Dear J.K. Rowling, The Harry Potter Series has changed my outlook on life immensely. The Sorcerer's Stone was a bright view into a wildly creative world on the dreary streets of London. I experienced the books in fifth grade and have adored them ever since. The Sorcerer’s Stone gives a place for me to experience pure joy and wonder. It is a haven for me in the darkening world we live in. The pure unadulterated joy and hope that comes when I explore Harry’s first experiences in the wizarding world is like none other. As I am being burdened with the stresses that come with aging the book lets me have a sense of being a careless child again. The future appears bleak somedays. I have to believe that the world is not always as it seems. In
Since the first segment of the series was released in 1997, Harry Potter has been challenged by churches and parents due to the practicing of magic by children found within the books. The books have been removed from school shelves, discouraged by churches, and censored by parents. It is claimed that Harry Potter is devilish, satanic, and encourages children to practice the occult, damaging their religious views (LaFond). Therefore, many parents keep their children from reading the book series. Yet, Harry Potter has been such a positive influence on my so many lives. Evident through the movies, theme parks, stores, and much more, J.K. Rowling’s series has been an overwhelming success for many reasons (“Because it’s his…”). In order to encourage
Imagine discovering that you’re not an ordinary person, but a wizard with magnificent, magical powers. Imagine attending a school where you’ll study transfiguration and charms instead of trigonometry and chem. Imagine the thrill of flying across the sky on a broomstick. These adventures and many others are waiting to be experienced in Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone by novelist J. K. Rowling. This fanciful and entertaining tale has taken the youth of the nation by storm, and its sales have only been surpassed by the book’s sequels, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets and Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban.
I believe that I should be one of the few that gets to sit in a chair. Considering the fact that there will be multiple students writing this to you, I hope to persuade you into thinking that I should be able to sit in a chair.
Harry Potter is a fascinating tale of sorcerers, wands, broomsticks, dragons, and magic. The story begins with a young boy named Harry Potter who lives at number four Privit Drive, Surray, England. His journey begins after the death of his parents at the hands of the evil Lord Voldemort. Harry learns of his past and his future as a wizard from Hagrid, the keeper of keys and grounds at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. He travels to Hogwarts where he learns spells and enchantments, makes new friends, finds enemies, and discovers fantastic secretes. J.K. Rowling weaves a web of impeccable storytelling with this critically acclaimed novel. In the tale of Harry Potter imagery, symbolism, and motif take central focus.
Harry Potter is known as a fantasy series, but it also touches on some of the difficult aspects of adolescence. Not only can we see the adolescent development of Harry himself, but also of those around him. It made them seem human and thus easier to relate to, despite their 'wizardry.'
The journey from childhood to adulthood is filled with many challenges with the desired outcome being a successful entry into adulthood. Almost everyone can relate to learning about the significance of family, how to win the respect of peers, how to value humility, the forces of good and evil, and right and wrong, and when it’s time to rebel or follow the rules. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone by J.K. Rowling, is an adventure story set in Surrey, England. It’s about the transformation of a timid, weak young boy with a secret gift, into an infamous hero. Harry Potter, escapes a life of abuse to begin a new life filled with adventure and friends who respect him. The recurring theme throughout the book is that we are neither inherently good or bad, rather it’s our choices or decisions that determine who we become and our place in the world.
The wizardry and witchcraft of the Harry Potter series is precisely what makes them so enchanting in the eyes’ of J.K. Rowling’s readers. The other worldly aspects provide both children and adults with an escape from the real world through its text, allowing for a break from reality without any repercussions or extreme measures necessary. In the eyes of renowned astronomer and scholar Marcia Montenegro, however, this other worldly theme in Harry Potter is what makes the books dangerous to its readers and those around them in society. Rather than believing that the elements of witchcraft are harmless, Montenegro firmly believes that Harry Potter opens the eyes of its readers to the horrors of the occult and the dark elements of sorcery. The
In 1997, J.K. Rowling, a graduate of Exeter University, became an over-night sensation when she introduced the world to a boy named Harry Potter. The rags-to-riches life of Harry is a parallel of Rawling's own life. Rawling, a divorced, unemployed, single-mother living on public assistance, breathed life into Harry and his comrades on cocktail napkins in a café she frequented. After numerous rejections from publishers, Bloomsbury Publishers took a chance, and to borrow a trite expression, "the rest is history." Since the release of the first (of the rumored seven book series) Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, or Philosopher's Stone as it is known abroad, three additional installments of Harry's life have been published. In 1999, the first three Harry Potter books filled the top three positions of the New York Times best sellers list.
