Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
Loeffelholz
The United States, With LovePosts: 8,998Quartermasters
...No...I don't know anything about it yet
Sorry if I got anyone's hopes up... :v But it's closing in on the bewitching hour where I live, when the book goes on sale everywhere from Barnes and Noble to the local drug store. Whether you're a fan of The Boy Who Lived or not, this is a huge event in publishing history...and anything that gets someone to crack a book---in an age where declining literacy is a very real concern---can't be all bad.
I just read all six prior Potter books this Spring, starting in April or so, and I have to say I'm a fan of J.K. Rowling...truth be told, I'm happy whenever someone with a fresh and creative idea can find a way to 'get over'...and IMO she's done it with distinctive style.
I have at least two employees who are in costume right now---one as Luna Lovegood, the other as Hermoine Granger, in line at the local Barnes and Noble, with 80 minutes to go before the tome in question falls into their sweaty little hands. As a battle-weary member of Management, I'll be on the job at 7:00 AM, Central Time, U.S.A....so I wasn't able to make the midnight extravaganza without doing undue harm to my middle-aged body and already-fragile mental acuity ) If I were off tomorrow, however, I think I'd probably be there, if only as an interested observer, taking a peek at yet another manifestation of an unhinged Fan Sub-Culture---the latest in a line preceded by the RPGers, the Trekkies, the Star Wars Nuts...and yes, even the fans of a particular fictional British Secret Service Agent, :007) plus as many others as further ruminations might conjure.
This is, after all, the "Last Hurrah" for the Harry Potter readers...there will, of course, be two more film premieres---and the requisite signings and conventions, as Harry's Fan Base grows older, and ever more affluent But there'll never be another Night of Potter like this one...
I will be purchasing the book tomorrow afternoon, straightaway after serving my time on the job, and will begin reading it nearly immediately B-)
Are there any Potter book fans here? If so, how bad have you got it?
Congratulations to J.K. Rowling on the great literary coup of the Late 20th-Early 21st Centuries {[]
POST-SCRIPT: I added the spoiler tag as a reminder not to kill the surprise for the rest of us...and would urge (read: beg) any early-bird readers to add the 'SPOILER' brackets to any known story details they simply cannot resist sharing...
Sorry if I got anyone's hopes up... :v But it's closing in on the bewitching hour where I live, when the book goes on sale everywhere from Barnes and Noble to the local drug store. Whether you're a fan of The Boy Who Lived or not, this is a huge event in publishing history...and anything that gets someone to crack a book---in an age where declining literacy is a very real concern---can't be all bad.
I just read all six prior Potter books this Spring, starting in April or so, and I have to say I'm a fan of J.K. Rowling...truth be told, I'm happy whenever someone with a fresh and creative idea can find a way to 'get over'...and IMO she's done it with distinctive style.
I have at least two employees who are in costume right now---one as Luna Lovegood, the other as Hermoine Granger, in line at the local Barnes and Noble, with 80 minutes to go before the tome in question falls into their sweaty little hands. As a battle-weary member of Management, I'll be on the job at 7:00 AM, Central Time, U.S.A....so I wasn't able to make the midnight extravaganza without doing undue harm to my middle-aged body and already-fragile mental acuity ) If I were off tomorrow, however, I think I'd probably be there, if only as an interested observer, taking a peek at yet another manifestation of an unhinged Fan Sub-Culture---the latest in a line preceded by the RPGers, the Trekkies, the Star Wars Nuts...and yes, even the fans of a particular fictional British Secret Service Agent, :007) plus as many others as further ruminations might conjure.
This is, after all, the "Last Hurrah" for the Harry Potter readers...there will, of course, be two more film premieres---and the requisite signings and conventions, as Harry's Fan Base grows older, and ever more affluent But there'll never be another Night of Potter like this one...
I will be purchasing the book tomorrow afternoon, straightaway after serving my time on the job, and will begin reading it nearly immediately B-)
Are there any Potter book fans here? If so, how bad have you got it?
Congratulations to J.K. Rowling on the great literary coup of the Late 20th-Early 21st Centuries {[]
POST-SCRIPT: I added the spoiler tag as a reminder not to kill the surprise for the rest of us...and would urge (read: beg) any early-bird readers to add the 'SPOILER' brackets to any known story details they simply cannot resist sharing...
Check out my Amazon author page! Mark Loeffelholz
"I am not an entrant in the Shakespeare Stakes." - Ian Fleming
"Screw 'em." - Daniel Craig, The Best James Bond EverTM
"I am not an entrant in the Shakespeare Stakes." - Ian Fleming
"Screw 'em." - Daniel Craig, The Best James Bond EverTM
Comments
NO SPOILERS!!!!
That goes for everyone!
I had The Return Of The King spoiled for me, and I don't want the same thing to happen to anyone else!
That being said, Hallows ends (almost) exactly the way I thought it would, and I think many millions of people will be very pleased with the final instalment.
Happy reading everyone!
