Fourteen-year-old Harry Potter joins the Weasleys at the Quidditch World Cup, then enters his fourth year at Hogwarts Academy where he is mysteriously entered in an unusual contest that challenges his wizarding skills, friendships and character, amid signs that an old enemy is growing stronger.
Review of 'Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
So, I’ve been rereading this book a chapter a week for about a year with the Harry Potter and the Sacred Text podcast. The podcast will hit the last chapter on Thursday’s episode. It’s been great to read a book this way.
Review of 'Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
Order of the Phoenix was the first Harry I saw on CD. For the last time, I got the Adrenaline rush, which faded as I got older, but sitting there listening to the news report with Harry under the window rekindled that feeling. Interestingly, it was also the first time I actually had a novel from the series in print, and the first time I’d read an original potter at the computer before being able to get the audio version.
I say original because of the profusion of fanfiction I’d swallowed. I was first introduced to Harry at the end of 2000, and this one appeared halfway through 2003. I’d of course pounced upon the first four and eaten them quickly and, like many die-hard Potter fans, dived into reading fanfiction because of the huge gap between releases. There’s a whole category of “Post-GOF” fanfic in my archive, none of …
Order of the Phoenix was the first Harry I saw on CD. For the last time, I got the Adrenaline rush, which faded as I got older, but sitting there listening to the news report with Harry under the window rekindled that feeling. Interestingly, it was also the first time I actually had a novel from the series in print, and the first time I’d read an original potter at the computer before being able to get the audio version.
I say original because of the profusion of fanfiction I’d swallowed. I was first introduced to Harry at the end of 2000, and this one appeared halfway through 2003. I’d of course pounced upon the first four and eaten them quickly and, like many die-hard Potter fans, dived into reading fanfiction because of the huge gap between releases. There’s a whole category of “Post-GOF” fanfic in my archive, none of which I’ve even looked at in over 7 years, but it’s still there, for a day I decide to revisit my youth.
I liked Order of the Phoenix. Rereading it now, the blend of Harry’s teenage tantrums, interference at Hogwarts, the stress of Sirius and Dumbledore’s distance make for a powerful cocktail. Reading it for the first time I suppose I didn’t look for reasons for the emotion, just enjoyed the story, so that was different.
It’s also huge, of course – the longest by far, and certainly with a wealth of depth and detail. Something was missing – (innocence, the world gets darker, and I think something of the charm of the world Rowling made fades with it, which is sad. Still, it’s a most worthy story, a powerful and compelling book and certainly worthy of more detail and attention than I’ve been able to give it in this brief write-up.