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Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows ハードカバー – 2007/7/21
英語版
J. K. Rowling
(著)
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'His hand closed automatically around the fake Horcrux, but in spite of everything, in spite of the dark and twisting path he saw stretching ahead for himself, in spite of the final meeting with Voldemort he knew must come, whether in a month, in a year, or in ten, he felt his heart lift at the thought that there was still one last golden day of peace left to enjoy with Ron and Hermione.' With these words Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince draws to a close. And here, in this seventh and final book, Harry discovers what fate truly has in store for him as he inexorably makes his way to that final meeting with Voldemort. In this thrilling climax to the phenomenally bestselling series, J.K. Rowling will reveal all to her eagerly waiting readers.
- 対象読者年齢11 ~ 15 歳
- 本の長さ608ページ
- 言語英語
- 寸法14 x 5 x 21 cm
- 出版社Arthur A. Levine Books
- 発売日2007/7/21
- ISBN-109780747591054
- ISBN-13978-0747591054
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レビュー
"'Like the rest of the world, I have to know what happens next.' Kate Saunders, New Statesman"
著者について
Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone was J.K. Rowling's first novel, followed by Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, as well as three books written for charity and inspired by the Harry Potter novels: Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, Quidditch Through the Ages and The Tales of Beedle the Bard. The Harry Potter novels have now sold over 400 million copies worldwide and been translated into 70 languages. J.K. Rowling has generated huge popular appeal for her books across the generations in an unprecedented fashion: she was the first children's author to be voted the BA Author of the Year, and also to win the British Book Awards Author of the Year. J.K. Rowling lives with her family in Edinburgh.
登録情報
- ASIN : 0747591059
- 出版社 : Arthur A. Levine Books (2007/7/21)
- 発売日 : 2007/7/21
- 言語 : 英語
- ハードカバー : 608ページ
- ISBN-10 : 9780747591054
- ISBN-13 : 978-0747591054
- 対象読者年齢 : 11 ~ 15 歳
- 寸法 : 14 x 5 x 21 cm
- Amazon 売れ筋ランキング: - 267,865位洋書 (洋書の売れ筋ランキングを見る)
- - 4,090位Children's Fantasy & Magic Books
- カスタマーレビュー:
著者について
著者をフォローして、新作のアップデートや改善されたおすすめを入手してください。

1965年生まれ。乳飲み子を抱え、生活保護を受けながら書いた『ハリー・ポッターと賢者の石』は、2007年7月にシリーズ全七巻が完結した。作品は数々の賞に輝き、2000年には英国女王からO.B.E.勲章を授与された(「BOOK著者紹介情報」より:本データは『 ハリー・ポッター裏話 (ISBN-13: 978-4863890077 )』が刊行された当時に掲載されていたものです)
カスタマーレビュー
5つ星のうち4.8
4.8/5
83,072 件のグローバル評価
評価はどのように計算されますか?
全体的な星の評価と星ごとの割合の内訳を計算するために、単純な平均は使用されません。その代わり、レビューの日時がどれだけ新しいかや、レビューアーがAmazonで商品を購入したかどうかなどが考慮されます。また、レビューを分析して信頼性が検証されます。
-
トップレビュー
上位レビュー、対象国: 日本
レビューのフィルタリング中に問題が発生しました。後でもう一度試してください。
2023年4月17日に日本でレビュー済み
Amazonで購入
Not necessarily a happy ending but I am glad I spent a lot of time reading 7 volumes. Wow. Time well-spent.
2023年2月15日に日本でレビュー済み
Amazonで購入
第1話から英文で読みました。はじめは途中で投げ出すに決まっていると思ってた。
わからなくなってくると息子の日本語版を見たりしてましたが、だんだん必要なくなってくる。
グイグイ引き込まれて7話まで読んでしまいました。
少年少女が読むように書かれているのだから、難解な所はありません。
日本語訳が残念過ぎる。3話から出てくるDementer は吸魂鬼と訳されたのですね。
mental を取り除いてしまう者。『Dementerにキスされると…』「死ぬの?」
『それより恐ろしい。Soullessで生き続ける』
英文に親しむのに最適かと。
わからなくなってくると息子の日本語版を見たりしてましたが、だんだん必要なくなってくる。
グイグイ引き込まれて7話まで読んでしまいました。
少年少女が読むように書かれているのだから、難解な所はありません。
日本語訳が残念過ぎる。3話から出てくるDementer は吸魂鬼と訳されたのですね。
mental を取り除いてしまう者。『Dementerにキスされると…』「死ぬの?」
『それより恐ろしい。Soullessで生き続ける』
英文に親しむのに最適かと。
2022年2月7日に日本でレビュー済み
Amazonで購入
今日(2/7)、届きました。状態はほんの少し背表紙が色落ち(?)してますが酷くはなく全体的に見れば他に目立った傷やヤケはないので綺麗な部類です。
2018年7月26日に日本でレビュー済み
Amazonで購入
Immersive, exhilarating, dramatic... I could keep going. It brought me closure and prepared me for the next set of books, of which I’m going to buy as soon as I finish this review.
