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View Full Version : Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows? Anyone read it?



slinkedog
07-23-2007, 01:51 PM
Just wondering if there are any other Harry Potter readers out there. If you read it or are reading it, I'd love to hear your thoughts!

I got it Friday night and was done by early evening on Saturday. I won't say anything about the content for fear of posting spoilers. PM me if you want to talk about it, I guess! :)

Meg McKilty
07-23-2007, 01:52 PM
It was as if I was in the battles themselves. She is such an excellent storyteller.

Trekhawk
07-23-2007, 02:07 PM
Loved it!!! Just sad thats the last.

rebran
07-23-2007, 02:09 PM
I was to tired to ride Saturday and Sunday because I stayed up so late reading. . .I thought it was fantastic :)

snapdragen
07-23-2007, 03:25 PM
I'm about 3/4 through with it, I'll finish tonight.:cool:

maillotpois
07-23-2007, 03:39 PM
OMG!! I read quickly, but I have barely scratched the surface. I think I am spending too much time getting caught up on the Tour after my trip to Bend! I better get reading!! :p

I tell you, that's a hard book to read lying in bed. It's HEAVY!! My upper body strength is not what it used to be. :D

salsabike
07-23-2007, 03:53 PM
Just got my copy today.

slinkedog
07-23-2007, 03:59 PM
I tell you, that's a hard book to read lying in bed. It's HEAVY!! My upper body strength is not what it used to be. :D


YES!! I had the same problem. I tried to lay it on my bed and lean over it, but I got sick of that and finally just went back out to the couch.

DrBadger
07-23-2007, 04:21 PM
I am about 2/3 of the way through... will try to finish tonight as I have a friend who wants it.

So far am loving it, but am also sad that it is the last one :(

limewave
07-23-2007, 04:36 PM
Hi, I'm Heather and I'm a widow to Harry Potter. DH has been reading it non-stop between working and watching le Tour. He won't talk to me. He doesn't hear me when I call for him. All he does is sit and read and eat cookies and milk. It's like he's reverted back to the fifth grad. God love 'im.

Mr. Bloom
07-23-2007, 05:36 PM
Silver took SilverSon to get it at midnight Friday:eek: :eek: :eek:

I'm getting the Cliff Note version from him

I read the last chapter though:rolleyes: :rolleyes: ...and he's filling in the detail:) :)

I'm very, very naughty;)

slinkedog
07-23-2007, 05:41 PM
Silver took SilverSon to get it at midnight Friday:eek: :eek: :eek:

I'm getting the Cliff Note version from him

I read the last chapter though:rolleyes: :rolleyes: ...and he's filling in the detail:) :)

I'm very, very naughty;)

Bad Mr. Silver!! My mother read the last chapter before she would consent to reading the entire book. I was pretty disappointed in her!! ;)

winddance
07-23-2007, 06:05 PM
I have to admit that I peeked at the last chapter after I was over halfway through. Bad me. But, I was glad I did. I finished early yesterday afternoon.

My friends and I are debating whether books 5-7 are actually appropriate for children. What do you think? I mean, I'm just happy to see kids (and adults of all types) reading, but there was an awful lot of life/death going on in the final 3. Very, very interesting.

Zen
07-23-2007, 06:13 PM
I'm more of a Nancy Drew fan:p

Mr. Bloom
07-23-2007, 06:36 PM
I'm more of a Nancy Drew fan:p


Yeah, but is Nancy Drew a billionaire????

slinkedog
07-23-2007, 06:37 PM
I have 3 under the age of 8 and I haven't read any of the books to them yet. Even the unicorn blood part in book 1 would freak them out. My almost 8 year old will probably be ready to read the first couple this year. I guess it depends on the kid.

margo49
07-23-2007, 07:31 PM
After getting it 36 hours after Everyone Else due to the Theocracy I am living under *and* trying to fit it in with the TdF...I finished it last night.
The best book since the first one. Lots of action and wonderful themes about Life, love, racism, power going to people's heads, and teenagers biting off more than they can chew but surviving and winning through. Brilliant ending or endings.

Mr. Bloom
07-24-2007, 01:53 AM
Without saying anything else, I think that Snape has consistently proven to be the 'richest' character in the sense of depth and dimension. While Harry is the star, JKR really made a masterpiece in his character...right to the end, we're still guessing, "is he or isn't he????"

