105. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. J.K. Rowling. 2000. 734 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars]
First
sentence: The villagers of Little Hangleton still called it "the Riddle
House," even though it had been many years since the Riddle family had
lived there.
ETA: This one isn't my favorite or best. But I did listen to it on audio for my third read through. I love the narration of Stephen Fry. (Except for the elves, but I think any narrator would struggle.) It is certainly important for the series, but again not my favorite or best.
Premise/plot: Harry Potter returns (eventually) to Hogwarts where he and his friends discover several changes for the school year ahead. Before school returns, there is a Quidditch World Cup to be endured. It felt like the sporty Quidditch World Cup took up 800 pages. Once he (and his friends) return to Hogwarts and begin their studies again, the pace picks up a bit. One of the changes this year is the triwizard competition. Hogwarts is one of three schools participating. There is supposed to be one student per school. But someone has entered Harry's name into the goblet of fire and so he ends up being a 'champion' [participant]. Cedric Diggory is the other Hogwarts champion. [I don't remember the names from the other two schools.] This competition is spread out throughout the school year.
My thoughts: I feel like the first six-hundred pages were mostly dull and ho-hum. I think the last bit of the novel has all the action and suspense. Out of the four novels I've read so far, this has been the dullest all things considered. All things being taking the book as a whole. There were definitely intense, action-packed, emotional scenes/chapters. But does THAT end-portion make up for all the sporty-sport-sport bit at the start???? I'm not sure. This was the first Harry Potter book where I've had to force myself to keep reading to get to the end of it. ETA: I had forgotten--almost--how much I disliked
this one, OR, at least the start of this one. This one is like THREE
different books. There is the EXTREMELY LONG AND BARELY NECESSARY
"prologue" of the sporting world championship bit, AND there is the
normal, formulaic school semesters bit, and then there is the super
compelling, well-paced, ABSOLUTELY absorbing and completely and totally
necessary bit that CHANGES EVERYTHING. Like the whole series pivots
thanks to the last hundred or so pages of this one. But it takes FOREVER
for the good bit to come.
© 2025 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews

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