2017年9月1日に日本でレビュー済み
Amazonで購入
ハードカバー: 608ページ
出版社: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC; Adult ed版 (2007/2/10)
ISBN-10: 0747591067 のレビュー。
ともかく全7巻をまとめあげた作者に感謝。こういったシリーズはだらだら続けてマンネリになったり、話を広げすぎて収拾がつかなくなったり、作者が飽きてしまったり、死亡して未完のままになったりしがちなものだが、このシリーズは一応話を収めて終っている。もちろん、読者それぞれには、納得できない事や不満が残る部分はあるだろうが、大河小説として満足できる完成度でしょう。
第6巻まで読んだ方で、この最終巻を読まずにすます方は少ないでしょう。まだ読み始めていない方は前半の巻をていねいに読むことをおすすめする。さまざまな伏線のほか、後半と呼応するシーンがたくさんあって、第6,7巻がより深く楽しめるだろう。たとえば、第3巻第2章のAunt Marge のアル中の描写は、第6巻第13章のMrs Cole(孤児院のマトロン)のアル中描写と呼応している。ジョークやドタバタでくりかえされるものもたくさんある。第4巻第5巻の冗長さにめげそうなかたも、がんばって読んでくれ。
全7巻読んでうれしいのは、ネット上のさまざまな情報がネタバレを気にせず参照できることだ。Sherbet Lemonって、わたしはラムネ菓子みたいなものだと思っていたが、違うんですね。 knickerbocker gloryってのも実在するんだ。ただし、妖精や怪物や人物のイメージなんか、映画化のあとでは映画のイメージしか出てこないのは困ったもんです。作者のローリングさんも、ちょっとインタビューなんかでしゃべりすぎのような気がする。ま、いいか。
20世紀の末、小説という古臭い形態で、これほど世界中を席巻するものが現れようとは、わたしにとってかなり意外であった。それも、純ブリティッシュの伝統の上に作られたものが、世界中にアピールするというのは驚くべきことですね。ブリティッシュ産の伝説や昔話をもとにしていることは言うまでもないけれども、その他にもブリティッシュ文化の厚い地層を見せつけられた。ジャーロック・ホームズなどのミステリ、ウッドハウスやダグラス・アダムズなどのユーモア小説やコメディ、ディケンズなどの大河小説など、さまざまな伝統を引き継いだ作品である。だから、この全7巻を読んだ方は、さらに深く広い世界へ旅立てるわけである。若い内にこんな作品に接することができた若い人たちがちょっとうらやましいね、年寄りとしては。
シリーズ全体の大きなテーマだる、家族・血筋・家柄の問題は、さまざまな作品で論じられる大きなテーマで、本シリーズの描き方・問題への焦点のあて方は、議論の土台やヒントになるでしょう。わたしは、ひょっとしてDraco Malfoyの父親はDobbyじゃないかなんて想像していたけど、さすがに、そんな反則技はなかったね。
最終巻のエピローグはちょっと、書きすぎですね。わたしはHarryが魔法の力を失って、Hagrid の後を継いでGamekeeperとして残るって結末を予想していたんだけどね。小説内の年月日をしっかりと確定したのはなんか意味があったんだろうか?
出版社: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC; Adult ed版 (2007/2/10)
ISBN-10: 0747591067 のレビュー。
ともかく全7巻をまとめあげた作者に感謝。こういったシリーズはだらだら続けてマンネリになったり、話を広げすぎて収拾がつかなくなったり、作者が飽きてしまったり、死亡して未完のままになったりしがちなものだが、このシリーズは一応話を収めて終っている。もちろん、読者それぞれには、納得できない事や不満が残る部分はあるだろうが、大河小説として満足できる完成度でしょう。
第6巻まで読んだ方で、この最終巻を読まずにすます方は少ないでしょう。まだ読み始めていない方は前半の巻をていねいに読むことをおすすめする。さまざまな伏線のほか、後半と呼応するシーンがたくさんあって、第6,7巻がより深く楽しめるだろう。たとえば、第3巻第2章のAunt Marge のアル中の描写は、第6巻第13章のMrs Cole(孤児院のマトロン)のアル中描写と呼応している。ジョークやドタバタでくりかえされるものもたくさんある。第4巻第5巻の冗長さにめげそうなかたも、がんばって読んでくれ。
全7巻読んでうれしいのは、ネット上のさまざまな情報がネタバレを気にせず参照できることだ。Sherbet Lemonって、わたしはラムネ菓子みたいなものだと思っていたが、違うんですね。 knickerbocker gloryってのも実在するんだ。ただし、妖精や怪物や人物のイメージなんか、映画化のあとでは映画のイメージしか出てこないのは困ったもんです。作者のローリングさんも、ちょっとインタビューなんかでしゃべりすぎのような気がする。ま、いいか。
20世紀の末、小説という古臭い形態で、これほど世界中を席巻するものが現れようとは、わたしにとってかなり意外であった。それも、純ブリティッシュの伝統の上に作られたものが、世界中にアピールするというのは驚くべきことですね。ブリティッシュ産の伝説や昔話をもとにしていることは言うまでもないけれども、その他にもブリティッシュ文化の厚い地層を見せつけられた。ジャーロック・ホームズなどのミステリ、ウッドハウスやダグラス・アダムズなどのユーモア小説やコメディ、ディケンズなどの大河小説など、さまざまな伝統を引き継いだ作品である。だから、この全7巻を読んだ方は、さらに深く広い世界へ旅立てるわけである。若い内にこんな作品に接することができた若い人たちがちょっとうらやましいね、年寄りとしては。
シリーズ全体の大きなテーマだる、家族・血筋・家柄の問題は、さまざまな作品で論じられる大きなテーマで、本シリーズの描き方・問題への焦点のあて方は、議論の土台やヒントになるでしょう。わたしは、ひょっとしてDraco Malfoyの父親はDobbyじゃないかなんて想像していたけど、さすがに、そんな反則技はなかったね。
最終巻のエピローグはちょっと、書きすぎですね。わたしはHarryが魔法の力を失って、Hagrid の後を継いでGamekeeperとして残るって結末を予想していたんだけどね。小説内の年月日をしっかりと確定したのはなんか意味があったんだろうか?
