Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince1/26/2009 10:01:00 AM
By now, everyone knows the story of Harry Potter, the orphaned boy sent to live with his horrible aunt and uncle. When he finds out that he is a wizard on his eleventh birthday, his world changes forever, and not necessarily for the better.
While at first Harry is able to get away from the horrible existence he has with the Dursleys, the wizarding world has its own dark secrets underneath the surface that soon come to light.
Each book in the series has grown in size and in darkness, depth of story and character detail. Harry's sixth year at Hogwart’s School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince" is no exception. In fact, this may be his darkest year yet.
At the end of Harry's fourth year, detailed in "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire," Lord Voldemort had returned to life, regaining power and strength once more. At the end of "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix," the second war had begun and no Witch or Wizard was safe.
At the beginning of "Half-Blood Prince," two weeks after the ending of "Order of the Phoenix," Harry is waiting for Albus Dumbledore to collect him at the Dursleys. While Harry is keen to leave, there is something inside him that doesn't believe he will be able to escape the prison of the Dursleys after only two weeks. Harry is wrong, however, and is soon leaving number four Privet Drive after his shortest stay yet.
After helping Dumbledore bring a new teacher on staff, Horace Slughorn, Dumbledore takes Harry to the Burrow where he is to live out the rest of his summer with the Weasleys. Before entering the Burrow, however, Dumbledore informs Harry that he would like to have private lessons with him this year. When Harry presses Dumbledore on what he is going to be learning this year, Dumbledore is vague, but Harry suspects it has to do with the prophecy he heard the year before: "Neither can live while the other survives..."
With Dumbledore’s private lessons on the horizon, two new staff appointments and Lord Voldemort alive and wreaking havoc on the Muggle and Wizarding world alike, it looks as if Harry's sixth year will be his most exciting – and dangerous - yet...
Of course, I've barely scratched the surface of the plot of this book. To go into further detail would ruin the book for the one or two people in the world who still haven't read "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince." For those people, I say only this: What are you waiting for?
"Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince" actually topped my previous favorite book in the series, "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban" and that's saying something. While I found "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix" to lag in places and a bit too long, I found "The Half-Blood Prince" to zoom along at lightning quick pace. I was finished the book before I knew it and wondered, vaguely, where the rest of it was. Surely, the book couldn't just end like that, could it?
"Half-Blood Prince" is the best book in the series so far. It's got action, danger, laughs, love, a painful death; all the things that make fiction great. As well, character development is at an all time high. Gone is surly, angry Harry. The Harry we know and love is back. All the characters are growing up; they are now sixteen years of age.
Though some reviewers didn't care for the kissing scenes, I felt that they lent a realism to the character development. Rowling is letting her characters grow up along with the readers, instead of having them remain static. This should be heralded instead of looked down upon.
I read the book three times in a row before I felt sated enough to put it down. I figured I had waited two years for this book and I was going to read it as many times as I wanted, thank you very much. Now, with another two year wait for the conclusion to what are the best books I have ever read, I can only wonder this: What will happen next? Only time will tell...
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Having read Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, I am reminded of a quote from another novel.
Years ago I had the pleasure of reading Wizards First Rule by Terry Goodkind. And though the rest of the novels in the series weren’t as good as the first, something that Zed, the wise old wizard, told Richard has stuck with me for years: Nothing is ever easy.
This mantra has stayed with me for years and has done me well in times of strife and hardship. I only wish it could so the same for Harry Potter, Ronald Weasley and Hermione Granger.
In a word, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows is amazing. It has gone well above and beyond anything I could have expected, anything I could have hoped for and anything I dreamed of. It’s exceeded my expectations and then some and has made me view the entire series of books in a new light.
What I find so shocking is its darkness. The darkness was always there but now it’s out in full force and we see what kind of a world that they live in. It’s a world of power, a world of changing alliances and a world of very dark magic. There are parts in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows that left me breathless with their malevolence and there are quite a few parts where I had to sit back and wonder if I would let my child read this.
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows is about strength, about cunning. About solving puzzles and mysteries that seem unsolvable; it’s about choosing your destiny and what choices you make. It’s also about prejudices and, while reading about the wizarding world, you can’t help but see clear parallels between their world and ours.
Unfortunately, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows is also about death. It is a literary bloodbath. There is such violence here, so much bloodshed. And so many deaths.
Because of this, I find myself in a state of mourning. Characters have died that I feel closer to than many real flesh and blood people that I know. I have cried, laughed and cried again through most of this novel and now that I am nearing the end, the end of ten years of waiting and wanting and needing, I feel like as if a part of me is about to die.
I have lived with Harry through so much and the fact that it is coming to an end is something I don’t think I can face. But, I am reminded once again of my mantra: Nothing is ever easy. I will try to be as strong as I can and make Harry proud and finish Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.
Besides, it need not be an ending. Instead, it will be a new beginning.
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I was given Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix on DVD. My husband Robert gave it to me as a cheer up present. He went the extra mile and got me the special two disc edition, knowing that I am a Special Features Junkie.
I have three addictions in life. Four if you count Chocolate. But the first three are: Harry Potter, Books and Special Features. I love DVD extras. They really enable you to see what the film could have been, what was left out.
I think of them as little lost treasures, little bits of fun.
Now, having watched Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, I can truly say that it is by far the best film in the series. It's fresh, engaging, moving, and beautiful. I loved watching it more the second time on DVD than I did when I saw it the first time.
This may have something to do with the fact that, in the theatre, there was a gentleman behind me that talked through the entire bloody thing. Or maybe because when I got to watch it at home, it was on a new twenty six inch screen; but I digress.
I was all excited to look at the Special Features after watching the film. The Husband (Hello Husband!) went off to do his thing. I popped in the second disc of the DVD, preparing myself to be enraptured.
Previous DVD editions of the movie have included games, maps, Triwizard Tournament Challenges, Potion Making Classes, a spidery maze, hidden extras and more. So imagine my surprise when I popped in the second DVD and saw a menu of only five things:
Languages, The Hidden Secrets of Harry Potter, Tour with Tonks and The Magic of Editing.
Measly fare at best. Where were the games, where were the extras, the fun stuff? Where were the Special Features that really helped me get behind the film. Nowhere I could see. I took a cursery glance through everything and announced it all tosh.
As it turned out, I was wrong. Very wrong indeed.