

Loading... Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (Book 7) (edition 2009)by J. K. Rowling (Author)
Work detailsHarry Potter and the Deathly Hallows by J. K. Rowling
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Best Fantasy Novels (60) Best Young Adult (13) » 68 more Books Read in 2016 (22) Favourite Books (134) Books Read in 2017 (47) Books Read in 2019 (19) Female Author (48) BBC Big Read (95) 20th Century Literature (134) Favorite Long Books (55) To Read (1) Books Read in 2018 (196) Top Five Books of 2016 (360) Five star books (207) 2000s decade (29) Movie Adaptations (13) Books Read in 2007 (28) XXX (2) Protagonists - Girls (60) Unread books (410) Books with Twins (30) READ IN 2020 (169) aijowenuwaneaw (7) Protagonists - Boys (47) Books on my Kindle (105) Scholastic (7) Delete This List (6) Secrets Books (59) Books About Murder (301) Magic Realism (333) Finished audio with the kids. Again. Read it 4 times. 11/10 Some people say that having the first movies come out before she finished the series affected her writing. Maybe it did but it is still darn good writing! I give this book five stars only after having literally ripped the disgusting epilogue pages out of the book. I've read the book three (maybe four) times and it still makes me feel all the feels. I think my only re-read of The Deathly Hallows. I re-read the previous books before each one came out, since maybe book 5. Over all, the books have a style I do not like. The time line was not start to finish. It kept going from Harry's time, to Voldemort's time, to Sirius' time, etc. I would have enjoyed the series A LOT more if it was told real time. Knowing Dumbledore's plan from the start would have been awesome. Reacting to Harry's anger toward Snape knowing what he is doing... I wish there was a chronological edition of the series. Original comment: I was sad to finish this book/series 1/4/2021 81,132 members; 4.42 average rating
I am happy with your article, Dafatoto think your website is pretty good. Many articles are very useful for everyone. I am sure your website will grow in the future. Dafatoto will always support your website, hopefully more advanced. keep the spirit... thanks The shallowness of Rowling’s enterprise is revealed in the vapid little epilogue that seems inspired less by great fiction than B-list Hollywood scripts. Where the cataclysmic showdown in The Lord of the Rings leaves the Hobbits and Middle-earth irrevocably altered even in victory, the wizarding world merely returns to business as usual, restoring its most famous citizens to a life of middle-class comfort. At the end of this overly long saga, the reader leaves with the impression that what Harry was fighting for all along was his right–and now that of his children–to play Quidditch, cast cool spells and shop for the right wand. Or what George Bush would call “our way of life.” All great writers are wizards. Considering the mass Harrysteria of the last few days, who would have been surprised if they had logged on to YouTube at 12.01 a.m. Saturday and seen J.K. Rowling pronounce a curse -- "Mutatio libri!" -- that would magically change the final pages of her book and foil the overeager reviewers and Web spoilsports who revealed its surprise ending? Potter fans, relax—this review packs no spoilers. Instead, we’re taking advantage of our public platform to praise Rowling for the excellence of her plotting. We can’t think of anyone else who has sustained such an intricate, endlessly inventive plot over seven thick volumes and so constantly surprised us with twists, well-laid traps and Purloined Letter–style tricks. Hallows continues the tradition, both with sly feats of legerdemain and with several altogether new, unexpected elements. Perhaps some of the surprises in Hallows don’t have quite the punch as those of earlier books, but that may be because of the thoroughness and consistency with which Rowling has created her magical universe, and because we’ve so raptly absorbed its rules. Everyone knows that the Harry Potter books have been getting darker. With an introductory epigraph from Aeschylus's The Libation Bearers ("Oh, the torment bred in the race/the grinding scream of death") there is no doubt that the seventh and last volume in the sequence will face us with darkness visible. Belongs to SeriesHarry Potter (7) Is contained inHas the adaptationIs replied to inInspiredHas as a reference guide/companion
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Well, I didn't remember most of this :) I probably only read this last one once. But definitely my friend was right and the Fantastic Beasts movies interest me in a whole another level now. It's super fun to talk to someone about them who grew up with the books, since I was in my 20s when I read them first time. (