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qiáo 'ān · luó lín Joanne Rowlingyuèdòu
  běn piàn jiǎng shù de shì shī de hòu dài xiǎo nán hái de shìcóng xiǎo shuāng wáng de xiǎo nán hái shì shī de hòu dài de dōubèi jiè de huài shī suǒ shārán 'ér dāng huài shī shā shí què bèi zhǒng de liàng gěi zhǐ yīn xìng cúnzhī hòu 'ā jiā rén tóng zhùér qiě bèi sòng wǎng shī xué xiào jiù shēng duō yòu yòu de jīng


  Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone is the first novel in the Harry Potter series written by J. K. Rowling and featuring Harry Potter, a young wizard. It describes how Harry discovers he is a wizard, makes close friends, and a few enemies at the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, and with the help of his friends thwarts an attempted comeback by the evil wizard Voldemort, who killed Harry's parents and tried to kill Harry when he was one year old.
  
  The book was published on 30 June 1997 by Bloomsbury in London, while in 1998 Scholastic Corporation published an edition for the United States market under the title Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone. The novel won most of the UK book awards that were judged by children, and other awards in the USA. The book reached the top of the New York Times list of best-selling fiction in August 1999, and stayed near the top of that list for much of 1999 and 2000. It has been translated into several other languages and has been made into a feature-length film of the same name.
  
  Most reviews were very favourable, commenting on Rowling's imagination, humour, simple, direct style and clever plot construction, although a few complained that the final chapters looked rushed. The writing has been compared to that of Jane Austen, one of Rowling's favourite authors, of Roald Dahl, whose works dominated children's stories before the appearance of Harry Potter, and of the Ancient Greek story-teller Homer. While some commentators thought the book looked backwards to Victorian and Edwardian boarding school stories, others thought it placed the genre firmly in the modern world by featuring contemporary ethical and social issues.
  
  Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, along with the rest of the Harry Potter series, has been attacked by several religious groups and banned in some countries because of accusations that the novels promote witchcraft. However, some Christian commentators have written that the book exemplifies important Christian viewpoints, including the power of self-sacrifice and the ways in which people's decisions shape their personalities. Educators regard Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone and its sequels as an important aid in improving literacy because of the books' popularity. The series has also been used as a source of object lessons in educational techniques, sociological analysis and marketing.
  
  Synopsis
  Plot
  
  Just before the start of the novel, Voldemort, the most powerful evil wizard in living memory, killed Harry's parents but mysteriously vanished after trying to kill Harry. While the wizarding world is celebrating Voldemort's downfall, Professor Dumbledore, Professor McGonagall and Hagrid place the one year-old orphan in the care of his Muggle (non-wizard) aunt and uncle, Vernon and Petunia Dursley.
  
  For ten years, they and their son Dudley bully Harry. Shortly before Harry's eleventh birthday, a series of letters arrive, addressed to Harry but destroyed by his uncle before Harry can read them. As a result, a torrent of letters pour into the house through every opening, however small, and to escape this, Vernon Dursley takes the family to a lonely island. As they are settling in, Hagrid bursts through the door to tell Harry what the Dursleys have kept from him: Harry is a wizard and has been accepted at Hogwarts for the coming year.
  
  Hagrid takes Harry to Diagon Alley, a magically-concealed shopping precinct in London, where Harry is bewildered to discover how famous he is among wizards as "the boy who lived." He also finds that in the wizarding world he is quite wealthy, since a bequest from his parents has remained on deposit at Gringotts Wizarding Bank. Guided by Hagrid, he buys the books and equipment he needs for Hogwarts - and finds that the only wand that works well for him is effectively the twin of Voldemort's.
  
  A month later, Harry leaves the Dursleys' home to catch the Hogwarts Express from King's Cross railway station. There he is befriended by the Weasley family, who show him how to pass through the magical wall to Platform 9¾, where the train is waiting. While on the train Harry makes friends with Ron Weasley, who tells him that someone tried to rob a vault at Gringotts. Another new pupil, Draco Malfoy, accompanied by his beefy but dim sidekicks Vincent Crabbe and Gregory Goyle, offers to advise Harry, but Harry dislikes Draco's arrogance and prejudices.
  
  Before the term's first dinner in the school's Great Hall, the new pupils are allocated to houses by the magical Sorting Hat. The Hat assigns most pupils instantly – particularly when sending Draco, Crabbe and Goyle to Slytherin – but telepathically discusses with Harry about whether the boy's ambition would make Slytherin the best choice for him. When Harry silently but vehemently objects, the Hat sends him to join the Weasleys in Gryffindor. While Harry is eating, Professor Snape catches his eye and Harry feels a sudden stab of pain in the scar Voldemort left on his forehead, which fades as quickly.
  
  After a traumatic first Potions lesson with Snape, Harry and Ron visit Hagrid, who lives in a rustic house on the edge of the Forbidden Forest. There they learn that the attempted robbery at Gringotts happened the day Harry was withdrawing money, and Harry remembers Hagrid removing a small package, emptying a vault that was later broken into and searched.
  
  During the new pupils' first flying lesson, Neville Longbottom breaks his wrist and Draco takes advantage to throw the forgetful Neville's fragile Remembrall high in the air. Harry gives chase on his broomstick, catching the Remembrall inches from the ground. Professor McGonagall dashes out and appoints him as Gryffindor's new Seeker.
  
