Harry Potter is lucky to reach the age of thirteen, since he has survived the murderous attacks of the feared Dark Lord on more than one occasion. But his hopes for a quiet school term concentrating on Quidditch are dashed when a maniacal mass-murderer escapes from Azkaban, pursued by the soul-sucking Dementors who guard the prison. It's assumed that Hogwarts is the safest place for Harry to be. But is it a coincidence that he can feel eyes watching him in the dark, and should he be taking Professor Trelawney's ghoulish predictions seriously?
These adult editions with glorious jacket art by Andrew Davidson are now available in hardback for the first time.
- ISBN10 1408865416
- ISBN13 9781408865415
- Publish Date 13 August 2015 (first published 28 June 1999)
- Publish Status Active
- Publish Country GB
- Imprint Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
- Format Hardcover
- Pages 480
- Language English
Reviews
Written on Dec 9, 2012
mrs_mander_reads
Written on Oct 6, 2012
clementine
Written on Sep 4, 2012
Sirius's introduction is probably the first significant instance of JK Rowling completely leading her reader astray, fooling us and smashing our beliefs. Of course, when you know who Sirius is, you read the book in a completely different way - but Jo does such a wonderful job of setting him up as a terrifying psychopath, one who is directly responsible for Harry's current parentless lot in life. There is no reason for a first-time reader to believe that he is anything but a soulless mass murderer. One detail I particularly like is Trelawney's prediction that Voldemort's servant will rise, etc etc - obviously, a first-time reader would think she is referring to Sirius. Of course, once you know who Sirius actually is, it's obvious that the prediction is actually referring to Pettigrew. This is the sort of detail Rowling so expertly plants. I don't think you'd even stop to consider who Trelawney was talking about if you didn't know the outcome; it's just a given that it's Sirius - except it's not. The first two books aren't as enshrouded in this expertly hidden mystery, and the third really sets the stage for this constant wondering about allegiances in the last four, which becomes particularly urgent at the end of HBP.
Another reason why I love PoA is that the characterization is much more believable. Nobody stuck out as a storybook villain (except maybe Malfoy, but he is a particularly nasty one - and Jo certain redeems his character in HBP and DH). The new characters were fairly well fleshed out, even if they didn't have much dialogue.
I always feel like I could write endlessly about these books; there are so many incredible intricacies that I'd be here all day trying to point them all out and explain why I love them.
Looking forward to moving onto GoF when I have a bit of free time.
mbtc
Written on Jun 18, 2012
boghunden
Written on Jul 9, 2011
sleepseeker
Written on Apr 26, 2011
I would recommend these series of books to anybody.
remo
Written on Dec 8, 2001