The next volume in the thrilling, moving, bestselling Harry Potter series will reach readers June 21, 2003 – and it’s been worth the wait!We could tell you, but then we’d have to Obliviate your memory.
Like so many others, I'm a big fan of Harry Potter. The fifth book is particularly fascinating because, for the first time in the series, you just want to yell at Harry sometimes. In book five, Harry feels like the world is against him. He fights with his friends (okay, this isn't the first book with fighting among the trio of friends), fights with Snape (again, nothing new), and even lashes out at Dumbledore. I think the book captures marvelously the nobody-gets-me attitude so often stereotyped upon teenagers. The book gives you a chance to remember what it's like to feel upset at times without really understanding why you're upset. More generally, the Order of the Phoenix is chock full of the fun, adventure, magic, mystery and fantasy we love from the wizarding world. After a nightmarish escape from the graveyard where Tom Riddle lies in his now-disturbed tomb after Voldemort is returned to his able, physical form, Harry struggles to understand why the wizarding world seems to go silent over the summer. He doesn't hear from his friends, Sirius, or anyone else over the summer, and it isn't until he has nearly returned to Hogwarts that he learns the wizarding world has turned against him. Harry has to struggle through the school year as friends and classmates, once loyal, ridicule him. The book culminates with an intense, energizing duel, the first real display of large-scale good vs. bad dueling between the wizards fighting with Harry and the death eaters sent to destroy him.
J.K. Rowling is the author of the record-breaking, multi-award-winning Harry Potter novels. Loved by fans around the world, the series has sold over 500 million copies, been translated into 80 languages, and made into 8 blockbuster films. She has written three companion volumes in aid of charity: Quidditch Through the Ages and 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), as well as a film script inspired by Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, which marked the start of a five-film series to be written by the author. She has also collaborated on a stage play, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child Parts One and Two, which opened in London’s West End in the summer of 2016 and on Broadway in early 2018. In 2012, J.K. Rowling’s digital company Pottermore was launched, where fans can enjoy news, features and articles, as well as original content from J.K. Rowling. She has also written The Casual Vacancy, a novel for adult readers, and the Strike crime series, written under the pseudonym Robert Galbraith. As well as receiving an OBE for services to children’s literature, she has received many awards and honours, including an OBE and Companion of Honour, France’s Légion d’honneur, and the Hans Christian Andersen Award.
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