  Draco tricks Ron and Harry into a midnight excursion, and Neville and the bossy Hermione Granger, both also in Gryffindor, accompany the pair to keep them out of trouble. All four accidentally enter a forbidden corridor and find a room containing a huge three-headed dog. The group beats a hasty retreat, and only Hermione notices that the dog is standing over a trap-door. Harry concludes that the monster guards the package Hagrid retrieved from Gringotts.
  
  After Ron criticizes Hermione's ostentatious proficiency in Charms, she hides in tears in the girls' toilet. Professor Quirrell reports that a troll has entered the dungeons. While everyone else returns to their dormitories, Harry and Ron rush to warn Hermione. The troll corners Hermione in the toilet but when Harry sticks his wand up one of its nostrils, Ron uses the levitation spell to knock out the troll with its own club. Afterwards, several professors arrive and Hermione takes the blame for the battle and becomes a firm friend of the two boys.
  
  The evening before Harry's first Quidditch match, he sees Snape receiving medical attention from Filch for a bite on his leg by the three-headed dog. During the game, Harry's broomstick goes out of control, endangering his life, and Hermione notices that Snape is staring at Harry and muttering. She dashes over to the Professors' stand, knocking over Professor Quirrel in her haste, and sets fire to Snape's robe. Harry regains control of his broomstick and catches the Golden Snitch, winning the game for Gryffindor. Hagrid refuses to believe that Snape was responsible for Harry's danger, but lets slip that he bought the three-headed dog, and that the monster is guarding a secret that belongs to Professor Dumbledore and someone called Nicolas Flamel.
  
  Harry and the Weasleys stay at Hogwarts for Christmas, and one of Harry's presents, from an anonymous donor, is an Invisibility Cloak. Harry uses the Cloak to search the library's Restricted Section for information about the mysterious Flamel, has to evade Snape and Filch after an enchanted book shrieks an alarm, and slips into a room containing the Mirror of Erised, which shows his parents and several of their ancestors. Harry becomes addicted to the Mirror's visions and is rescued by Professor Dumbledore, who explains that it shows what the viewer most desperately longs for.
  
  When the rest of the pupils return for the next term, Draco plays a prank on Neville, and Harry consoles Neville with a sweet. The collectible card wrapped with the sweet identifies Flamel as an alchemist. Hermione soon finds that he is a 665-year-old man who possesses the only known Philosopher's Stone, from which can be extracted an elixir of life. A few days later Harry notices Snape sneaking towards the outskirts of the Forbidden Forest. There he half-hears a furtive conversation about the Philosopher's Stone, in which Snape asks Professor Quirrell if he has found a way past the three-headed dog and menacingly tells Quirrell to decide whose side he is on. Harry concludes that Snape is trying to steal the Stone and Quirrell has prepared a series of defences for it.
  
  The three friends discover that Hagrid is raising a baby dragon, which is against wizard law, and arrange to smuggle it out of the country around midnight. Draco arrives, hoping to raise the alarm and get them into trouble, and Neville comes to warn them of Draco's mischief. Although Ron is bitten by the dragon and is sent to the infirmary, Harry and Hermione spirit the dragon safely away. However, they are caught, and Harry loses the Invisibility Cloak. As part of their punishment, Harry, Hermione, Draco and Neville are compelled to help Hagrid to rescue a badly-injured unicorn in the Forbidden Forest. They split into two parties, and Harry and Draco find the unicorn dead, surrounded by its blood. A hooded figure crawls to the corpse and drinks the blood, while Draco screams and flees. The hooded figure moves towards Harry, who is knocked out by an agonising pain spreading from his scar. When Harry regains consciousness, the hooded figure has gone and a centaur, Firenze, offers to give him a ride back to the school. The centaur tells Harry that drinking a unicorn's blood will save the life of a mortally injured person, but leave them only barely alive. Firenze suggests Voldemort drank the unicorn's blood to gain enough strength to make the elixir of life from the Philosopher's Stone, and regain full health by drinking that. On his return, Harry finds that someone has slipped the Invisibility Cloak under his sheets.
  
  A few weeks later, while relaxing after the end-of-session examinations, Harry suddenly wonders how something as illegal as a dragon's egg came into Hagrid's possession. The gamekeeper says he was given it by a hooded stranger who bought him several drinks and asked him how to get past the three-headed dog, which Hagrid admits is easy – music sends it to sleep. Realising that one of the Philosopher's Stone's defences is no longer secure, Harry goes to inform Professor Dumbledore, only to find that the headmaster has just left for an important meeting. Harry concludes that Snape faked the message that called Dumbledore away and will try to steal the Stone that night.
  Voldemort on the back of Professor Quirrell's head at the climax of the film Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone.
  
