Books: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows by J.K. Rowling (2007, Scholastic). What the hell do you care what I think? By the number of people I see on a daily basis with the 700+ page tome under their arms, you've either already read it, in the midst of reading it, and/or are reading it again.
But, real quick, despite JK Rowling's sometimes clunky writing -- I mean, seriously, couldn't we find a synonym for 'prise' -- she continues to be a gripping storyteller with a more than satisfying climax (even if it did feel reminiscent of contemporary films and stories. One particular scene at a particular train station felt pulled almost directly out of The Matrix trilogy).
I would recommend it but, like I said, if you haven't already read it, you're gonna anyway.
But, real quick, despite JK Rowling's sometimes clunky writing -- I mean, seriously, couldn't we find a synonym for 'prise' -- she continues to be a gripping storyteller with a more than satisfying climax (even if it did feel reminiscent of contemporary films and stories. One particular scene at a particular train station felt pulled almost directly out of The Matrix trilogy).
I would recommend it but, like I said, if you haven't already read it, you're gonna anyway.
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