This literary analysis will define the importance of self-realization in the fantasy world of Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone by J.K. Rowling. Rowling’s fantasy world presents the challenges of a young boy, Harry Potter, that is trapped between the “real world” and the fantasy world of Hogwart’s School. Harry’s transport into the world of Hogwart’s provides him with the potential for self-realization that will fulfill his true identity as a wizard. Hogwarts School is, in fact, a fantasy location, but the overriding realism of his identity as a wizard teaches him about the importance
The Harry Potter phenomenon had its humble beginning all the way back in the 1990s, when the first book, written by J. K. Rowling, came out in the shops. The main protagonist, a scrawny, young child wizard, who wore round glasses, had an immediate appeal to the readers, but no one at that time knew that the young boy would turn out to be the literary icon of the last decade. The popularity of the book resulted in it being translated into various language...
The novel, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone by J.K. Rowling, is a story about an orphan named Harry Potter who is sent to live with his relatives, the Dursleys. For the first ten years of his life, Harry is hated and ignored by his Aunt Petunia and Uncle Vernon. Harry has never experienced a friendship with anyone until the day he is sent to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Throughout the school year, Harry develops a balance of friendship between Ron Weasley, Hermione Granger, and Neville Longbottom. Each of them, has a need to belong somewhere. Together, they form a balance that make them each feel wanted in way that they have never known until they meet each other.
In the novel, Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone, J.K Rowling introduces her main character, a 11-year old British wizarding student, Harry Potter. Harry is described to have jet-black hair, green eyes, and to be pale, skinny, and bespectacled. While Harry was still and infant, he was responsible for the downfall of a dark and powerful wizard, as a result his name is known to everyone wizarding world. In the novel, despite all the fame and admiration he has, Harry only recently finds out he is a wizard, and that he is famous. Therefore Harry feels burdened and insecure with all the attention he is receiving, and at the end of the novel, he proves himself to be an incredible wizard. Throughout the novel we learn Harry is brave, curious and modest.
One of the most read series in all literature is Harry Potter. The seven-book succession has sold over 400 million copies and has been translated into over sixty languages. What is it that makes this series so wildly famous? What is it about the boy who lived that makes frenzied readers flock to their local bookstore at midnight on the day of the release to buy the latest installment? How is a story set in a world that doesn’t exist about wizards, witches, magic, and mystical creatures so popular? The series has been able to earn its spot on the New York Times Bestseller list and has granted author J.K. Rowling multiple awards because it is relatable. It is not the setting or the events in the plot of the story that we relate to. We relate to what Harry, his friends, mentors, teachers, caretakers, and even enemies feel. Harry is in a lot of ways exactly like us. He represents some of the good characteristics that all of us have as well as the bad. The series as a whole, is about one thing that is stressed over and over again in the novels, love. The Harry Potter series is one of the most read sequences of novels because the central theme is love and self-sacrifice, and readers are looking for a novel that shows them just that.
J. K. Rowling encountered far more closed doors than open ones. In the late 1990’s after her first marriage ended, and she lost her job, she was a “single mother living on welfare”. Despite these setbacks, she was far from deterred if anything she was even more determined to become a novelist. She had reached rock bottom and she said, “I had to achieve something. Without the challenge, I would have gone stark raving mad.” After numerous hours of writing in a little café with her sleeping baby, Rowling submitted her first novel to an editor who liked it, but warned her that she’d “never make any money out of children’s books.” The money was of little consequence to her; knowing that she had created a novel after hours of careful thought and planning was reward enough for her. Her next moment of triumph came when, after several rejections, her book was picked up by a publishing company. Through her diligence, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone came to be and J.K. Rowling started on her path to success with her most beloved
Witches and wizards, flying broomsticks and magic potions, fantastic beasts and terrible secrets are just a few of the reasons why Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone by J.K Rowling is one of the most beloved books of the twentieth century. In this story the main character, Harry Potter, lives a boring and dreadful life. Then one day, everything changes when he is introduced to the world of Witchcraft and Wizardry at a school called Hogwarts. As the book continues he faces many conflicts, some of which people do not approve of. There are many reasons why people would not like these conflicts, mainly consisting of the fantasy of it or the “satanic tones” associated with witchcraft and wizardry. However, without the conflicts that are faced, the story would not be the same.