2019年3月25日に日本でレビュー済み
Amazonで購入
great story!
2017年1月10日に日本でレビュー済み
Amazonで購入
ええ、本の内容は良かったです。
…が、何しろ作者の ダンブルドアはゲイ発言で 台無しでした;;
最初に読んだのは発言前だったので楽しめましたが、もう そういう目でしか見れない…;
…が、何しろ作者の ダンブルドアはゲイ発言で 台無しでした;;
最初に読んだのは発言前だったので楽しめましたが、もう そういう目でしか見れない…;
2007年8月8日に日本でレビュー済み
Amazonで購入
By far the best story out of the seven books. Harry's world is so magical and so beyond our reach but but this book let's us reacknowledge that Harry's pain and suffering as well as his joys and excitement is something we can all relate to. Not only am I impressed with the story but I am also very much impressed with J.K. Rowling and her astonishing creativity that strung all of these seven books into completion very beautifully.
他の国からのトップレビュー
William L. Isley, Jr.
5つ星のうち5.0
Harry Potter: The Good and the Not So Good
2014年6月30日にアメリカ合衆国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
Harry Potter Part II: The Good and the Not So Good
A good way to evaluate Harry Potter is to compare it to Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings trilogy. Taking into account the facts that Tolkien’s masterpiece is the standard for fantasy literature and that Rowling is writing a slightly different genre and for a different audience, Harry Potter holds up fairly well. Nevertheless, Rowling falls short at a crucial point. That shortcoming, however, is one that much Christian thinking about God and evil shares. We desperately need to hear Tolkien in order to avoid the errors of moralism and a simplistic faith that cannot withstand the tidal waves of disappointment in the face of the hiddenness of God.
The similarities between Tolkien’s and Rowling’s works are obvious. They are both fantasy literature, have a deep concern with the dangers of power, and share a typically British appreciation for normal life.
The differences are just as important. Harry Potter is also a coming of age story and shows a marked preoccupation with death. The Lord of the Rings is an epic tale and so more in tune with the tragic dimension of life.
As a coming of age story, Harry Potter is necessarily geared to a younger audience than Tolkien, and, at least in the earlier volumes, is at the level of intelligent older children. As Harry, Ron, and Hermione grow up, the story becomes more appropriate for adolescents and young adults. I think this is why Rowling has so much more humor than does Tolkien. Her marvelous gift for invention is used to entertain children and teens. Howlers, disgusting jelly bean flavors, and quidditch are great fun. She also includes a wonderful collection of queer beasts and odd ball characters.
Tolkien is the better stylist. As an epic author his prose has a gravitas that is lacking in Rowling, and his landscape descriptions carry the reader into a world of sweeping grandeur. At times Rowling’s writing contains some painful lapses.
Rowling does avoid the trap of simplistic characterization, a failing of many children’s and cosmic conflict stories. Her characters are not mere cartoon figures of pure good and evil. There is internal conflict and failure by the good. Hermione can be a prig. In addition to Ron’s adolescent addiction to snogging (which is Rowling’s fault not his), he is subject to juvenile jealousy, and Harry can feel real hatred. Harry also has to come to grips with the fact that his father had mistreated Snape, and, as a young wizard, even Dumbledore had lusted for power.
Also, some of the bad characters are not purely evil. The Malfoy family is a case in point. Lucius Malfoy, a nasty bigoted man, in the end is a weak person. His wife Narcissa is too, but at the same time she is strongly devoted to her son Draco, a devotion that leads her to lie to Voldemort and save Harry Potter. Draco, the bad boy bully in all the earlier stories, still has enough decency not to want to kill Dumbledore and in the end, if not reconciled to Harry, at least has become a husband and a father who is no longer actively hostile to Potter.
Both Rowling and Tolkien finish their tales in the typically British fashion in which the great cosmic battle for evil results in the reestablishment of normal life. In Tolkien the Shire is restored, and Sam becomes happily married. In Harry Potter the main characters are married and send their children to Hogwarts.
Yet this return to the normal points to the most serious shortcoming of Harry Potter. Rowling’s portrayal of evil lacks the depth of Tolkien’s. Harry’s loss of his parents and friends poignantly portrays the human desire to escape the tragic consequences of death. Voldemort’s quest for immortality shows how that desire can be perverted to very evil ends. In the end, however, Harry can go on to live a normal life, having matured from his combat with evil but not being permanently marred by it. He can live a normal life even though he has a scar.
The effect of evil upon Frodo is lasting, symbolized by his loss of a finger and the injury received on Weathertop that never completely heals. Frodo does not just have battle wounds. He is a wounded person. He cannot return to a normal life in the Shire and is granted passage to Valinor where he will find peace.
As I watched Harry snap the Elder Wand and cast it into an abyss in the movie version of The Deathly Hallows (in the book he returns it to Dumbledore’s grave) so that it could never be used for evil purposes again, I couldn’t help but think of the contrast with Frodo and the ring of power. Harry, the true hero, resists the temptation to abuse power. In The Lord of the Rings Frodo fails. He cannot resist the temptation to keep the ring and use its power for himself. The ring is only destroyed because Gollum wants it for himself, takes it from Frodo, and then falls into the fires of Mount Doom.
