Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (Harry Potter, Book 7)
Paperback
• 784 Pages
• USD 16.99
• English
• 9781338878981
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| Publisher | Scholastic Inc. |
|---|---|
| ISBN13 | 9781338878981 |
| ASIN/SKU | 1338878980 |
| Book Format | Paperback |
| Language | English |
| Pages | 784 |
| List Price | USD 16.99 |
| Series Title | Harry Potter |
| Publishing Date | 02/05/2023 |
| Dimensions | 5.2 x 1.8 x 7.5 inches |
| Weight | 2.31 pounds |
| Book Code | BD00055481 |
Discover Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (Harry Potter, Book 7) by J. K. Rowling. This book is published by Scholastic Inc. in Paperback format, ISBN 9781338878981, ASIN 1338878980, under Children's Books, Children's Friendship Books, Fantasy for Children.
Book Description
As he climbs into the sidecar of Hagrid's motorbike and takes to the skies, LEAVING Privet Drive for the last time, Harry Potter knows that LORD VOLDEMORT and the Death Eaters are not far behind. The protective CHARM that has kept Harry safe until now is BROKEN, but he cannot keep hiding. The Dark Lord is breathing FEAR into everything Harry LOVES, and to stop him Harry will have to find and destroy the remaining HORCRUXES. The final BATTLE must begin - Harry must stand and face his enemy…Please ask if you need a specific version. The data provided here may not be correct. With buying and not asking you are accepting the book as is.
Author Biography
J.K. Rowling is the author of the enduringly popular Harry Potter books. After the idea for Harry Potter came to her on a delayed train journey in 1990, she plotted out and started writing the series of seven books and the first was published as Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone in the UK in 1997. The series took another ten years to complete, concluding in 2007 with the publication of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.
To accompany the series, J.K. Rowling wrote three short companion volumes for charity, Quidditch Through the Agesand Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, in aid of Comic Relief and Lumos, and The Tales of Beedle the Bard, in aid of Lumos. She also collaborated on the writing of a stage play, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, which was published as a script book.
Her other books for children include the fairy tale The Ickabog and The Christmas Pig, which were published in 2020 and 2021 respectively and have also been bestsellers. She is also the author of books for adults, including a bestselling crime fiction series.
J.K. Rowling has received many awards and honors for her writing. She also supports a number of causes through her charitable trust Volant and is the founder of the children’s charity Lumos.
To find out more about J.K. Rowling visit jkrowlingstories.com.
To accompany the series, J.K. Rowling wrote three short companion volumes for charity, Quidditch Through the Agesand Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, in aid of Comic Relief and Lumos, and The Tales of Beedle the Bard, in aid of Lumos. She also collaborated on the writing of a stage play, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, which was published as a script book.
Her other books for children include the fairy tale The Ickabog and The Christmas Pig, which were published in 2020 and 2021 respectively and have also been bestsellers. She is also the author of books for adults, including a bestselling crime fiction series.
J.K. Rowling has received many awards and honors for her writing. She also supports a number of causes through her charitable trust Volant and is the founder of the children’s charity Lumos.
To find out more about J.K. Rowling visit jkrowlingstories.com.
Editorial Reviews
Editorial Reviews will be added soon…
Book Summary
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows is the final book in J. K. Rowling’s series and brings Harry’s long struggle with Voldemort to its most dangerous and emotional point. After the death of Dumbledore, Harry is left with the task of finding and destroying the remaining Horcruxes, the hidden objects that contain pieces of Voldemort’s soul and keep him alive. Unlike the earlier books, Harry is no longer at Hogwarts for much of the story. Instead, he, Ron, and Hermione go on the run, trying to complete Dumbledore’s mission while the wizarding world falls deeper under Voldemort’s control. The Ministry of Magic has been taken over, the Order of the Phoenix is weakened, and fear spreads everywhere. Harry is now not just a student but a hunted enemy, and the pressure on him grows heavier with every chapter.
