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Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (Book 4) (original 2000; edition 2002)

by J. K. Rowling

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61,7374916 (4.35)12 / 530
Member:caitbrowne
Title:Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (Book 4)
Authors:J. K. Rowling
Info:Scholastic Paperbacks (2002), Mass Market Paperback, 752 pages
Collections:Your library
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Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire by J. K. Rowling (2000)

adventure (460) boarding school (209) British (338) children (560) children's (1,011) children's books (153) children's fiction (310) children's literature (565) dragons (152) England (339) fantasy (7,349) fiction (4,547) friendship (212) hardcover (248) Harry Potter (3,084) Harry Potter Series (183) Hogwarts (260) J.K. Rowling (328) juvenile (184) magic (2,284) novel (415) own (361) read (925) Rowling (168) school (272) series (924) sff (207) witches (433) wizards (1,132) young adult (2,019)
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Showing 1-5 of 450 (next | show all)
Things are tough all over for Harry Potter. The family he lives with hates him, and when at school, people seem to keep trying to kill him. In this, the fourth installment of the Harry Potter franchise, Harry is awakened by a throbbing in his scar. He believes that it is caused by Voldemort planning his doom. He is saved from worrying about it however, as he is invited to the Quidditch world cup by the Weasleys. While at the tournament, however, someone releases the dark mark into the air, which is a signal to the followers of Voldemort, known as Death Eaters.

Harry and his friends go to school. At Hogwarts, it is announced that the first tri-wizard tournament will be held in over a hundred years. And it will be hosted at Hogwarts. There is an age limit, but somehow Harry's name is entered anyway. This causes a rift in his friendship with Ron, who believes that Harry did it on purpose. The tournament is harrowing, and filled with dangers.

Over all this is a great book. It is exciting with well-developed characters, twists and turns that are unexpected, and a touch of darkness at the end that gives the book a sense of gravitas that was missing from the previous books in the series. ( )
  burningtodd | Jun 11, 2013 |
Oh snap! It's totally on. Shit just got real up in here... ( )
  breakofdawn | Jun 11, 2013 |
In Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, Harry is midway through both his training as a wizard and his coming of age. He wants to get away from the malicious Dursleys and go to the Quidditch World Cup with Hermione, Ron, and the Weasleys. He wants to dream about his crush, Cho Chang (and maybe do more than dream). And now that he's gotten the hang of things at Hogwarts-he hopes-he just wants to be a normal fourteen-year-old wizard. But even by his standards, Harry's year is anything but normal. First Dumbledore announces the revival of a grand competition that hasn't taken place for one hundred years: the Triwizard Tournament, where a Hogwarts champion will compete against rivals from two other schools of magic in three highly dangerous tasks. Then someone frames Harry to participate in the tournament-which really means someone wants him dead. Harry is guided through the competition by Professor Alastor Moody, this year's Defenst Against the Dark Arts teacher, but he must also contend with a nasty reporter named Rita Skeeter, who digs up some highly unflattering secrets about Hagrid; a terrible fight with Ron, who is deeply jealous of Harry's fame; Hermione's newfound activism on behalf of house-elves; and the terrifying prospect of asking a date to the Yule Ball. Worst of all, Lord Voldemort may finally have gathered the materials necessary for his rejuvenation... and he has a faithful servant at Hogwarts waiting only for a sign. No, nothing is every normal for Harry Potter. And in his case, different can be deadly.
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  tauruseducation | Jun 6, 2013 |
I realize that for most folks, this is their favorite in the series, but not for me. I felt like there was just way too much going on for one book. While I understand her reasoning behind it, we could have done without the entire S.P.E.W. plot line, or could have done with a much abbreviated version and still gotten the point across and set up the conflict with the house elf in TOOTP just as well. ( )
  ScoutJ | Jun 5, 2013 |
It would be hard to pick a favorite Harry Potter book, but this one would be a top contender. This is where Rowling pulls out the big guns, and plunges the reader into some really interesting territory. I remember the first time I read it, right after the book came out. I read it nearly straight through- I couldn't put it down. It definitely stands up to multiple re-reads. Even after 11 years, even though I know what happens in the end of the book and series, I still get drawn into and fascinated by the magical world. Just like when I was a kid. ( )
  psychedelicmicrobus | May 26, 2013 |
Showing 1-5 of 450 (next | show all)
The fourth book in the Harry Potter phenomenon, at 734 pages, is what you call a wallow—one that some will find wide-ranging, compellingly written, and absorbing; others, long, rambling, and tortuously fraught with adverbs.
 
