mirihawk reviewed James Potter and the Hall of Elders' Crossing by G. Norman Lippert (James Potter, #1)
Review of "James Potter and the Hall of Elders' Crossing" on 'Goodreads'
1 star
Did not finish.
Ebook, 391 pages
Published Nov. 19, 2007
What’s it like to be the son of the most famous wizard of all time?
James Potter thinks he knows, but as he begins his own adventure at Hogwarts, he discovers just how much of a challenge it really is to live up to the legend of the great Harry Potter. As if it wasn’t enough dealing with the delegates from the American wizarding school and figuring out the mysteriously polite Slytherins, James and his new friends, Ralph and Zane, begin to uncover a secret plot that could pit the Muggle and the Magical worlds against each other in all-out war.
Now, with the help of Ted Lupin and his band of merry mischief makers (The Gremlins), James must race to stop a war that could change the world forever. His only hope is to learn the difference between being a hero and being the son of a hero.
Did not finish.
I have to say I thoroughly enjoyed this book. As a Harry Potter fan it was nice to head back to Hogwarts and follow a new(ish) crowd. The story had me guessing start to finish, with a few surprises along the way.
Having read the original books there were one or two things that niggled at me. The first was students going into each others dorms. Now, I understand that this is a new age, but it just felt a little odd. The second was finding different aged students in the same lessons. I'm not sure if this happens in real boarding schools, but again, it was something that was strange to read. Lastly was the lesson on paintings. Now I could be wrong, or not know my HP facts, but according to the lesson only simple, 2D characters could move between other paintings that were not their own. Fully …
I have to say I thoroughly enjoyed this book. As a Harry Potter fan it was nice to head back to Hogwarts and follow a new(ish) crowd. The story had me guessing start to finish, with a few surprises along the way.
Having read the original books there were one or two things that niggled at me. The first was students going into each others dorms. Now, I understand that this is a new age, but it just felt a little odd. The second was finding different aged students in the same lessons. I'm not sure if this happens in real boarding schools, but again, it was something that was strange to read. Lastly was the lesson on paintings. Now I could be wrong, or not know my HP facts, but according to the lesson only simple, 2D characters could move between other paintings that were not their own. Fully magically charmed characters could only travel between the paintings of themselves, but not enter another person's painting. If this is so, then surely the fat lady, or the knight Sir Cadogan, could not travel between paintings as they did in the original stories. Just something I've been pondering. If I have my facts wrong then you can ignore my musings.
The only major problem I had was with the formatting of speech. A new person speaking means a new paragraph. G. Norman Lippert didn't do this, probably as a result of the overall paragraph formatting. However, that being said, I didn't find myself getting lost when people were speaking (which has been the case in other self-published novels I've read, where different people's words were lumped together).
So all in all, despite the niggles I would definitely recommend this story to HP fans, and I'm starting #2 directly.