  Covered by the Invisibility Cloak, Harry and his two friends go to the three-headed dog's chamber, where Harry sends the beast to sleep by playing a flute. After lifting the trap-door, they encounter a series of obstacles, each of which requires special skills possessed by one of the three, and one of which requires Ron to sacrifice himself. In the final room Harry, now alone, finds Quirrell rather than Snape. Quirrell admits that he let in the troll that tried to kill Hermione in the toilet, and that he tried to kill Harry during the first Quidditch match but was knocked over by Hermione. Snape had been trying to protect Harry and suspected Quirrell. Quirrell serves Voldemort and, after failing to steal the Philosopher's Stone from Gringotts, allowed his master to possess him in order to improve their chances of success. However the only other object in the room is the Mirror of Erised, and Quirrell can see no sign of the Stone. At Voldemort's bidding, Quirrel forces Harry to stand in front of the Mirror. Harry feels the Stone drop into his pocket and tries to stall. Quirrell removes his turban, revealing the face of Voldemort on the back of his head. Voldemort/Quirrell tries to grab the Stone from Harry, but simply touching Harry causes Quirrell's flesh to burn. After further struggles Harry passes out.
  
  He awakes in the school hospital, where Professor Dumbledore tells him that he survived because his mother sacrificed her life to protect him, and Voldemort could not understand the power of such love. Voldemort left Quirrell to die, and is likely to return by some other means. Dumbledore had foreseen that the Mirror would show Voldemort/Quirrell only themselves making the elixir of life, as they wanted to use the Philosopher's Stone; Harry was able to see the Stone in the Mirror because he wanted to find it but not to use it. The Stone has now been destroyed.
  
  Harry returns to the Dursleys for the summer holiday, but does not tell them that under-age wizards are forbidden to use magic outside Hogwarts.
  
  After ten years, Harry became an eleven year-old boy. The Dursleys have kept the truth about Harry's parents from him, but it is revealed in the form of Rubeus Hagrid, who tells Harry that he is a wizard and has been accepted at Hogwarts for the autumn term. Harry takes the train to Hogwarts from King's Cross Station. On the train, Harry sits with and quickly befriends Ron Weasley; the two are also briefly visited by Neville Longbottom and Hermione Granger. Later on in the journey, Malfoy comes into Harry and Ron's compartment with his friends Crabbe and Goyle and introduces himself. After Ron laughs at Draco's name, Draco offers to help Harry distinguish the wrong sort of wizards, but Harry declines.
  
  Upon arrival, the Sorting Hat places Harry, Hermione, Neville and Ron into Gryffindor House, one of the school's four houses, while Draco and his cronies are placed in Slytherin. After a broom-mounted game to save Neville's Remembrall, Harry joins Gryffindor's Quidditch team as their youngest Seeker in over a century.
  
  Shortly after school begins, Harry and his friends hear that someone broke into a previously emptied vault at the wizarding bank, Gringotts. The mystery deepens when they discover a monstrous three-headed dog, Fluffy, who guards a trapdoor in the forbidden third floor passageway. On Halloween, a troll enters the castle and traps Hermione in one of the girls' lavatories. Harry and Ron rescue her, but are caught by Professor McGonagall. Hermione defends the boys and takes the blame, which results in the three becoming close friends.
  
  Harry's broom becomes jinxed during his first Quidditch match, nearly resulting in Harry falling from a great height. Hermione believes that Professor Snape has cursed the broom and distracts him by setting his robes on fire, allowing Harry to catch the Golden Snitch and win the game for Gryffindor.
  
  At Christmas, Harry receives his father's Invisibility Cloak from an unknown source. Later, he discovers the Mirror of Erised, a strange mirror that shows Harry surrounded by his parents and the extended family he never knew. Later, Harry learns that Nicolas Flamel is the maker of the Philosopher's Stone, a stone that gives the owner eternal life.
  
  Harry sees Professor Snape interrogating Professor Quirrell about getting past Fluffy, seemingly confirming the suspicion that Snape is trying to steal the Philosopher's Stone in order to restore Lord Voldemort to power. The trio discover that Hagrid is hiding a dragon egg, which hatches; since dragon breeding is illegal, they convince Hagrid to send the dragon to live with others of its kind. Harry and Hermione are caught returning to their dormitories after sending Norbert off and are forced to serve detention with Hagrid in the Forbidden Forest. In the forest, Harry sees a hooded figure drink the blood of an injured unicorn. Firenze, a centaur, tells Harry that the hooded figure is Voldemort.
  
  Hagrid accidentally tells Harry, Ron, and Hermione how to get past Fluffy; and they rush to tell the headmaster, Albus Dumbledore, what they know, only to find that he has been called away from the school. Convinced that Dumbledore's summons was a red herring to take him away while the Philosopher's Stone is stolen, the trio set out to reach the Stone first. They navigate a series of complex magical challenges set up by the school's faculty, and at the end of these challenges, Harry enters the inner chamber alone, only to find that it is the timid Professor Quirrell, not Snape, who is after the Stone. The final challenge protecting the Stone is the Mirror of Erised. Quirrell forces Harry to look into the mirror to discover where the Stone is hidden; and Harry successfully resists, and the Stone drops into his own pocket. Lord Voldemort reveals himself: he has possessed Quirrell and appears as a ghastly face on the back of Quirrell's head. Quirrell tries to attack Harry, but merely touching Harry proves to be agony for him. Voldemort flees and Quirrell dies as Dumbledore arrives back in time to save Harry.
  
  As Harry recovers, Dumbledore confirms that Lily had died while trying to protect Harry as an infant. Her pure, loving sacrifice provides her son with an ancient magical protection against Voldemort's lethal spells. Dumbledore also explains that the Philosopher's Stone has been destroyed to prevent Voldemort from ever using it. He then tells Harry that only those who wanted to find the Stone, but not use it, would be able to retrieve it from the mirror, which is why Harry could acquire it. When Harry asks Dumbledore why Voldemort attempted to kill him when he was an infant, Dumbledore promises to tell Harry when he is older.
  