In Tolkien evil is not defeated by the heroic efforts of an individual. Evil defeats itself in what he calls a “eucatastrophe” (See his “On Fairy-Stories” in Essays Presented to Charles Williams edited by C. S. Lewis.). Tolkien’s eucatastrophe is undoubtedly derived from the biblical notion of evil defeating itself, especially in the cross of Christ where the forces of evil do their worst and unwittingly trigger the means of saving the world.
The theme of evil defeating itself is present in Harry Potter. The killing curse that Voldemort uses upon Harry is his own undoing, but in the final analysis it is Harry’s heroic action that saves the day.
We Christians often present the Bible as a collection of tales about heroes from whom we can learn moral lessons and ways to live victoriously. We look for evident victories. Sadly our quest for evident victories means that we will seek power to win them. In so doing we walk by sight and thus succumb to power’s hidden capacity for evil.
We forget that God has chosen to reveal the biblical characters as sinners and frequently as failures. The hero of the biblical narrative is God, and his ways are not only higher than ours they are often hidden from us. In the darkest hour, at the moment of testing, the Christian will often fail. Yet even then the unseen hand of God’s providence is working to overcome evil. Indeed, the very victories of evil, such as the cross, are the moments of its greatest downfalls. By trusting in the hidden God, we learn to walk by faith and not by sight and overcome the temptations of power. As the Lord told Paul, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness” (2 Corinthians 12:9).
A good way to evaluate Harry Potter is to compare it to Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings trilogy. Taking into account the facts that Tolkien’s masterpiece is the standard for fantasy literature and that Rowling is writing a slightly different genre and for a different audience, Harry Potter holds up fairly well. Nevertheless, Rowling falls short at a crucial point. That shortcoming, however, is one that much Christian thinking about God and evil shares. We desperately need to hear Tolkien in order to avoid the errors of moralism and a simplistic faith that cannot withstand the tidal waves of disappointment in the face of the hiddenness of God.
The similarities between Tolkien’s and Rowling’s works are obvious. They are both fantasy literature, have a deep concern with the dangers of power, and share a typically British appreciation for normal life.
The differences are just as important. Harry Potter is also a coming of age story and shows a marked preoccupation with death. The Lord of the Rings is an epic tale and so more in tune with the tragic dimension of life.
As a coming of age story, Harry Potter is necessarily geared to a younger audience than Tolkien, and, at least in the earlier volumes, is at the level of intelligent older children. As Harry, Ron, and Hermione grow up, the story becomes more appropriate for adolescents and young adults. I think this is why Rowling has so much more humor than does Tolkien. Her marvelous gift for invention is used to entertain children and teens. Howlers, disgusting jelly bean flavors, and quidditch are great fun. She also includes a wonderful collection of queer beasts and odd ball characters.
Tolkien is the better stylist. As an epic author his prose has a gravitas that is lacking in Rowling, and his landscape descriptions carry the reader into a world of sweeping grandeur. At times Rowling’s writing contains some painful lapses.
Rowling does avoid the trap of simplistic characterization, a failing of many children’s and cosmic conflict stories. Her characters are not mere cartoon figures of pure good and evil. There is internal conflict and failure by the good. Hermione can be a prig. In addition to Ron’s adolescent addiction to snogging (which is Rowling’s fault not his), he is subject to juvenile jealousy, and Harry can feel real hatred. Harry also has to come to grips with the fact that his father had mistreated Snape, and, as a young wizard, even Dumbledore had lusted for power.
Also, some of the bad characters are not purely evil. The Malfoy family is a case in point. Lucius Malfoy, a nasty bigoted man, in the end is a weak person. His wife Narcissa is too, but at the same time she is strongly devoted to her son Draco, a devotion that leads her to lie to Voldemort and save Harry Potter. Draco, the bad boy bully in all the earlier stories, still has enough decency not to want to kill Dumbledore and in the end, if not reconciled to Harry, at least has become a husband and a father who is no longer actively hostile to Potter.
Both Rowling and Tolkien finish their tales in the typically British fashion in which the great cosmic battle for evil results in the reestablishment of normal life. In Tolkien the Shire is restored, and Sam becomes happily married. In Harry Potter the main characters are married and send their children to Hogwarts.
Yet this return to the normal points to the most serious shortcoming of Harry Potter. Rowling’s portrayal of evil lacks the depth of Tolkien’s. Harry’s loss of his parents and friends poignantly portrays the human desire to escape the tragic consequences of death. Voldemort’s quest for immortality shows how that desire can be perverted to very evil ends. In the end, however, Harry can go on to live a normal life, having matured from his combat with evil but not being permanently marred by it. He can live a normal life even though he has a scar.
The effect of evil upon Frodo is lasting, symbolized by his loss of a finger and the injury received on Weathertop that never completely heals. Frodo does not just have battle wounds. He is a wounded person. He cannot return to a normal life in the Shire and is granted passage to Valinor where he will find peace.
As I watched Harry snap the Elder Wand and cast it into an abyss in the movie version of The Deathly Hallows (in the book he returns it to Dumbledore’s grave) so that it could never be used for evil purposes again, I couldn’t help but think of the contrast with Frodo and the ring of power. Harry, the true hero, resists the temptation to abuse power. In The Lord of the Rings Frodo fails. He cannot resist the temptation to keep the ring and use its power for himself. The ring is only destroyed because Gollum wants it for himself, takes it from Frodo, and then falls into the fires of Mount Doom.
In Tolkien evil is not defeated by the heroic efforts of an individual. Evil defeats itself in what he calls a “eucatastrophe” (See his “On Fairy-Stories” in Essays Presented to Charles Williams edited by C. S. Lewis.). Tolkien’s eucatastrophe is undoubtedly derived from the biblical notion of evil defeating itself, especially in the cross of Christ where the forces of evil do their worst and unwittingly trigger the means of saving the world.
