. While I'm not Christian, I am open to the Christian perspective. As such, I've read his essays on Moral Law and Punishment.
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Old 06-20-2003, 10:14 PM   #6
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Personally, I think Harry Potter is better than the Cronicals of Narnia which I read as a kid. But I never liked how Lewis never kept the same characters from the first book, and thats some of the allure of Harry Potter, following the characters over the years. I still admire Lewis's writing though, he was also an verry well spoken and written Christian Philosopher.
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Old 06-20-2003, 10:16 PM   #7
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Quote:
Originally posted by wbonnell
As it turns out, CS Lewis also happens to be a first-rate Christian philosopher. While I'm not Christian, I am open to the Christian perspective. As such, I've read his essays on Moral Law and Punishment.

ha you beat me to it. I always laugh when you have some crazy christians talk about books and games about casting spells and the like, and say they are the work of the Devil. I often wonder if they known that some of their own theologians have written on similar subjects.
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Old 06-20-2003, 10:16 PM   #8
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I feel vaguely dirty after reading Jim Caple's piece.
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Old 06-20-2003, 10:20 PM   #9
wbonnell
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Quote:
Originally posted by Tigercat
ha you beat me to it. I always laugh when you have some crazy christians talk about books and games about casting spells and the like, and say they are the work of the Devil. I often wonder if they known that some of their own theologians have written on similar subjects.

From what I gather, CS Lewis wasn't quite so well regarded in his time. Indeed, he had to resort to publishing his essay refuting the "Humanitatian Theory of Punishment" in an Australian publication because nobody back home- in England- would.
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Old 06-20-2003, 10:22 PM   #10
wbonnell
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Quote:
Originally posted by CamEdwards
I feel vaguely dirty after reading Jim Caple's piece.

See what I get for not reading the original post! This thread isn't even about the novel!
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Old 06-20-2003, 10:33 PM   #11
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Quote:
Originally posted by wbonnell
As it turns out, CS Lewis also happens to be a first-rate Christian philosopher. While I'm not Christian, I am open to the Christian perspective. As such, I've read his essays on Moral Law and Punishment.

I'm starting to think that Aslan is supposed to be God or something
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Old 06-20-2003, 10:38 PM   #12
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HA! I always knew that Harry was a fraud, now I have my proof!
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Old 06-20-2003, 11:09 PM   #13
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Go Tom Clancy and Clive Cussler!
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Old 06-21-2003, 06:10 PM   #14
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There wasa riot at a local bookstore here when the manager couldn''t open all the boxes fast enough so order had to be restored by these guards with shot guns and corked baseball bats ...man what a xcene it was .In the end there were broken bodies of kids everywhere .
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