Aug 242005
 

Zoe Williams minces no words in this hilar­i­ous analy­sis of the “astound­ingly unim­pres­sive” results of an opin­ion poll in which British politi­cians named The Da Vinci Code and Harry Pot­ter as their favorite reads.

The soar­away favourite was The Da Vinci Code. Men­tion of this book is often suf­fixed by how many copies it has sold, as if sheer weight of num­bers obvi­ates all con­sid­er­a­tion of how rub­bish it is. And it’s a bit late to launch into a cri­tique of a work that makes peo­ple feel phys­i­cally sick when they fin­ish it, like a pound of straw­berry bon­bons, but the ques­tion remains — why aren’t they embarrassed?

[…]the ubiq­ui­tous Harry Pot­ter, a series so infan­tile that it is, quite lit­er­ally, a children’s book, a work that even the pub­lish­ers admit that an adult ought to be embar­rassed to be caught read­ing (well, they have a spe­cial “adult” edi­tion, with a dis­creet cover; this is like read­ing Play­boy inside the Econ­o­mist. Except that it’s slightly worse, since if one of these rep­re­sen­ta­tives had said “I shall be hol­i­day­ing with a copy of Play­boy hid­den inside an Econ­o­mist”, I would prob­a­bly vote for that person).

Williams the­o­rizes that the lack of class in the pref­er­ences might be because the politi­cians delib­er­ately dumbed down their list to appear more human and acces­si­ble to the aver­age guy on the street (read voter), end­ing with a bit of advice for the ones that chose Pot­ter: “Chil­dren aren’t allowed to vote.” Yes, but juve­niles are.

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