The theme of evil defeating itself is present in Harry Potter. The killing curse that Voldemort uses upon Harry is his own undoing, but in the final analysis it is Harry’s heroic action that saves the day.
We Christians often present the Bible as a collection of tales about heroes from whom we can learn moral lessons and ways to live victoriously. We look for evident victories. Sadly our quest for evident victories means that we will seek power to win them. In so doing we walk by sight and thus succumb to power’s hidden capacity for evil.
We forget that God has chosen to reveal the biblical characters as sinners and frequently as failures. The hero of the biblical narrative is God, and his ways are not only higher than ours they are often hidden from us. In the darkest hour, at the moment of testing, the Christian will often fail. Yet even then the unseen hand of God’s providence is working to overcome evil. Indeed, the very victories of evil, such as the cross, are the moments of its greatest downfalls. By trusting in the hidden God, we learn to walk by faith and not by sight and overcome the temptations of power. As the Lord told Paul, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness” (2 Corinthians 12:9).
Cliente Amazon
5つ星のうち5.0
Perfeito
2023年7月27日にブラジルでレビュー済みAmazonで購入
Chegou no prazo e o livro é lindo. Para quem quer praticar inglês e gosta de Harry Potter, super indico.
Kevin J. Loria
5つ星のうち5.0
An exceptionally satisfying bookend to an exceptional series that will live on long past the final Hollywood interpretations
2007年7月22日にアメリカ合衆国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
I MUST NOT TELL LIES....I rarely find that final books, movies, etc. live up to expectations, especially ones generating such a mainstream buzz. But after nearly a decade of devotion, as a reader introduced to the series early, I am content with Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. This is also exceptional because of the sheer enormity of the body count on this one, like the 2 books before it, most of the fallen turned out to be my favorite characters. The author had released before the release that two major characters who die. This is an understatement. Of course, plenty of death happen "off screen," TEN deaths are "major" players in the sense that they appear in 4-7 books!
While J.K.Rowling avoids making this the largest novel in order to answer all the questions and plot requirements, she does do the finale staple in the referencing or return of many, many, many concepts, characters and catch-phases of the past 6 books. Settings, spells and special guest appearances are all welcome additions to HP VII. Things big and small appear with parts to play: For example Dedalus Diggle, a very minor player, was the first wizard to appear in Book 1, and he is the first to do so here in the final story. Other characters returning in person or as a passing reference include the likes of: Mr. Ollivander, the surviving members of the Order and the D.A., the Malfoys, the Weasley's Ghoul, Stan Shunpike, Grindelvald, Nearly-Headless-Nick, Norbert, Bathilda Bagshot, R.A.B., Gregorovitch, Viktor Krum, the Lovegoods, house elves, Wormtail just to name a few. Watch out for cameos or references to inanimate and animate objects like, Harry's first snitch, his invisibility cloak (which plays a major role ), the Monster Book of Monsters, the Whomping Willow, the Marauder's Map, pensieves, Polyjuice Potion, and even Sirius' flying motorcycle as referenced early in Sorcerers' Stone.
Book SIX focused on tracking down the Horcruxes or magical objects into which the Dark Lord Voldemort a.k.a Tom Riddle has divided his soul to be virtually immortal. Horcruxes we've seen the Diary, the Ring, the great snake Nagini and Voldemort himself. We get some insight into his history and plans, but by the end of Half-Blood Prince we have as more questions than answers.
Questions ultimately answered in Book Seven:
Is HARRY himself one of the remaining Horcruxes?
How to destroy them? How did Dumbledore destroy the ring?
Where is real locket Horcrux? Who is R.A.B.?
What becomes of Hogwarts?
Is Snape evil? Why did Dumbledore trust him?
Did Dumbledore have a plan?
What are the Deathly Hallows? What is Voldemort's ultimate goal?
Must HARRY die to stop Voldemort?
What did Dumbledore really see in the Mirror of Erised, back in Book 1?
BOOK 7... Careful some plot spoilers below.......
This one opens with scenes behind enemy lines, revealing Harry's 17th birthday and the end of his protection from the Dark Lord is fast approaching. The Death Eaters are ready for the Order's plan to move Harry to a safe house. Following a down-rite heart warming good-bye to the Dursleys, the action-packed escape ends with the loss of more than just Harry's broom, but two friends fall as his childhood innocence is symbolically stripped from him. Things slow-down just long enough for The Wedding, before the chill is off the drinks all hell breaks lose and Harry's quest begins again for the "you know whats" and this time Harry's archetype takes on literal interpretation as his searches for a sword, "the Sword of Gryffindor" possibly the only way to finish his assignment for Dumbledore.
The Sword is at Hogwarts and Hogwarts is again controlled by the Ministry, but a corrupt or controlled government which has placed Snape as Headmaster. He has the Sword in Dumbledore's office, or does he? This quest and the search for the Horcruxes lead Harry back to the ex-headquarters of the Order, Grimmauld Place where he makes things right with Kreacher, the house elf willed to Harry along with the family estate itself.
Harry visits his own family's home which has become a memorial of sorts like GRACELAND. I think Hermione would disapprove of the graffiti there as well. Before this there is a daring visit to the "Muggle-Born Registration Commission. Forced further into hiding the trio learn more of Dumbledore's early history, the tale of the 3 Brothers and possible revelations about Harry's cloak.