The fantasy writer's job is to conduct the willing reader from mundanity to magic. This is a feat of which only a superior imagination is capable, and Rowling possesses such equipment.
 
As the midpoint in a projected seven-book series, "Goblet of Fire" is exactly the big, clever, vibrant, tremendously assured installment that gives shape and direction to the whole undertaking and still somehow preserves the material's enchanting innocence.
 
Dragones y Monstruos
 
This would be an appropriate novel students can chose to read on there own. I will keep this in my classroom so the students can grab them at anytime of the year.
added by courtneyemahr | editCourtney E. Mahr
 

» Add other authors (28 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
J. K. Rowlingprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Dale, JimNarratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Fry, StephenNarratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
GrandPré, MaryIllustratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Greenfield, GilesCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Canonical title
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Important events
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Epigraph
Dedication
To Peter Rowling,
in memory of Mr. Ridley
and to Susan Sladden,
who helped Harry
out of his cupboard.
First words
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.
Quotations
"Kill the spare"
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
Disambiguation notice
Publisher's editors
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Book description
In this book Harry conquers various tasks via the triwizard tournament, but is this tournament more than Harry can handle?
Haiku summary

Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0439139597, Hardcover)

In Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, J.K. Rowling offers up equal parts danger and delight--and any number of dragons, house-elves, and death-defying challenges. Now 14, her orphan hero has only two more weeks with his Muggle relatives before returning to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Yet one night a vision harrowing enough to make his lightning-bolt-shaped scar burn has Harry on edge and contacting his godfather-in-hiding, Sirius Black. Happily, the prospect of attending the season's premier sporting event, the Quidditch World Cup, is enough to make Harry momentarily forget that Lord Voldemort and his sinister familiars--the Death Eaters--are out for murder.

Readers, we will cast a giant invisibility cloak over any more plot and reveal only that You-Know-Who is very much after Harry and that this year there will be no Quidditch matches between Gryffindor, Ravenclaw, Hufflepuff, and Slytherin. Instead, Hogwarts will vie with two other magicians' schools, the stylish Beauxbatons and the icy Durmstrang, in a Triwizard Tournament. Those chosen to compete will undergo three supreme tests. Could Harry be one of the lucky contenders?

But Quidditch buffs need not go into mourning: we get our share of this great game at the World Cup. Attempting to go incognito as Muggles, 100,000 witches and wizards converge on a "nice deserted moor." As ever, Rowling magicks up the details that make her world so vivid, and so comic. Several spectators' tents, for instance, are entirely unquotidian. One is a minipalace, complete with live peacocks; another has three floors and multiple turrets. And the sports paraphernalia on offer includes rosettes "squealing the names of the players" as well as "tiny models of Firebolts that really flew, and collectible figures of famous players, which strolled across the palm of your hand, preening themselves." Needless to say, the two teams are decidedly different, down to their mascots. Bulgaria is supported by the beautiful veela, who instantly enchant everyone--including Ireland's supporters--over to their side. Until, that is, thousands of tiny cheerleaders engage in some pyrotechnics of their own: "The leprechauns had risen into the air again, and this time, they formed a giant hand, which was making a very rude sign indeed at the veela across the field."

Long before her fourth installment appeared, Rowling warned that it would be darker, and it's true that every exhilaration is equaled by a moment that has us fearing for Harry's life, the book's emotions running as deep as its dangers. Along the way, though, she conjures up such new characters as Alastor "Mad-Eye" Moody, a Dark Wizard catcher who may or may not be getting paranoid in his old age, and Rita Skeeter, who beetles around Hogwarts in search of stories. (This Daily Prophet scoop artist has a Quick-Quotes Quill that turns even the most innocent assertion into tabloid innuendo.) And at her bedazzling close, Rowling leaves several plot strands open, awaiting book 5. This fan is ready to wager that the author herself is part veela--her pen her wand, her commitment to her world complete. (Ages 9 and older) --Kerry Fried

(retrieved from Amazon Wed, 02 Jan 2013 22:43:32 -0500)

(see all 7 descriptions)

Harry Potter, a fourth-year student at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, longs to escape his hateful relatives, the Dursleys, and live as a normal fourteen-year-old wizard, but what Harry does not yet realize is that he is not a normal wizard, and in his case, different can be deadly.Fourteen-year-old Harry Potter joins the Weasleys at the Quidditch World Cup, then enters his fourth year at Hogwarts Academy where he is mysteriously entered in an unusual contest that challenges his wizarding skills, friendships and character, amid signs that an old enemy is growing stronger.… (more)

(summary from another edition)

» see all 12 descriptions

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