Knowing that Stefan Petrucha's text and Rick Parker's images for their 2010 graphic novel Harry Potter spoof Harry Potty and the Deathly Boring reflect Mad Magazine types of parodies, I both accept and also expect bad puns, silly names and massive amounts of toilet jokes, that Harry Potty and the Deathly Boring is thus full full full of adolescent humour, which is not really a criticism but simply a statement of fact (although also a bit of a caveat). And while adult I keeps rolling her eyes more than a trifle derisively throughout Harry Potty and the Deathly Boring (and is also constantly groaning), I do have to albeit a trifle guiltily admit that my inner child has rather enjoyed what Petrucha is textually presenting, how J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter, Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger become Harry Potty, Don Measley and Whiny Stranger in Harry Potty and the Deathly Boring, with the Death Eaters now being Odour Eaters, Dobby the House Elf transforming into Robby the Mouse Elf (complete with Mickey Mouse ears), Voldemort being called Value-Mart in Harry Potty and the Deathly Boring, Dumbledore known as Dumb-as-a-Door and so on and so on and so on (admittedly almost a bit too much, but hey, Mad Magazine type of literary spoofs such as Harry Potty and the Deathly Boring, they are generally if not even always like this).
But that being said, I do think Stefan Petrucha might actually be just a wee bit confused regarding his intended audience for Harry Potty and the Deathly Boring. For yes, while the plethora of bad puns, silly names and gross-out humour is suitable (and funny) for an elementary school type of audience, there is also a fair amount of political satire and pop culture references that will probably sail right over the heads of the adolescents for whom Harry Potty and the Deathly Boring has supposedly been penned (and that the adult content of Harry Potty and the Deathly Boring such as for example the references to cross dressing and Dumb-as-a-Door's sexual orientation in my humble opinion feel both unsuitable for Harry Potty and the Deathly Boring and would also likely be pretty uninteresting and a bit strange for the intended audience).
And finally, just to say that pictorially speaking, Rick Parker's artwork for Harry Potty and the Deathly Boring provides a perfect mirror for Petrucha's text and vice versa, and that I do like how rather than draw photo-realistic images of the popular characters as seen in the Harry Potter movies, Parker delightfully caricatures them to good visual effect, creating for example a Dumb-as-a-Door who looks really demented and that Harry Potty, Don Measley and Whiny Stranger sure look like what their parodistic names suggest (and with the sight-gags hidden in the background of Harry Potty and the Deathly Boring making this book also a bit of a search-and-find activity). Not bad, definitely decently enjoyable for my inner child, but much too over the top so to speak, way too many bad puns, jokes and bathroom humour for adult I, and indeed, that Stefan Petrucha's textual confusion regarding who Harry Potty and the Deathly Boring is geared towards leaves a rather generous and also pretty low three star rating.