  At the end-of-year feast, where Harry is welcomed as a hero. Dumbledore gives a few last-minute additions, granting enough points to Harry, Ron, Hermione, and Neville for Gryffindor to win the House Cup, ending Slytherin's six-year reign as house champions.
  Main characters
  
  Harry Potter is an orphan whom Rowling imagined as a "scrawny, black-haired, bespectacled boy who didn't know he was a wizard." She developed the series' story and characters, including Voldemort, to explain how Harry came to be in this situation and how his life unfolded from there. Apart from the first chapter, the events of this book take place just before and in the year following Harry's eleventh birthday. Voldemort's attack left a lightning bolt-shaped scar on Harry's forehead, which produces stabbing pains when Voldemort or a close associate of the dark wizard feels any strong emotion. Harry has prodigious natural talent for Quidditch and the ability to persuade friends by passionate speeches.
  
  Petunia Dursley, the sister of Harry's mother Lily, is a thin woman with a long neck that she uses for spying on the neighbours. She regards her magical sister as a freak and tries to pretend that she never existed. Her husband Vernon is a heavily-built man whose irascible bluster covers a narrow mind and a fear of anything unusual. Their son Dudley is an overweight, spoilt bully.
  
  Despite being the school's jokers, identical twins Fred and George Weasley get good marks in examinations and are excellent Quidditch players. Their younger brother Ron is Harry's age and Rowling describes him as the ultimate best friend, "always there when you need him." Ron lacks confidence in his prospects of matching his three oldest brothers' achievements or the popularity of Fred and George, but his skill and bravery in a magical chess game where lives are at stake help Harry past one of the obstacles on the path to the Philosopher's Stone.
  
  Hermione Granger, the daughter of an all-Muggle family, is a bossy girl who has apparently memorised most of the textbooks before the start of term. Rowling described Hermione as a "very logical, upright and good" character with "a lot of insecurity and a great fear of failure beneath her swottiness". Despite her nagging efforts to keep Harry and Ron out of trouble, she becomes a close friend of the two boys, and her magical and analytical skills play a vital part in finding the Philosopher's Stone.
  
  Draco Malfoy is a slim, pale boy who speaks in a bored drawl. He is arrogant about his skill in Quidditch, and despises anyone who is not a pure blood wizard – and wizards who do not share his views. His parents had supported Voldemort, but changed sides after the dark wizard's disappearance. Draco avoids direct confrontations, and tries to get Harry and his friends into trouble.
  
  Neville Longbottom is a plump, diffident boy, so forgetful that his grandmother gives him a Remembrall. Neville's magical abilities are weak and appeared just in time to save his life when he was eight. Despite his timidity, Neville will fight anyone after some encouragement or if he thinks it is right and important.
  Dumbledore as portrayed by the late Richard Harris in the film Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone.
  
  Professor Dumbledore, a tall, thin man who wears half-moon spectacles and has silver hair and a beard that tucks into his belt, is the headmaster of Hogwarts, and thought to be the only wizard Voldemort fears. Dumbledore, while renowned for his achievements in magic, finds it difficult to resist sweets and has a whimsical sense of humour. Although he shrugs off praise, he is aware of his own brilliance. Rowling described him as the "epitome of goodness".
  
  Professor McGonagall, a tall, severe-looking woman with black hair tied in a tight bun, teaches Transfiguration, and sometimes transforms herself into a cat. She is in charge of Gryffindor House and, unlike Professor Snape, shows no favouritism towards pupils in her House, but seizes any opportunity to help Gryffindor by fair means. According to the author, "under that gruff exterior" is "a bit of an old softy".
  
  Twitching, stammering Professor Quirrell teaches Defence Against the Dark Arts. Reputedly he was a brilliant scholar, but his nerve was shattered by an encounter with vampires. Quirrell wears a turban to conceal the fact that he is voluntarily possessed by Voldemort, whose face appears on the back of Quirrel's head.
  
  Professor Snape, who has a hooked nose, sallow complexion and greasy black hair, teaches Potions, but is eager to teach Defence Against the Dark Arts. Snape praises pupils in Slytherin, his own House, but seizes every opportunity to humiliate others, especially Harry. Several incidents, beginning with the shooting pain in Harry's scar near the end of the first dinner, lead Harry and his friends to think Snape is a follower of Voldemort.
  
  Hagrid, a half-giant nearly 12 feet (3.7 m) tall, with tangled black hair and beard, was expelled from Hogwarts and his wand was broken, but Professor Dumbledore let him stay on as the school's gamekeeper, a job which enables him to lavish affection and pet names on even the most dangerous of magical creatures. Hagrid is fiercely loyal to Dumbledore and quickly becomes a close friend of Harry, Ron and later Hermione, but his carelessness makes him unreliable.
  
  The school's caretaker, Filch, knows the school's secret passages better than anyone else except possibly the Weasley twins. His cat, Mrs. Norris, aids his hunts for misbehaving pupils. Other members of Hogwarts staff include: the dumpy Herbology teacher Professor Sprout; Professor Flitwick, the tiny and excitable Charms teacher, who is discreetly friendly towards Harry; the soporific History of Magic teacher, Professor Binns, a ghost who has not yet noticed his own death; and Madam Hooch, the Quidditch coach, who is strict but a considerate, methodical teacher. The poltergeist Peeves wanders around the buildings causing trouble for whomever he can.
  