The Sword is recovered by a Gryffindor other than Harry, but pulled from a lake like the Arthur archetype. Harry learns the hard way that there is power and fear in a name as the taboo on the Dark Lords name leads to the trio's capture and imprisonment at Malfoy Manor where Voldemort himself is a house-guest. Wormtail makes good on his debit to Harry. Ultimately they escape at the cost of a friend's LIFE along with fellow prisoners: Griphook the Goblin, Luna Lovegood and wandmaker Ollivander. They learn lots of wand lore that will be Harry's key weapon in his "final" battle with the Dark Lord, the "Elder Wand" will be the deciding force. Griphook will lead Harry and friends as they break into the best protected place in the wizarding world Gringotts Bank in order to claim a Horcrux. Are there really Dragons and traps protecting the place? Griphooks price for this good deed?
During return to HOGWARTS, new secret entrance to the school is revealed, along with a character previously only referenced Aberforth Dumbledore, who reveals his late brother's motivating guilt. Also the D.A. are summoned, among others to help Harry in his final quest. Harry up to this point has walked a fine line, between falling into the traps that both Tom Riddle and Dumbledore fell. The desire for the "Greater Good" costing a lot of lives. For all of his trust in people Dumbledore's greatest weakness was his secretiveness, and it cost both him and Harry plenty. Meanwhile, Harry risks his life turning away from killing whenever possible, Lupin even calls him on this early in this story. Harry here makes a choice to include the D.A., his friends & students from Hogwarts in his last mission for Dumbledore. This final battle at the school sees the return of many magical forces from the Forest and more. What begins as a play for time becomes the end of the war. The cast of characters and tied up plot lines is enormous here, Ron proves his worth and cleverness in "now or never" moments while Neville Longbottom proves himself a true Gryffindor as well.
Fear not there is an epilogue that is a satisfying bookend for the series as is the entire novel, "An exceptionally satisfying bookend to an exceptional series" that will live on long past the final Hollywood interpretations, as surely as THE CHUDLEY CANNONS will rank bottom of this years LEAGUE!!"
Thanks J.K.
Long live Gryffindor, where dwell the Brave at Heart!
While J.K.Rowling avoids making this the largest novel in order to answer all the questions and plot requirements, she does do the finale staple in the referencing or return of many, many, many concepts, characters and catch-phases of the past 6 books. Settings, spells and special guest appearances are all welcome additions to HP VII. Things big and small appear with parts to play: For example Dedalus Diggle, a very minor player, was the first wizard to appear in Book 1, and he is the first to do so here in the final story. Other characters returning in person or as a passing reference include the likes of: Mr. Ollivander, the surviving members of the Order and the D.A., the Malfoys, the Weasley's Ghoul, Stan Shunpike, Grindelvald, Nearly-Headless-Nick, Norbert, Bathilda Bagshot, R.A.B., Gregorovitch, Viktor Krum, the Lovegoods, house elves, Wormtail just to name a few. Watch out for cameos or references to inanimate and animate objects like, Harry's first snitch, his invisibility cloak (which plays a major role ), the Monster Book of Monsters, the Whomping Willow, the Marauder's Map, pensieves, Polyjuice Potion, and even Sirius' flying motorcycle as referenced early in Sorcerers' Stone.
Book SIX focused on tracking down the Horcruxes or magical objects into which the Dark Lord Voldemort a.k.a Tom Riddle has divided his soul to be virtually immortal. Horcruxes we've seen the Diary, the Ring, the great snake Nagini and Voldemort himself. We get some insight into his history and plans, but by the end of Half-Blood Prince we have as more questions than answers.
Questions ultimately answered in Book Seven:
Is HARRY himself one of the remaining Horcruxes?
How to destroy them? How did Dumbledore destroy the ring?
Where is real locket Horcrux? Who is R.A.B.?
What becomes of Hogwarts?
Is Snape evil? Why did Dumbledore trust him?
Did Dumbledore have a plan?
What are the Deathly Hallows? What is Voldemort's ultimate goal?
Must HARRY die to stop Voldemort?
What did Dumbledore really see in the Mirror of Erised, back in Book 1?
BOOK 7... Careful some plot spoilers below.......
This one opens with scenes behind enemy lines, revealing Harry's 17th birthday and the end of his protection from the Dark Lord is fast approaching. The Death Eaters are ready for the Order's plan to move Harry to a safe house. Following a down-rite heart warming good-bye to the Dursleys, the action-packed escape ends with the loss of more than just Harry's broom, but two friends fall as his childhood innocence is symbolically stripped from him. Things slow-down just long enough for The Wedding, before the chill is off the drinks all hell breaks lose and Harry's quest begins again for the "you know whats" and this time Harry's archetype takes on literal interpretation as his searches for a sword, "the Sword of Gryffindor" possibly the only way to finish his assignment for Dumbledore.
The Sword is at Hogwarts and Hogwarts is again controlled by the Ministry, but a corrupt or controlled government which has placed Snape as Headmaster. He has the Sword in Dumbledore's office, or does he? This quest and the search for the Horcruxes lead Harry back to the ex-headquarters of the Order, Grimmauld Place where he makes things right with Kreacher, the house elf willed to Harry along with the family estate itself.
Harry visits his own family's home which has become a memorial of sorts like GRACELAND. I think Hermione would disapprove of the graffiti there as well. Before this there is a daring visit to the "Muggle-Born Registration Commission. Forced further into hiding the trio learn more of Dumbledore's early history, the tale of the 3 Brothers and possible revelations about Harry's cloak.
