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Lessons to be Learned in the Harry Potter Books

2023-01-17 19:57:24

Please imagine a world where extraordinary things become normal. Where a fire dragon roams on the ground, you can usually change to a person you can not see by just pressing the wrist once. "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows", J. Rolling drew a brilliant picture of this magical world. This book seems full of illusion, but there are many courses taught when he or she travels with the protagonist. First, I will repeat the lesson through a story.

By Rowling, written by J. K., Harry Potter is the most successful fantasy book series in the centuries. Harry Potter and the magician's stone are the first book of this series. This is about how young Harry Potter invited Hogwarts, a school where children learn magic. And his life will change forever. In 1938, a young orphan Leyle came to her newly adopted parents 'parents Hans and Rosa' s house. When a kind painter Hans learns that Leyle can not read, he will teach a miracle of a word written in a child. Liesel always loves books and also keeps books from the bonfires of the Nazis. The new family of Liesel barely escaped, but their circumstances became even more dangerous when the father secretly protected the Jewish boy who saved the life of Hans.

Harry Potter is a mage. In addition, he is a magicalian with extraordinary abilities and extraordinary history. His history is particularly interesting. For he has learned something new about himself in every book. His legend begins with "Harry Potter and the Magical Stone" (1997; "Harry Potter Stone and British Philosopher"), starting with Harry 's approach to his 11th birthday. Harry was an orphan who lived in British country of Petunia Dursley and her husband Vernon, his sister's sister. Their houses are spacious and comfortable, but not for Harry. The Dursley family is relatively wealthy, but the evil stepmother treats Harry as badly as treating Cinderella in a classical fairy tale. They handed him clothes, letting him do something other than his housekeeping, excluding him from special family activities, and almost ignored him at Christmas and his birthday.