  In the book, Rowling introduced an eclectic cast of characters. The first character to be introduced is Vernon Dursley, Harry's uncle. Most of the actions centre on the eponymous hero Harry Potter, an orphan who escapes his miserable childhood with the Dursley family. Rowling imagined him as a "scrawny, black-haired, bespectacled boy who didn't know he was a wizard", and says she transferred part of her pain about losing her mother to him. During the book, Harry makes two close friends, Ronald Weasley and Hermione Granger. Ron is described by Rowling as the ultimate best friend, "always there when you need him". Rowling has described Hermione as a "very logical, upright and good" character with "a lot of insecurity and a great fear of failure beneath her swottiness".
  
  Rowling also imagined a supporting cast of adults. Headmaster of Hogwarts is powerful but kind wizard Albus Dumbledore, who becomes Harry's confidant; Rowling described him as "epitome of goodness". His right hand is severe Minerva McGonagall, who according to the author "under that gruff exterior" is "a bit of an old softy", the friendly half-giant Rubeus Hagrid, who saved Harry from the Dursley family and the sinister Severus Snape. Professor Quirrell is also featured in the novel.
  
  The main antagonists are Draco Malfoy, an elitist, bullying classmate and Lord Voldemort, the most powerful evil wizard who becomes disembodied when he tries to kill baby Harry. According to a 1999 interview with Rowling, the character of Voldemort was created as a literary foil for Harry, and his backstory was intentionally not fleshed-out at first:
  
   The basic idea... Harry, I saw Harry very very very clearly. Very vividly. And I knew he didn't know he was a wizard. [...] And so then I kind of worked backwards from that position to find out how that could be, that he wouldn't know what he was. [...] When he was one year old, the most evil wizard for hundreds and hundreds of years attempted to kill him. He killed Harry's parents, and then he tried to kill Harry—he tried to curse him. [...] And—so—but for some mysterious reason, the curse didn't work on Harry. So he's left with this lightning bolt shaped scar on his forehead and the curse rebounded upon the evil wizard, who has been in hiding ever since.
  
  Development, publication and reception
  Development
  
  In 1990 Jo Rowling, as she preferred to be known, wanted to move with her boyfriend to a flat in Manchester and in her words, "One weekend after flat hunting, I took the train back to London on my own and the idea for Harry Potter fell into my head... A scrawny, little, black-haired, bespectacled boy became more and more of a wizard to me... I began to write Philosopher's Stone that very evening. Although, the first couple of pages look nothing like the finished product." Then Rowling's mother died and, to cope with her pain, Rowling transferred her own anguish to the orphan Harry. Rowling spent six years working on Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, and in 1996 obtained a grant of £4,000 from the Scottish Arts Council, which enabled her to finish the book and plan the sequels. She sent the book to an agent and a publisher, and then the second agent she approached spent a year trying to sell the book to publishers, most of whom thought it was too long at about 90,000 words. Barry Cunningham, who was building a portfolio of distinctive fantasies by new authors for Bloomsbury Children's Books, recommended accepting the book, and the eight-year-old daughter of Bloomsbury's chief executive said it was "so much better than anything else."
  UK publication and reception
  Imitation of the fictional Platform 9¾ at the real King's Cross railway station, with a luggage trolley apparently half-way through the magical wall
  
  Bloomsbury accepted the book, paying Rowling a £2,500 advance, and Cunningham sent proof copies to carefully-chosen authors, critics and booksellers in order to obtain comments that could be quoted when the book was launched. He was less concerned about the book's length than about its author's name, as the title sounded like a boys' book and boys prefer books by male authors. Rowling therefore adopted the nom de plume J.K. Rowling just before publication. In June 1997, Bloomsbury published Philosopher’s Stone with an initial print-run of 500 copies in hardback, three hundred of which were distributed to libraries. The short initial print run was standard for first novels, and Cunningham hoped booksellers would read the book and recommend it to customers.
  
  Lindsey Fraser, who had supplied one of the blurb comments, wrote what is thought to be the first published review, in The Scotsman on 28 June 1997. She described Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone as "a hugely entertaining thriller" and Rowling as "a first-rate writer for children". Another early review, in The Herald, said, "I have yet to find a child who can put it down." Newspapers outside Scotland started to notice the book, with glowing reviews in The Guardian, The Sunday Times and The Mail on Sunday, and in September 1997 Books for Keeps, a magazine that specialised in children's books, gave the novel four stars out of five. In 1997 the UK edition won a National Book Award and a gold medal in the 9 to 11 year-olds category of the Nestlé Smarties Book Prize. The Smarties award, which is voted for by children, made the book well-known within six months of publication, while most children's books have to wait for years.
  
  The following year, Philosopher's Stone won almost all the other major UK awards that were decided by children. It was also shortlisted for children's books awards adjudicated by adults, but did not win. Sandra Beckett comments that books which were popular with children were regarded as undemanding and as not of the highest literary standards – for example the literary establishment disdained the works of Roald Dahl, an overwhelming favourite of children before the appearance of Rowling's books.
  
  Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone won two publishing industry awards given for sales rather than literary merit, the British Book Awards Children's Book of the Year and the Booksellers' Association / Bookseller Author of the Year. By March 1999 UK editions had sold just over 300,000 copies, and the story was still the UK's best-selling title in December 2001. A Braille edition was published in May 1998 by the Scottish Braille Press.
  
  Platform 9¾, from which the Hogwarts Express left London, was commemorated in the real-life King's Cross railway station with a sign between tracks 9 and 10 and a trolley apparently passing through the wall.
  
  USA publication and reception
  
  Scholastic Corporation bought the USA rights at the Bologna Book Fair in April 1997 for US$105,000, an unusually high sum for a children's book. They thought that a child would not want to read a book with the word "philosopher" in the title and, after some discussion, the American edition was published in October 1998 under the title Rowling suggested, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone. Rowling claimed that she regretted this change and would have fought it if she had been in a stronger position at the time. Philip Nel has pointed out that the change lost the connection with alchemy, and the meaning of some other terms changed in translation, for example from UK English "crumpets" to US English "muffin". While Rowling accepted the change from both standard UK English "mum" and Seamus Finnegan's Irish variant "mam" to "mom" in Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, she vetoed this change in the later books. However Nel considered that Scholastic's translations were considerably more sensitive than most of those imposed on UK English books of the time, and that some other changes could be regarded as useful copyedits. Since the UK editions of early titles in the series were published a few months earlier than the American versions, some American readers became familiar with the British English versions after buying them via the Internet.
  
  At first the most prestigious reviewers ignored the book, leaving it to book trade and library publications such as Kirkus Reviews and Booklist, which examined it only by the entertainment-oriented criteria of children's fiction. However, more penetrating specialist reviews (such as one by Cooperative Children’s Book Center Choices, which pointed out the complexity, depth and consistency of the world Rowling had built) attracted the attention of reviewers in major newspapers. Although The Boston Globe and Michael Winerip in The New York Times complained that the final chapters were the weakest part of the book they and most other American reviewers gave glowing praise. A year later the US edition was selected as an American Library Association Notable Book, a Publishers Weekly Best Book of 1998, and a New York Public Library 1998 Best Book of the Year, and won Parenting Magazine's Book of the Year Award for 1998, the School Library Journal Best Book of the Year, and the American Library Association Best Book for Young Adults.
  
  In August 1999 Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone topped the New York Times list of best-selling fiction, and stayed near the top of the list for much of 1999 and 2000, until the New York Times split its list into children's and adult sections under pressure from other publishers who were eager to see their books given higher placings. Publishers Weekly's report in December 2001 on cumulative sales of children's fiction placed Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone 19th among hardbacks (over 5 million copies) and 7th among paperbacks (over 6.6 million copies).
  
  In May 2008, Scholastic announced the creation of a 10th Anniversary Edition of the book to be released in September 2008 to mark the tenth anniversary of the original American release.
  zhuǎn yǎn jiān zài huò xué xiào nián de xué shùn jié shù liǎoduì 'ér yán kāi zhè gāng gāng shú de shì jièhuí dào zhēn de jiā jiǎn zhí shì jiàn zuì tòng de shì qíng rěn shòu shǔ jiǎ de pèi mánhèng de nóng dié dié xiū de láo dāo jiān guǎn
  
   shì chū duì de zhěng shǔ jiǎ kuài guò liǎo jiā chú liǎo yǔn zuò de zuò wàijīhū méi yòu tài wéi nán dàn shì hái shì jué hěn nǎoyīn wéi zài huò zuì hǎo de liǎng péng yǒu héng héng mǐn luó 'ēn jīng wàng liǎosān hǎo péng yǒu shuō hǎo yào zài shǔ jiǎ xiě xìn bǎo chí lián tíng gěi liǎng péng yǒu xiě xìndàn shì zhí dào xiàn zài què hái méi yòu jiē dào fēng huí xìn
  
   jiù zài jiàqī shàng yào jié shù de shí hòu míng jiào duō de xiǎo jīng líng rán chū xiàn zài de shì zhōng jǐng gào huí dào huò jiāng huì yòu de shì qíng jiàng lín huì yòu shēng mìng wēi xiǎnwèile bǎo quán de xìng mìngduō jié liú liǎo suǒ yòu mǐn luó 'ēn gěi de huí xìn héng héng wéi zhè yàng jiù huì chū duì péng yǒu de shī wàng 'ér zài fǎn huí huò shàng xué shì jiān chí yào huí dào huò wèile zhǐ duō zài shèn zhì wéi guǐ zài guā shì jiè shǐ yòng liǎo nào jiājiēguǒ dān liǎo fǎn huí huò de zhuān lièjiù zài xīn fén de shí hòuhǎo péng yǒu luó 'ēn jià zhe liàng shī liǎo de fēi chē lái jiù jià liǎofèi jìn zhōu zhé men zhōng zài xīn xué kāi xué diǎn shàng gǎn huí xué xiào
  
