Number of pages in each of the Harry Potter books
Transcription
Number of pages in each of the Harry Potter books
Number of pages in each of the Harry Potter books The The The The Order The The The Sorcerer's Chamber Prisoner Haff-Biood Deathly Goblet of the Stone of Secrets ofAzitaban of Fire Phoenix Prince Hailows 6 SCHOLASTIC NEWS / MAY 7 & 14, 2007 aitlin McAfee lives in a quiet neigyiborhood in Springfield, Missouri. But at the stroke of midnight on July 21, she'll be soaking up the bright lights of New York City. The 16-year-old will be in the Big Apple to celebrate the release of Harry Potter and the Deathly HaUows. That's the seventh and final book in the Harry Potter series. "I've lived with Harry for eight years," says Kaitlin. "He has really become a friend to me. I figure we should go out with a bang." Kaitlin is just one of millions of kids worldwide who have grown up with Harry Potter. For the past decade, they've read book after book, following Harry's every move as he solves the mysteries of Hogwarts with his pals, Ron and Hermione. The series has been one of the biggest publishing phenomenons. Sales of the Harry Potter books have set records. Hany Potter and the HalfBlood Prince, the sixth Harry Potter book, was the fastest-selling book in history. Nearly 7 million copies were phenomenonE (feh-nom-uh-non) tu>un. Something veiy unusual and remarkable. ROUGH E YEARS 1998 has been almost 10 ye nee readers were firsi itroduced to Harry Pot l i s lifiu^ )iii(' .s'lfiw.s t h e • each b< UC series. 1999 2OOO sold in the first 24 hours it was on sale. Also, the first five Harry Potter books have been turned into blockbuster movies. The fifth movie, Han~n Potter arid (he Order of the Phoenix, will hit movie screens July 13 (See From the Page to the Big Screen, page 9). Most important, the books have turned a generation of kids into avid readers. Reading experts say that the Harry Potter series has helped make kids want to keep gobbling up books. Soon, the moment, of truth will airive. J. K. Rowling will reveal Harry Potter's fate when her final Harry Potter book hits bookshelves this summer. While kids everywhere await its arrival, Schol.asfic News talked to kids nationwide about what Harry has meant to them. Wild About Harry KaitUn says she has a soft spot for Harry Potter books because of the bond they've created between her and her 80-year-old grandfather. He introduced her to the books when she was 8. "He sat, me down on the couch one day and just started reading to me," she says. "We got through the first book, then came the second, then the third, then the fourth. It was a lot of nights spent reading together Through Harry, I really have become closer to my granddad." Harry has gotten Michael Byrne through some tough times. Michael also began reading the books when he was 8. At the time, he was undergoing chemotherapy after being diagnosed with bone cancer. "Harry has to go through a lot of bad things, but he's still positive and doesn't let them overcome him," says the eighth-grader from Corona, California. "It gave me strengt:h. It helped me think positive." Now that the countdown to the release of the final book has begun, Michael is rereading the first six novels. He's looking for clues that will help him figure out how it all ends. Thomas Staley says he's pulling for Harry to defeat Lord Voidemort. Over the years, the fifth-grader says, he has grown attached to the Potter d i a g n o s e : (dyp-iilig-nohss) verb. To determine what disoaw a pci-son has or wiial tlie cause ot"a iirtiblr ' Ortter of the Phoenix sales hit 5 million copies In 24 hours. SCHOLASTIC NEWS / MAY 7 & 14, 2007 7 characters, especially to Harry. "Harry, for me, is an ideal main chiiracter," says the 11-year-old from Hingham, Massachusetts. "He has his fame, but he's so humble. He's brave. He's very adventurous. He likes to help the other people around him. He's not perfect. He's real." Harry's Legacy In an age when young people are plugged into video games, iPods, and the Internet. Hany has turned millions of kids into bookworms. In all, more than 325 millicm Harry Potter books have been sold worldwide. The books have been translated into at least 64 languages. "It's wonderful that Harry Potter has encouraged so tnany children to get hooked on books," says Linda Gambrell, President of the Internalioiial Reading Association. "They're spetiding titoir free time reading. Once kids get engaged in Hany Potter, they are highly motivated to read other books." In a recent study done by Scholastic Inc., Harry Potter's U.S. publisher, three out of four Hairy Potter readers reported that they have become more interested in reading other books. 8 SGHOLASTIC NEWS /MAY 7 & 14, 2007 Thomas is one of those kids. "Now, that I've read the Harry Potter books, I want to feel that same excitement about other books," he says. "I keep taking out hooks from the library. I keep reading and reading." Kiishna Patel, 11, of Florida, says the Harry Potter books have had the same effect on her. "I can't wait to see all the other surprises waiting in [other] books." Although the Harry Potter series will soon come to an end, the books will not be forgotten. Harry's tale will be read by generations to come. As for Kaitlin, she'll be forever grateful to J. K. Rowling and a lovable boy wizard named Harry. "It's so crazy how one series of books can shape your life," she says. "Because of J. K. Rowling and Harry Potter, I want to be a writer. They've ii\spired me to create my own stories." What is your favorite genre C/ahn-ruh), or type, of book? Is it fiction or.nonfiction? Mysteries or scieticefiction?All are great. Explain your choice. [ The plot is the story line of any story. Plot involves four main buiiding biocks: Conflict—or the main character's probiem; Development—detaiis about the confiict; Ciimax—what happens to resoive the probiem; and Resoiution—or how the story ends. Build your own piot beiow. Use a separate sheet of paper if you need to. Tiien, use your piot to write your own short story! 1. Conflict— 2 . Development— 3. Climax— 4. Resolution— engaged: (en-ga^d) adjective. Being busy and L occi5»ied with something or doing something.