Slinke, I agree that your kids are way too young...and a couple of the movies are way too 'dark' for such an age. But then, their 'age' will have its own epic blockbuster someday

PS: SilverSon finished it last night...that means I'm now fully informed:p

jeannierides
07-24-2007, 06:08 AM
:eek: Ok, it looks like I may just be the last living human to not have read any of the HP books! I am an avid reader, just never thought I would be interested. Evidentally that's heresy (or close to it)! I was sitting by the pool Sunday, reading my latest who-done-it, when my SO saw that a nearby sun-worshipper was reading a HP book... needless to say... almost an hour later I was ready to hit him over the head for even asking, 'cuz she was still talking...:( :rolleyes:
Ok, so here's the question... should I start now with the first... or just hop on the last one... :rolleyes:

snapdragen
07-24-2007, 08:22 AM
Finished! :cool: No spoilers - it ended as it should have. I'm very pleased.

:D

Cyclo Kitty
07-24-2007, 08:32 AM
Begin at the beginning-- it won't be as much fun if you don't, and the foreshadowing and tension won't work as well. You'd need to at least start with the Prisoner of Azkaban, and the first two are so short (comparatively) that they'll be like canapes to the main course of the later novels.

The Deathly Hallows is really the best one, better written and constructed, I thought.I read the book straight thru on Saturday starting at about 7 pm...I was sleepy on Sunday! Then DH and I saw Order of the Phoenix yesterday on our one kid-free day. I will say that I was glad to have seen the movie after finishing the last book--it really made Snape so much more interesting and even a poignant character, even in his chilliness.

My 8-almost-9-year-old son loves Harry Potter, and wants to start reading the first one. It's a stretch for him (he's dyslexic) but I think worth trying.

Geonz
07-24-2007, 08:33 AM
I didn't read 'em for a while - usually what is popular with the masses is dross to me. My librarian friend said they were good stories... and they are.
I would definitely start with the first one... and it's a bit of a slow start, too. Hang on... once you're in, it picks up and is tons of fun.
THe fourth book or so things do change radically and go from kids' adventures to darker stories that involve the whole world.
I do sympathize with an English prof here who said she stopped at the third book because she was disappointed that the whole society had such strictly stereotyped roles, especially gender roles (but not limited to that). I'd already accepted that... that this was a story of heroic action by very imperfect people in a very imperfect society (and I love how the wizard world's "little issues" unfold... goblin politics and all...) tho' there are chapters where the teenagers are being so annoyingly Teenager that it's almost like watching a soap opera and I wish they would just GET OVER IT :)
Most folks I know figured that she'd find *some* way to give us a Snape Surprise. It was a little bit "out there," since Dumbledore's behavior wasn't quite typical of him... you'da thunk he'd learned... but all in all, very satisfactory.
Here, I could pay in advance and get in the "pre-paid" line with my ticket at midnight and trade ticket for book... *very* fast-moving line. Then ride home, read 'til 2:00 a.m., go to bed and get up and lead my bicycle ride, pause for reading occasionally (when we stopped to eat), back home for a nap, read, eat, finish it... gotta tell you, my dreams were sort of invaded and I had to sort out book from dreams at one point!
For kids? Welp, it gets pretty dark.
I read a post from a teacher and mom who had trouble 'cause of the "B" word, whereas I realized I had trouble with the situation wherein it was used; it portrayed vengeance-is-the-perfect-climax. (The idea that that was no problem, but saying B**** was rather disturbed me. It's okay to kill, but be polite while you do it ?!?!?)

amymisk
07-24-2007, 12:22 PM
I haven't started my copy yet, too wrapped up in TdF.

My favorite story has been Goblet of Fire.

I can't wait to start this one, but I hesitate since it is the last.

rocknrollgirl
07-24-2007, 12:38 PM
My pre-ordered copy arrived by owl Saturday morning and I finished Sunday night. Would have been done earlier, but training got in the way. I loved it.....
I am having post harry blues right now.

Wahine
07-24-2007, 12:41 PM
Just picked up my copy today!! Can't wait. My problem now is how to start the book and still maintain the discipline to not read too much that I A) miss workouts B) Don't get enough sleep or C) have my husband leave me.