   ér shí shàng xué kuì de yīng xióng xíng wéi jīng zài huò zhěng shì jiè guǎng wéi chuán rán chéng wéi liǎo zhòng rén zhǔ mùdì zhōng xīnyòu fēng chuī cǎo dòng jiù néng chéng wéi rén men lùn de huà piān piān xīn shàng rèn de hēi fáng jiào shòu luò ( kěn . ) shì 'ài chū fēng tóu de rén yóu huān míng 'àn diāo nán xià rán hòu biāo bǎng chéng wéi huò zhēn zhèng de yīng xióng
  
   guǒ rán jīng líng duō yán de yàngxīn xué kāi shǐ méi duō jiǔhuò jiù pín pín chū xiàn kǒng shén de shì jiàn héng héng luò dān de xué shēng shǒu mén rén de māo shòu dào mǒu zhǒng de liàng de gōng 'ér shí huàér de 'ěr biān shí cháng yòu yōu líng bān shēng yīn xiǎng gào huò de shì zhī mén bèi kāixié 'è liàng de hòu jiāng huì duì xué xiào de zhǒng ( shì shī de xué shēng ) jìn xíng bào
  
   shí jiān huò rén xīn huáng huángyóu néng tīng dǒng shé de yán bèi huái shì chuán shuō zhòngxié 'è liàng de hòu wéi zài shēn biān de péng yǒu men fēn fēn kāi shǐ zhì zhǐ yòu mǐn luó 'ēnshǐ zhōng duì zhe bǎi fēn zhī bǎi de xìn rènrán hòu dāng yòu tiān mǐn bèi zāo dào liǎo shén liàng de gōng xiàng zhōng chuī léi de luò jiào shòu xiǎn chū nuò de běn xìnglín zhèn tuì suōzhǐ yòu luó 'ēn jiān dìng zhàn zài duì kàng zhe xié 'è liàng zhī dàowèile bǎo 'ài de huò xué xiàowèile zhěng jiù shēng gòng de hǎo péng yǒu wéi liǎo qīng jiā zài tóu shàng de zhǒng zhǒng huái yòu suǒ xíng dòng liǎo shì miàn duì de rén jiū jìng shì shuí yǐn cáng zài de mùdì yòu shì shénme xiàn tuán zhōng……
  《 · shì》 [ diàn yǐng ]- yǐngpiān píng jià
  
   běn yào gèng piān chéng rén diào gèng 'ànyóu piàn zhōng xiē jiào hài rén de chǎng miànhuá gōng céng shí fēn dān xīn yǐngpiān bèi huá wéi PG-13 zhè yàng men zài yǐngpiān shàng yìng hòu tóng tuī chū de wán xiāo liàng jiāng huì zhé kòu。《 · shìde yuán zhù xiǎo shuō jǐn gèng chángbāo hán gèng duō de rén juésè gèng suī rán yòu xiē zhě jiāng shìyuán zhù xuǎn wéi men zuì huān de jiyīn wéi qíng guò zhí jiēquē zhédàn shìyǐngpiān hēi 'àn yán jùn de zhù héng héng xué xiào zhōng de xié 'è de cún zài jiāng xué shēng men biàn chéng liǎo shí tóu héng héng shǐ dǎo yǎn lún néng gòu zhuān zhù lìng rén huàn de shì jué xiào de dòng zuò chǎng miànyuán xiān bàn yǎn xiào cháng de lǎo chá · shì liǎo huān de rén néng cuò guò zhè zài yuán zhù xiǎo shuō de chā xiǎo jīng líng duō yǐngpiān de xíng xiàng chā xiǎopiàn zhōng yòng suàn zhì zuò chū lái duō hái yīn wéi cháng 'é luó zǒng tǒng jīng yòu xiē xiāng 'ér yǐn liǎo guān zhù zhēng
  《 · shì》 [ diàn yǐng ]- hòu zhì zuò
  
  《 · shìyuán zhù xiǎo shuō 1998 nián chū bǎnsuí dēng shàng liǎo yīng guó chàng xiāo shū páiháng bǎng de guànjūnjiē zhe gèng zàiniǔ yuē shí bào》、《 jīn měi guó bàohuá 'ěr jiē bàode chàng xiāo shū páiháng bǎng shàng chēng zài quán shì jiè shí guó jiā xíngzǒng xiāo shòu liàng gāo qiān duō wàn běn ( guāng shì zài měi guó jiā jiù mài chū liǎo chāo guò qiān bǎi wàn běn )。
  
  《 · shì 2001 nián 11 yuè 19 zài jùn de dēng shè yǐng péng zhǎn kāi pāi shè gōng zuò,《 shén de shízài yīng guó dāng cái shàng yìng sān tiānjiù liǎo duō xiàng piào fáng chéng wéi yǐng shǐ shàng zǒng piào fáng shōu 'èr gāo de diàn yǐngtóng shí náng kuò liǎo sān xiàng 'ào jīn xiàng jiǎng de míng xiàng yīng guó yǐng shì shù xué yuàn jiǎng de míngbāo kuò nián zuì jiā yīng guó yǐngpiān
  
   zhè xīn piàn zài zhǎo lái tóng xīng dān 'ěr · léi (《 jīng bào wēi 》、 BBC diàn shì tái dekuài ròu shēng 》 ) shì yǎn · lín shì yǎn róng 'ēn · wéi 'āi · sēn shì yǎn miào · lán jiésān wèi xiǎo shī jìn liǎo huò huá shù xué yuàn de 'èr xué nián shén de xié 'è liàng duǎn bīng jiāo jiē
  
