Revisiting Potter via Dale, part three | Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban | J. K. Rowling
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Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
J. K. Rowling
Bloomsbury Publishing
, 1999 - 320 pages
average customer review:
based on 2640 reviews
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highly recommended
Once Again, Potter Astonishes
Although I didn't enjoy this book as much as its predecessor, "
Prisoner
of
Azkaban
" is still a 5 star novel. It is a great mystery that will keep you guessing until the final reveal. Matters get much darker this time around, and it seems it could not get worse for
Harry
Potter
. I really enjoyed the character growth Rowling implemented into this novel. Harry, Hermione, and Snape are all psychologically expanded on in this book. Harry's heroic tendecies are fresh and very enjoyable. He is becoming more and more brave as these books follow eachother. Snape's hatred is very much explained this time around, and I liked to see him as a tragic character, and not some schmuk who was born mean. Hermione is given her own mystery, and as a character I loved her so much much more in this volume than the last.
Character growth was my main reason for loving the book. The story is great, as well as the mystery. However, I liked the previous two books' stories more. Another element I enjoy in "Prisoner" is the backstory involving Harry's father. I wont give too much away, but that side of the tale was most interesting. All in all, book 3 is not my favorite, but it certainly is solid.
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Harry Potter #3 book on CD
This is the 3rd in the series that I have listened to. Jim Dale does an excellent job of reading and interpreting the
Harry
Potter
books. You have a hard time believing all those voices are his!
Revisiting Potter via Dale, part three
Even with the book series all said and done, I still proclaim the third
Harry
Potter
novel my favorite in the series. At this point, Rowling has mostly smoothed the rough edges off of her style, and she has a much clearer idea of where the series is going. She lays so much groundwork here not just for book four, but for the end-game of the entire series. Draco Malfoy begins the slow fade to the background that will remove him as any kind of main plot participant until Half-Blood Prince, while Severus Snape steps up into the limelight and becomes more than an aggravation / subplot. With the arrival and then departure of Remus Lupin, we get our first hint that the constant vacancy of the Dark Arts position is more than just happenstance. And with the introduction of Lupin, Sirius Black and Peter Pettigrew, we start to get the history that will affect every decision Harry makes throughout the rest of the series.
What I've always liked about Rowling's writing is that Harry, Ron, Hermione and their teenage friends don't always make the right decision -- they go on their instincts, their hormones, and sometimes make the kind of mistake we as readers are slapping our foreheads and shouting at them to not make. Every time Harry fails to tell Dumbledore something, every time the Trio hare off on their own someplace, the writer in me recognizes Rowling setting up important complications but the reader in me yells at them to stop being stupid and myopic. Of course, they are teenagers -- they are virtually made of myopia. And that's what makes them so real. They are not perfect. Even amongst themselves -- the discord between Ron and Hermione here, how easily they cut each other out, is a great hint at how Seamus Finnegan will turn completely against Harry in "Phoenix" based solely on what Seamus thinks he knows versus what is the truth.
Prisoner
is also the last of the short books in the series, the last that is tightly plotted and in which the subplots are not given equal page time with the main plot. Which also mirrors the age Harry and the gang are at -- life gets more complicated the older kids get, as their world-view expands beyond themselves.
Jim Dale, of course, does his usual fantastic job performing the book. I've commented before that his Hagrid and McGonagall sound just like Robbie Coltrane and Maggie Smith, while the rest of his characters sound original. This time, he manages to also make Remus Lupin sound almost exactly like David Thewlis. Certain voices, certain inflections, just fit certain characters, and I think in these cases Dale is wise to go with what sounds right rather than differentiating just to avoid comparisons.
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excellent delivery
The Audio books came as advertised (new) and were delivered well within the time frame promised.
Harry Potter #3
The product we recieved has been very satisfactory. Jim Dale is an excellent interpreter of the
Harry
Potter
saga. This book is my favorite of all, and it is an important chapter in the entire series.
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