The Sword is recovered by a Gryffindor other than Harry, but pulled from a lake like the Arthur archetype. Harry learns the hard way that there is power and fear in a name as the taboo on the Dark Lords name leads to the trio's capture and imprisonment at Malfoy Manor where Voldemort himself is a house-guest. Wormtail makes good on his debit to Harry. Ultimately they escape at the cost of a friend's LIFE along with fellow prisoners: Griphook the Goblin, Luna Lovegood and wandmaker Ollivander. They learn lots of wand lore that will be Harry's key weapon in his "final" battle with the Dark Lord, the "Elder Wand" will be the deciding force. Griphook will lead Harry and friends as they break into the best protected place in the wizarding world Gringotts Bank in order to claim a Horcrux. Are there really Dragons and traps protecting the place? Griphooks price for this good deed?
During return to HOGWARTS, new secret entrance to the school is revealed, along with a character previously only referenced Aberforth Dumbledore, who reveals his late brother's motivating guilt. Also the D.A. are summoned, among others to help Harry in his final quest. Harry up to this point has walked a fine line, between falling into the traps that both Tom Riddle and Dumbledore fell. The desire for the "Greater Good" costing a lot of lives. For all of his trust in people Dumbledore's greatest weakness was his secretiveness, and it cost both him and Harry plenty. Meanwhile, Harry risks his life turning away from killing whenever possible, Lupin even calls him on this early in this story. Harry here makes a choice to include the D.A., his friends & students from Hogwarts in his last mission for Dumbledore. This final battle at the school sees the return of many magical forces from the Forest and more. What begins as a play for time becomes the end of the war. The cast of characters and tied up plot lines is enormous here, Ron proves his worth and cleverness in "now or never" moments while Neville Longbottom proves himself a true Gryffindor as well.
Fear not there is an epilogue that is a satisfying bookend for the series as is the entire novel, "An exceptionally satisfying bookend to an exceptional series" that will live on long past the final Hollywood interpretations, as surely as THE CHUDLEY CANNONS will rank bottom of this years LEAGUE!!"
Thanks J.K.
Long live Gryffindor, where dwell the Brave at Heart!
abrar waliuddin
5つ星のうち5.0
good quality
2023年8月8日にオーストラリアでレビュー済みAmazonで購入
books in good condition and arrived on time
NoLongerHere
5つ星のうち5.0
Are there MORE than 5 stars to give?
2007年7月24日にアメリカ合衆国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
Allow me to begin by saying I refuse to spoil any part of any of these books for anyone for any reason. If you haven't read the books, stop here, buy them, read them, return...
That being said, instead of detailing the book (as I normally would in a review) I'll recount my own experience:
I pre-ordered this book when it first became available to do so. At that time, I had not read any of the books, but had seen the first four movies based upon the books. I promptly purchased the 6 books which precede the Deathly Hallows and read them.. the Order of the Phoenix I read three times, the Half Blood Prince I read twice and completed my second read one week prior to the release of the Deathly Hallows. I was intent on reading the series and this final book before anyone could spoil the ending for me. You see, I had already learned the fate of ... some of the characters involved in OOP and HBP, because there are people in this world who live off of the pleasure of ruining things for other people. I was determined to read the series and this final book before some loud mouth jerk could ruin it for me. I succeeded.
With one week to go for the book release I began thinking that perhaps all these questions swelling inside of me - is Snape friend or foe? where are the horcruxes? will Harry live? - and so many other questions did not need answering. The magic of this series was in bringing out the discussion, the last few months (well over a year, actually) have had fans on the edges of their collective seats, casting about all kinds of theory and conjecture, ideas born of the tiniest details about mundance things. The magic - the true magic of it all - was in bringing together generations of readers in discussion about one of our era's literary masterworks.
One week to go to get the book, and I was telling myself that I'd rather not read it, that I'd rather put it neatly on a shelf, so that no matter what happens to who, the magic would always live on, the dicussions would never end, the theories and conjectures would continue to bind readers together. A very noble, yet unrealistic notion, I agree. I had my fears that certain characters would die, and in not reading this book, I theorized that they would live forever if I never read about their deaths.
The evening prior to the book's release, my daughter attended a Potter party at a Barnes & Noble book store. She is not a fan - she likes the movies, but she's not a fan of science fiction or fantasy, and has refused to read the books. Okay. She's entitled to her tastes. But she attended the party because some of her friends are Potter fans. I sat home, jealous that I wasn't a teenager and therefore way too old to attend a Potter party. I should have gone, I regret not going - the last of the Potter hooplas, the last Hallow's Ball. At any rate, my daughter brought home a wand and some Potter glow-in-the-dark eye glasses for me. I would like to have gone, but how sad is it to see a 40-something woman dressed as a witch for a Potter party? Perhaps not sad at all, but I feared being the oldest witch at the party...
At midnight, I leaped from my seat and counted down the 60 seconds to the 12:01am mark of release of the book. My husband, who is use to my insane moments such as this, simply looked at me and nodded off.
The next day - delivery day! - I cleaned every square inch of my house waiting for the UPS delivery van to pull up and bring me my book. I started cleaning at 8am... the book arrived at 4pm. A full day of scrubbing everything around me in a vain attempt to make the time go faster so that the book would finally arrive. I knew that once the book did arrive, nothing would get done.
I had two hours to read the opening chapters of the book, because we had planned to make an excursion to a drive-in movie theater that evening to see the Order of the Phoenix movie. I very reluctantly put the precious book down for the evening.
