That may be applicable if Harry Potter was a textbook; a textbook presents facts and studying another source for that textbook would present you with a good idea of what is going on and what it means. Harry Potter is not a textbook, though. You have to understand that you cannot get the context of a book, without the book. You can read essays all day if you want to, but you aren't going to understand the psychological aspects of the scenes you find to be so disturbing, until you read them.
I'm not interested in the psychology of the characters. My only interest is in the occult presented in the books.
You would have a clearer picture regarding facts about the books, but you will not have a clearer picture concerning the books themselves. We were, lately, talking about the damaging effects that the murder, the torture, the mind-invasion has and so on and so forth. But Lexicon will tell you the facts, or sometimes speculation, concerning what is in the books. It does not portray the context in which readers view it. They're not interested in that. To see what psychological aspects there are, one must go to the source: The books, all seven of them. I recommend reading them.
Why all this about psychology of the characters or setting of the books? I'd rather have an clear analytical view of the books then one bogged down with concern for characters. Besides I simply don't have time to read all the books or sections of the books that are concerned with building the characters.
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