Hmmmmm. Maybe I should wait to read it until after Ironman.

winddance
07-24-2007, 04:30 PM
BF wisely left town for the weekend, and reading was completed by Sunday afternoon. :)

Meg McKilty
07-24-2007, 04:39 PM
Me and my friend, Julie, going to a book premier for Harry! I won first place in the Slytherin costume contest, and got a Sorting Hat. w00t!
She was Professor Trelawny.

Mr. Bloom
07-24-2007, 05:24 PM
:eek: Ok, it looks like I may just be the last living human to not have read any of the HP books! I am an avid reader, just never thought I would be interested. Evidentally

Actually, you're wrong. I've never read a single one - :p :p cause I'm from Alabama and don't know how to read :p :p - why read when you can seen the movie?

Hey Meg!! You come up with the funniest avatar pics!!!:) :)

silver
07-25-2007, 05:22 AM
Silver took SilverSon to get it at midnight Friday:eek: :eek: :eek:

I'm getting the Cliff Note version from him

I read the last chapter though:rolleyes: :rolleyes: ...and he's filling in the detail:) :)

I'm very, very naughty;)

:eek: I had no idea!!!!!! I'm horrified!!!! You...YOU....last chapter reader!!! It's a good thing you have such nice legs ;)

Trek1500
07-31-2007, 12:54 PM
[QUOTE=Mr. Silver;226611]Without saying anything else, I think that Snape has consistently proven to be the 'richest' character in the sense of depth and dimension. While Harry is the star, JKR really made a masterpiece in his character...right to the end, we're still guessing, "is he or isn't he????"

I absolutely agree.

7rider
07-31-2007, 03:23 PM
Actually, you're wrong. I've never read a single one - :p :p cause I'm from Alabama and don't know how to read :p :p - why read when you can seen the movie?

:)

Another non-Harry reader here. But I am a HP (and TdF) widow.
I tried slogging my way through the first book. No wait. Maybe it was the second. I have seen all of the movies - they are harmless, but the books I find impossible to read. Plus, they're all the same. Here's a summary of just about every book to date (last one excepted - but I have no reason to believe it won't be more of the same):
"Boy, that was some awful summer. My aunt and uncle are nasty" says Harry.
"Don't look now, Harry." says someone. "He-who-must not be named is after you - again." [Convenient how he always shows up during the school year, isn't it? - ed.]
The school administration either (a) looks the other way, or (b) actively enables star athlete's breaking the rules.
Bang! Crash! A miraculous spell conjured up just in the nick of time!
Yay!!! Harry! Boy wizard - you beat the baddies again!!!
The end. Have a great summer!

slinkedog
07-31-2007, 03:32 PM
"Boy, that was some awful summer. My aunt and uncle are nasty" says Harry.
"Don't look now, Harry." says someone. "He-who-must not be named is after you - again." [Convenient how he always shows up during the school year, isn't it? - ed.]
The school administration either (a) looks the other way, or (b) actively enables star athlete's breaking the rules.
Bang! Crash! A miraculous spell conjured up just in the nick of time!
Yay!!! Harry! Boy wizard - you beat the baddies again!!!
The end. Have a great summer!

If you'd read the books you'd know that there's a good reason why the bad guy only shows up during the school year.

Mr. Bloom
07-31-2007, 06:53 PM
I was amazed that following the AWESOME battle scene with Valdemort (which we were watching in 3D IMAX - OMG - it was 15 minutes of awesome)...but anyway, SilverSon leans over and says:

"in the book, that scene was much longer...the did this...and this...and so on"

Geez...it told me he really did read it, but more so, he remembered it!

Hub
08-01-2007, 06:03 AM
I didn't start until Goblet of FIre was released, but I am now a faithful fan. Each time a new one comes out I go back & start at the beginning- I haven't ordered the last one yet- it's in my cart at Amazon, BUT I did read about about the interview JK did Meredith on the today show. That's okay - I think it will be great. I plan to start the immersion process tonight & expect # 7 to be on my doorstep by the time I finish rereading 1-6!
My favorite part is that she as she aged the characters the story became more mature as well. It's really good stuff.

I must also add that when Psycycle path first handed me the Trek 5200 (Now known as old blue) to ride a bike for the first time in many many years he said- 'It's faster than Harry Potter's broom'.