This
paper explains that J.K. Rowling's "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire" is a well-crafted
story, with incredibly detailed characters, and an adventure of
epic proportions complete with magic spells and witches and wizards. The author points out that children are given a sense of hope because the protagonist Harry is portrayed as both an unassuming boy and a hero; when his parents were killed when he was a baby, grew up in an mentally abusive and physically neglected household and yet, he is finds out that not only is he a wizard, with powers beyond those of his horrible relatives but also the savior of the
wizarding world. The paper relates that the story champions equal rights as in Hermione's cause to free the House Elves, who are slaves, and in the struggles of the half-blood of the wizarding world against the superior attitudes of some of the pure-blooded families.