The book begins with a sense of farewell and danger as Harry prepares to leave Privet Drive forever. Before he does, he learns that Voldemort is already hunting him and that the protective measures around him are collapsing. During the escape, there is a chaotic battle, and one of the members of the Order is killed, showing how serious the war has become. Soon after, Harry and his friends must hide constantly, moving from place to place with very few clues about where the Horcruxes are. Their search is slow, frustrating, and full of arguments, because the mission tests not only their courage but also their friendship. The trio, who have relied on one another for years, now face exhaustion, fear, and uncertainty in a way they never have before.
One of the key parts of the story is the discovery of the Deathly Hallows, three legendary magical objects said to make their possessor the master of death. These are the Elder Wand, the Resurrection Stone, and the Invisibility Cloak. Harry gradually learns that the Hallows are tied to an old wizarding tale and that they may represent a different kind of power than the Horcruxes. This adds another layer to his journey, because he must decide whether he wants to chase the Hallows or remain focused on destroying Voldemort. In the end, the novel presents the Hallows as tempting but dangerous symbols, while Harry’s real strength comes from sacrifice, love, and choice rather than from magical objects.
As the trio continues their search, tensions rise between them. The pressure of hunger, fear, and failure causes Ron to leave temporarily, and this becomes one of the most painful moments in the book. Harry and Hermione are left alone for a while, and the loneliness and grief they feel make the mission even harder. Eventually, Ron returns, proving that their bond is stronger than their worst moment of weakness. The trio’s friendship is tested, but it survives, and this becomes one of the emotional anchors of the story. Their loyalty is one of the few things Voldemort cannot control.
Harry also begins to uncover the truth about Snape, a man he had long believed to be an enemy. Throughout the series, Snape has seemed cruel, secretive, and possibly treacherous. In this final book, however, the full truth about him is revealed. Snape had loved Harry’s mother, Lily, deeply, and after her death he worked in secret to protect Harry, even though he never acted kindly toward him. His harshness and bitterness were real, but so was his courage. His memories show that he had agreed to help Dumbledore, and that he remained loyal to Lily’s memory even when no one recognized his sacrifice. This revelation changes the meaning of many earlier events and gives Snape a tragic complexity. He is not redeemed in a simple way, but his hidden loyalty becomes one of the novel’s most powerful surprises.
The battle reaches its peak at Hogwarts, which becomes the final battlefield. Harry returns to the school with his friends and allies as Voldemort and his forces prepare for open war. Students, teachers, members of the Order, and even former enemies join together to defend the castle. The battle is fierce and devastating, and many characters die. The story does not spare the reader from loss, which is one reason the ending feels so powerful. The war is not neat or heroic in a simple way; it is messy, tragic, and costly. But it also brings out courage in ordinary people, and Hogwarts becomes a place where bravery, loyalty, and resistance matter more than blood status or pure power.
As Harry moves closer to the final confrontation, he learns the truth about himself and his connection to Voldemort. He discovers that a piece of Voldemort’s soul has been living inside him, which means he must die in order for Voldemort to become mortal. This is one of the most heartbreaking moments in the entire series, because it means Harry knowingly walks toward death for the sake of everyone else. Yet this choice is what makes him truly heroic. He does not defeat Voldemort through domination or force, but through acceptance, love, and the willingness to sacrifice himself. When he meets death, he is given a strange, brief chance to return, and he chooses to go back, showing that his life still belongs to him.
The final duel between Harry and Voldemort is not only a battle of spells but of understanding. Voldemort believes in power, fear, and control, while Harry understands the importance of love, loyalty, and the limits of power. In the end, Voldemort’s own choices defeat him. The Elder Wand does not obey him as he expects, and the curse rebounds. He dies as a human being, stripped of the terror that once surrounded him. Harry survives, and the wizarding world is freed from his rule.
The ending moves forward in time to show Harry, Ron, and Hermione as adults with families of their own, sending their children off to Hogwarts. This final scene gives the story a sense of peace after so much suffering. It suggests that the war has ended, the broken world has healed, and the next generation can grow up without the same fear. “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows” closes the series by showing that bravery is not the absence of fear, but the decision to act despite it, and that love remains stronger than death, even in the darkest time.
