Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince

Hardcover, 612 pages

English language

Published Nov. 19, 2005 by Bloomsbury.

ISBN:
978-0-7475-8110-9
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OCLC Number:
57358293

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4 stars (27 reviews)

Harry's sixth year at Hogwarts begins, and it feels like a reassuring place to return to after the strange events of the summer. Disappearances, murder and an ominous chilling mist which swirls through both the Muggle and wizarding worlds are harbingers of more-sinister purpose. Voldemort's army is swelling, and with it the Death Eaters are growing bolder and more deadly. Suspicions are rife, and allegiances questioned, as even the safest havens cease to feel secure -from the Dark wizards. As the storm gathers strength, Harry must face the terrifying truth of his destiny.

--jacket flap

43 editions

Review of 'Harry Potter and the Half-blood Prince' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

This is my favorite of the HP novels because I love the backstory of the bad guy. This book and the chapter of the last book with Snape's memories tie up a ton of different threads in the series. I'm still left with the question: it seems that learning non-verbal spells casting would be pretty critical, as demonstrated in Harry's final confrontation with Snape. Why don't they actually learn this?

Also, Slughorn is much more likable in the book than in the movie. The movie presents him as an opportunistic thief (Dentacular leaves). This scene is very different in the book.

Review of 'Harry Potter and the Half-blood Prince' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

When I began rereading this series back in February 2011, my aim was to take them slow and perhaps do one a year. There was no rush, I thought, having already read them and with newer and different things to read.

And yet I managed to fit in books 4 and 5 last year, and now, having only recently caught the terrestrial television premier of Deathly Hallows part 2 (despite the DVD languishing unopened for years) I have a burning desire to finish the series yet again.

Half-Blood Prince, at the time, I liked quite a lot. I did rush through it of course, how could I not? It was a Potter release. Yet the full impact of things didn't really hit me, I fear, because I came away a little disheartened.

You can argue that I was supposed to: the end of the novel certainly doesn't cause you to …