Independent, one-shot comic books from the outskirts of Melbourne, Australia.
twitter.com/DrawnOutDad
I couldn't have been more wrong - the queue was absolutely huge, there may even have been over 100 people. Even a few chavs arrived to make fun of us, but geekiness was victorious this time, and the chavs were forced to retreat. (Nothing to do with the police arriving, and the press covering the event beginning to take photos).
But it was a really great atmosphere, and I'm glad I was part of it
That said; I can never be bothered with Potter books; not really my thing
But, my fiance is happy that she now has a copy of Deathly Hallows, and even though I've read the important chapters of the book (which is the most of Harry Potter that I've read, by the way) I still understand how important it is to a lot of people, so I won't spoil it.
Independent, one-shot comic books from the outskirts of Melbourne, Australia.
twitter.com/DrawnOutDad
I was pretty much the same way, despite enjoying the films; this particular flavour of Fantasy has never held any special appeal for me.
Once I started reading them, though, Rowling won me over. They're a bit formulaic, to be sure, but IMO they've gotten less so as they've progressed. Her magical world lives and breathes, and is often quite funny. Great entertainment.
Well...I'm off to read this one!
"I am not an entrant in the Shakespeare Stakes." - Ian Fleming
"Screw 'em." - Daniel Craig, The Best James Bond EverTM
Favourite bit (not spoliered, because the context, not the line, is all): 'NOT MY DAUGHTER YOU BITCH!!'
@merseytart
I've never been at midnight to get any of the others but dragged my dad into driving me to town this time. It was fun.
We had lots of drunks go past as I expected, but it was interesting as I'd never been into town so late before; I haven't needed to.
Some guys behind me, one with his girlfriend, were discussing what they thought was going to happen in the end. One guy said rather loudly, "Harry dies! Harry dies! Harry dies!" I turned round to look at him and he just goes, "He doesn't really, kid! He doesn't really!" and everyone just laughed. )
I did hear on the news though about one kid who had ordered it on the internet and they mucked it up and sent it to him Friday morning! ) Lucky git.
I'm around 400 pages in and I'm finding it a lot more dark than any of the others. A lot of things I never could have imagined hapenning have and really it's all full of surprises for me.
I have resisted the urge to flick ahead. I did however, peel the bottom of the page back and read the last sentence. It was very reassuring. I have also flicked through and looked at all the names of the chapters, which unfortunately didn't give me as many clues or ideas as I had hoped.
I have already shed a couple of tears for this book. JK Rowling is a genius.
I shall continue to read tomorrow and hope that I continue to be shocked.
~Pen -{
mountainburdphotography.wordpress.com
I'll be done in the next day or so---and it's with a weird mixture of anticipation, dread and sadness that I finish this remarkable journey.
"I am not an entrant in the Shakespeare Stakes." - Ian Fleming
"Screw 'em." - Daniel Craig, The Best James Bond EverTM
Remarkable. Absolutely F*****g Remarkable.
The amount of emotion this series has wrung from me---since I first started reading Sorceror's Stone last April---is nothing short of absolutely f*****g remarkable.
To J.K. Rowling: {[] Thanks very much for writing B-)
"I am not an entrant in the Shakespeare Stakes." - Ian Fleming
"Screw 'em." - Daniel Craig, The Best James Bond EverTM
~Pen -{
mountainburdphotography.wordpress.com
I cried five times in total:
The last chapter was nice but for me it left me with so many more questions than I had had before really lol. Like I was really interested of what jobs everyone who had survived would have lol. ) It was just something I was curious about.
I really enjoyed the chapter 'The Prince's Tale'. I'd never have guessed any of that would have hapenned.
But now it is over and I am slightly sad to know there will be no more.
I agree with the stuff that made you emotional; I felt the same way when
Some die-hard Potter fans I know didn't like the Epilogue, but I did! It hit me hard emotionally once more...
For all those who don't give a toss about these books...too bad for you But then, I feel the same way about Bond fans who can't be persuaded---or who simply refuse---to read Fleming: It's a shame, but I'd never try to force anyone to have a good time
"I am not an entrant in the Shakespeare Stakes." - Ian Fleming
"Screw 'em." - Daniel Craig, The Best James Bond EverTM
Completely deserves all her success!
I was blown away by Deathly Hallows, all Rowling's storylines flow superbly through all 7 books and are tied up with style in the last book.
I found it quite emotional at times:
Especially when Dobby was killed and the subsequent burial.
And also the revelations about Snape. I have always had a certain affinity with Snape as I share the same surname and I was glad he turned out to be one of the real heroes of the peice.
I was also pleased not all the villains were just killed off, Draco Malfoy or instance, him owing a life debt to Harry is much better than having him killed
As for the epilogue, I found it a nice way to wrap up the story, many people complained that all the characters aren't mentioned, if that had been the case it would have just read like a list with no real feeling in it. Some people just want to be told everything though i guess, just lazy and unimaginitive imo
All in all I love the book and the series as a whole, I'm sad it has ended.