Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
J.K. Rowling, Illustrated by Mary Grandpre
Scholastic, Sept., 1999.
Hardcover, 435 pages
Reading Level: Ages 9 to Adult
ISBN: 0439136350.
Ordering information:
Amazon.com.

British schoolboy Harry Potter loathes summer vacations.
Stuck in his lonely room, forbidden to do anything fun
by his ghastly aunt and uncle, the Durstleys, and constantly
teased by his obnoxious cousin Dudley, he longs for the
schoolyear to start. But Harry doesn't go to just any
school -- he attends Hogwarts School for Witchcraft and
Wizardry. His adoptive family hates magic and anything
to do with it, and finds Harry to be nothing but an
embarrassment to them. When Harry accidentally
inflates his horrible Aunt Marge into a balloon, he
runs away, sure that he will be expelled from his beloved
school for the misuse of magic in the Muggle (non-wizard)
world. But instead, he receives a mere slap on the wrist and
a wizard escort back to school when term time begins. It
appears that a terrible criminal has escaped from the Wizard
prison of Azkaban who is intent on killing Harry. Hogwarts
is on high alert and the principal is more interested in keeping
Harry safe than punishing him. Thus starts another year
at Hogwarts for Harry and his friends Ron and Hermione.
The third year of wizard school is full of magical
creatures, high-stakes Quidditch matches (sort of an airborne soccer
game played on flying broomsticks) despicable classmates,
and a terrible threat to Harry.
This is the third book in the enormously popular Harry Potter
series after
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone and
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. J.K. Rowling
proves she hasn't lost her touch.
Prisoner is full of
complex subplots, hair-raising adventures, and the
fascinating day to day details of attending Wizard School.
Harry is growing up a bit -- we get hints of a crush on a
female classmate, and we learn a bit more about Harry's
parents who were murdered by the evil Lord Voldemort.
But in between death defying escapades, Harry and his
friends continue to attend fabulous banquets in the magical
Great Hall, eat magical candy from the wizard's sweet shop
(chocolate frogs guaranteed to jump around in your stomach),
and avoid the school bully, Draco Malfitch. Rowling's prose style
is witty, funny and incredibly imaginative. This is one
series that really does live up to its media hype. Oh, and as for
it being a children's book -- apparently nobody told any of the
thirtysomethings who greedily devour the series at a rapid pace.
Highly recommended.
--Claire E. White
Return to the
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