The book begins with a sense of farewell and danger as Harry prepares to leave Privet Drive forever. Before he does, he learns that Voldemort is already hunting him and that the protective measures around him are collapsing. During the escape, there is a chaotic battle, and one of the members of the Order is killed, showing how serious the war has become. Soon after, Harry and his friends must hide constantly, moving from place to place with very few clues about where the Horcruxes are. Their search is slow, frustrating, and full of arguments, because the mission tests not only their courage but also their friendship. The trio, who have relied on one another for years, now face exhaustion, fear, and uncertainty in a way they never have before.
One of the key parts of the story is the discovery of the Deathly Hallows, three legendary magical objects said to make their possessor the master of death. These are the Elder Wand, the Resurrection Stone, and the Invisibility Cloak. Harry gradually learns that the Hallows are tied to an old wizarding tale and that they may represent a different kind of power than the Horcruxes. This adds another layer to his journey, because he must decide whether he wants to chase the Hallows or remain focused on destroying Voldemort. In the end, the novel presents the Hallows as tempting but dangerous symbols, while Harry’s real strength comes from sacrifice, love, and choice rather than from magical objects.
As the trio continues their search, tensions rise between them. The pressure of hunger, fear, and failure causes Ron to leave temporarily, and this becomes one of the most painful moments in the book. Harry and Hermione are left alone for a while, and the loneliness and grief they feel make the mission even harder. Eventually, Ron returns, proving that their bond is stronger than their worst moment of weakness. The trio’s friendship is tested, but it survives, and this becomes one of the emotional anchors of the story. Their loyalty is one of the few things Voldemort cannot control.
Harry also begins to uncover the truth about Snape, a man he had long believed to be an enemy. Throughout the series, Snape has seemed cruel, secretive, and possibly treacherous. In this final book, however, the full truth about him is revealed. Snape had loved Harry’s mother, Lily, deeply, and after her death he worked in secret to protect Harry, even though he never acted kindly toward him. His harshness and bitterness were real, but so was his courage. His memories show that he had agreed to help Dumbledore, and that he remained loyal to Lily’s memory even when no one recognized his sacrifice. This revelation changes the meaning of many earlier events and gives Snape a tragic complexity. He is not redeemed in a simple way, but his hidden loyalty becomes one of the novel’s most powerful surprises.
The battle reaches its peak at Hogwarts, which becomes the final battlefield. Harry returns to the school with his friends and allies as Voldemort and his forces prepare for open war. Students, teachers, members of the Order, and even former enemies join together to defend the castle. The battle is fierce and devastating, and many characters die. The story does not spare the reader from loss, which is one reason the ending feels so powerful. The war is not neat or heroic in a simple way; it is messy, tragic, and costly. But it also brings out courage in ordinary people, and Hogwarts becomes a place where bravery, loyalty, and resistance matter more than blood status or pure power.
As Harry moves closer to the final confrontation, he learns the truth about himself and his connection to Voldemort. He discovers that a piece of Voldemort’s soul has been living inside him, which means he must die in order for Voldemort to become mortal. This is one of the most heartbreaking moments in the entire series, because it means Harry knowingly walks toward death for the sake of everyone else. Yet this choice is what makes him truly heroic. He does not defeat Voldemort through domination or force, but through acceptance, love, and the willingness to sacrifice himself. When he meets death, he is given a strange, brief chance to return, and he chooses to go back, showing that his life still belongs to him.
The final duel between Harry and Voldemort is not only a battle of spells but of understanding. Voldemort believes in power, fear, and control, while Harry understands the importance of love, loyalty, and the limits of power. In the end, Voldemort’s own choices defeat him. The Elder Wand does not obey him as he expects, and the curse rebounds. He dies as a human being, stripped of the terror that once surrounded him. Harry survives, and the wizarding world is freed from his rule.
The ending moves forward in time to show Harry, Ron, and Hermione as adults with families of their own, sending their children off to Hogwarts. This final scene gives the story a sense of peace after so much suffering. It suggests that the war has ended, the broken world has healed, and the next generation can grow up without the same fear. “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows” closes the series by showing that bravery is not the absence of fear, but the decision to act despite it, and that love remains stronger than death, even in the darkest time.
Sample Chapters
Sample Chapters will be added soon…
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