I could hurl a hundred superlatives at
this book, most of which you've probably heard before, but they’d all be
deserved.
So, Harry Potter's sixth year at Hogwarts
school of witchcraft and wizardry, and what a year.
I like to think of this one as a history
book: not one of those big boring books that goes on and on about a long
forgotten civilisation, a King or a Queen, but a book about Harry's past, his
connection with Voldemort, and one that delves deep into the Dark Lord’s
past, by way of memories in the pensieve in Dumbledore's office;
memories that the headmaster has spent many years collecting.
Harry has inherited his god-father's house
and the vile elf, Kreacher, who he puts to good use following Draco Malfoy. Harry
knows that Draco is up to something, he overheard him threatening the owner of Borgin and Burkes in Knockturn alley,
he just doesn't know what.
There are potions to master, (somewhat
helped by an old potions book he finds in the spares cupboard, annotated and
proclaiming to be the property of the half-blood prince; there's Snape to
avoid, quidditch to play and an uncorrupted memory to extract from their new
potions master, Professor Horace Slughorn; who taught Tom Riddle before
he became Lord Voldemort.
There are girls, there's snogging and
there's Ginny Weasley, who Harry is starting to see in a different light.
To top it all, there are Horcruxes to
find, hidden objects that contain parts of Voldemort's soul, and this is where
these books are so clever. It is here, in book six, that we discover that Tom
Riddle's diary - which Harry destroyed in The Chamber of Secrets, (book two) -
was in fact a Horcrux. Dumbledore has already destroyed another, Voldemort's
grandfather's ring, and with Horace Slughorn relinquishing his untainted
memory, they now know that they have four more to find, excluding the part of
soul that resides in Voldemort himself.
So, over five hundred pages in and the
adventure begins, but Draco has succeeded in his task, Death Eaters have
entered the school, the dark mark hangs heavy above the astronomy tower,
Dumbledore is disarmed, Harry immobilised, Snape . . .
I know that most of you already know the
ending to this book, you've probably seen the film, but I put it to you, that
unless you have read this book, you do not know the ending.
The battle between the Death Eaters and
The Order, Snape and Malfoy's escape, the burning of Hagrid's hut, and the most
moving part of all, Dumbledore's phoenix and its lament, echoing hauntingly
through the corridors and classrooms of Hogwarts.
If a book could have more than five stars
out of five, this would be the one. Simply put, this book if stunning.
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, here I come.
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, here I come.
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