Sunday, July 22nd: the day I was able to spend every waking hour with Harry Potter and Co. I gathered the book, a bottle of water, a blanket and pillow, and headed out to my backyard where I have a hammock which hangs by a stream, overlooking a deep patch of woods. My own Forbidden Forest, of sorts.
It is now Tuesday afternoon, and the book is completed. I spent some time re-reading chapters before completing the book, just to make sure I had fully absorbed everything.
It is a wonderful book, it answers just about everything you'd want answered. There are some questions which are left open, and perhaps JKR did this to keep alive the discussions, or perhaps these questions are answered already (and the books need to be re-read). But mostly everything you'd want answered is indeed answered, albeit some things are way off from what many of us believed. Some, however, are right on. I recall several times yelling outloud, "I knew it!" There were MANY times when I sat here with a hand over my mouth, in stunned awe at what I was reading. And still, there were plenty of times I burst out crying.
No disappointment in the way this book was written, the way the whole story comes to its fruition, or the way the characters who survive, survive. And that little "crack" that JKR says she slipped in there incase she wanted to return to the 'wizarding world?' Yes, I even liked that (I don't normally). It works. It all works. It all makes perfect sense, and it could not have ended any other way.
Thank you - thank you - thank you - JKR. Thank you for such a wonderful fantasy, a wonderful world and this awesome, incredible boy, Harry Potter. Thank you.
That being said, instead of detailing the book (as I normally would in a review) I'll recount my own experience:
I pre-ordered this book when it first became available to do so. At that time, I had not read any of the books, but had seen the first four movies based upon the books. I promptly purchased the 6 books which precede the Deathly Hallows and read them.. the Order of the Phoenix I read three times, the Half Blood Prince I read twice and completed my second read one week prior to the release of the Deathly Hallows. I was intent on reading the series and this final book before anyone could spoil the ending for me. You see, I had already learned the fate of ... some of the characters involved in OOP and HBP, because there are people in this world who live off of the pleasure of ruining things for other people. I was determined to read the series and this final book before some loud mouth jerk could ruin it for me. I succeeded.
With one week to go for the book release I began thinking that perhaps all these questions swelling inside of me - is Snape friend or foe? where are the horcruxes? will Harry live? - and so many other questions did not need answering. The magic of this series was in bringing out the discussion, the last few months (well over a year, actually) have had fans on the edges of their collective seats, casting about all kinds of theory and conjecture, ideas born of the tiniest details about mundance things. The magic - the true magic of it all - was in bringing together generations of readers in discussion about one of our era's literary masterworks.
One week to go to get the book, and I was telling myself that I'd rather not read it, that I'd rather put it neatly on a shelf, so that no matter what happens to who, the magic would always live on, the dicussions would never end, the theories and conjectures would continue to bind readers together. A very noble, yet unrealistic notion, I agree. I had my fears that certain characters would die, and in not reading this book, I theorized that they would live forever if I never read about their deaths.
The evening prior to the book's release, my daughter attended a Potter party at a Barnes & Noble book store. She is not a fan - she likes the movies, but she's not a fan of science fiction or fantasy, and has refused to read the books. Okay. She's entitled to her tastes. But she attended the party because some of her friends are Potter fans. I sat home, jealous that I wasn't a teenager and therefore way too old to attend a Potter party. I should have gone, I regret not going - the last of the Potter hooplas, the last Hallow's Ball. At any rate, my daughter brought home a wand and some Potter glow-in-the-dark eye glasses for me. I would like to have gone, but how sad is it to see a 40-something woman dressed as a witch for a Potter party? Perhaps not sad at all, but I feared being the oldest witch at the party...
At midnight, I leaped from my seat and counted down the 60 seconds to the 12:01am mark of release of the book. My husband, who is use to my insane moments such as this, simply looked at me and nodded off.
The next day - delivery day! - I cleaned every square inch of my house waiting for the UPS delivery van to pull up and bring me my book. I started cleaning at 8am... the book arrived at 4pm. A full day of scrubbing everything around me in a vain attempt to make the time go faster so that the book would finally arrive. I knew that once the book did arrive, nothing would get done.
I had two hours to read the opening chapters of the book, because we had planned to make an excursion to a drive-in movie theater that evening to see the Order of the Phoenix movie. I very reluctantly put the precious book down for the evening.
Sunday, July 22nd: the day I was able to spend every waking hour with Harry Potter and Co. I gathered the book, a bottle of water, a blanket and pillow, and headed out to my backyard where I have a hammock which hangs by a stream, overlooking a deep patch of woods. My own Forbidden Forest, of sorts.
It is now Tuesday afternoon, and the book is completed. I spent some time re-reading chapters before completing the book, just to make sure I had fully absorbed everything.
It is a wonderful book, it answers just about everything you'd want answered. There are some questions which are left open, and perhaps JKR did this to keep alive the discussions, or perhaps these questions are answered already (and the books need to be re-read). But mostly everything you'd want answered is indeed answered, albeit some things are way off from what many of us believed. Some, however, are right on. I recall several times yelling outloud, "I knew it!" There were MANY times when I sat here with a hand over my mouth, in stunned awe at what I was reading. And still, there were plenty of times I burst out crying.
No disappointment in the way this book was written, the way the whole story comes to its fruition, or the way the characters who survive, survive. And that little "crack" that JKR says she slipped in there incase she wanted to return to the 'wizarding world?' Yes, I even liked that (I don't normally). It works. It all works. It all makes perfect sense, and it could not have ended any other way.
Thank you - thank you - thank you - JKR. Thank you for such a wonderful fantasy, a wonderful world and this awesome, incredible boy, Harry Potter. Thank you.