   shēn jiān dǎo yǎn zhí xíng zhì zuò zhí de · lún shuō: " zhǐ yào huān de diàn yǐngjiù dìng huì 'ài shàngxiāo shī de shì》, zhè shì gèng shén hēi 'ànchōng mǎn liǎo hài rén de guài qián cáng de xié 'è liàng wàizhè diàn yǐng hái zēng jiā liǎo duō lìng rén xīng fèn de xīn jiǎo bāo kuò xīn lái de hēi fáng shù jiào shòu luó · luò 。 "
  
   bèi biān dǎo yǎn děng duō xiàng cái de yǎn yuán kěn · lāi (《 léi 》、《 dōushì nán rén de huò》、《 zài qián shì qíng》 ), shì yǎn jiāo róu zuò zuò de liàn kuáng luó · luò jiā huò huá xué yuàndān rèn hēi fáng shù de xīn jiào shòu
  
   kěn · lāi shuō: " luó · luò shì luó lín xià de wàn rén hěn tóu huò huá de shì jiè zhè me duō yōu xiù de yǎn zhí rén yuán zuò。 "
  《 · shì》 [ diàn yǐng ]- hòu huā
  
  · hào nán zhù yǎn dān 'ěr · léi zài 'èr pāi dào bàn shí rán biàn shēnghòu lái jīng yóu xiē shù chǔlǐ cái suàn jiě jué zhì yào zhòng xīn zài pèi yīn
  
  · yóu piàn zhōng xiē jiào hài rén de chǎng miànhuá gōng céng shí fēn dān xīn yǐngpiān bèi huá wéi PG-13 zhè yàng men zài yǐngpiān shàng yìng hòu tóng tuī chū de wán xiāo liàng jiāng huì zhé kòubié xiǎo kàn zhè xiē wán nián men wéi huá gōng dài lái liǎo chāo guò 5 měi yuán de jìn zhàng men de zuì zhù yào gòu mǎi qún wéi 7 dào 11 suì de 'ér tóng
  
  · zuò wéi míng qīndǎo yǎn lún céng duì guān zhòng men chū zhè yàng de jǐng gào: " guǒ men dài zhe 7 suì shèn zhì 7 suì hái xiǎo de hái lái kàn zhè piānzǐqǐng dìng yào què bǎo men yòu néng fēn biàn men kàn de shì shénme。 "
  
  · zài yuán zhù xiǎo shuō de chā xiǎo jīng líng duō chuānzhuó chá jīn gǎi chéng demiàn kǒu dài shìde jiù jiān tóu jiān nǎowán 'àixiàng zhǐ xiǎo lǎo shǔ duō guò xiàng jīng líng yǐngpiān de xíng xiàng chā xiǎo
  
  · yǐngpiān zhōng de fēn shì nèi chǎng jǐng dōushì zài lún dūn jiāo wài yóu fèi chǎng gǎi zào de shè yǐng péng nèi wán chéng shuō zhè wèi zhì yǐn de nèi gòng yòu 22 shè yǐng péngér · de jiù bāo xià liǎo zhōng de 17
  
  · wèile pāi shè luó 'ēn kāi zhe fēi tiān chē gǎn xué xiào gòng dòng yòng liǎo 14 liàng yàng de lǎo chē yìng tóng jiǎo de pāi shè yào
  
  · wèile xiàn chū luò jiào shòu de 'ài róngdǎo yǎn lún yuán zuò zhě luó lín shì shāng liàng hòuwéi zhè juésè qīn shè liǎo zhǒng chóu shì wéi zhù de zào xíng cǎi huá guì yàn zhōng yòu tòu chū zhǒng shì huá de wèi dào
  
  · hái shì wèile jiǎng dān 'ěr zài zhōng de chū biǎo yǎnhuá gōng sòng gěi dān 'ěr mèng mèi qiú de diàn yóu ruǎn jiànsuī rán jià zhí zhǐ yòu 10 yīng bàngdàn què ràng tóng xīn jiǎn de dān 'ěr zhuóshí dòng liǎo bàn tiān
  
  · shì yǎn luó 'ēn de chéng rèn jué gān de shì yòu shí hòu yǐng men huì xiē guài de dōng ràng men qiān míngjiù zài tiān qiánjìng rán hái yòu rén qǐng zài zhāng zhī piào shàng qiān míngnòng xiào
  
  · shì yǎn mǐn de 'ài zuì huān de yǎn yuán shì hǎo lāi " zuì xìng gǎn de nán rén " · shuō wàng dào hǎo lāi zhǎnyòu cháo néng de 'ǒu xiàng zuò pāi piàn
  
  · zài huò xué shēng shè zǒu láng chū xiàn de xiē huì dòng de huà xiàng shuō huà de rén dōushì jiù cái wèi hòu gōng zuò rén yuán dēng guāng shīhuà zhuāng shī děng děng wéi huì zhì de
  
  · suí zhe diàn yǐng jiē tuī chūzhòng duō de men děng dài zhe luó lín de · xiǎo shuō wèn shì shì děng xīn jiāozhè jīng dìng míng wéi · fèng huáng de mìng lìngde xiǎo shuōzuì xīn de shuō jiāng huì zài míng nián 6 yuè fèn zhèng shì chū bǎn
  《 · shì》 [ diàn yǐng ]- chuān bāng jìng tóu
  
  · zài kuí sài guò chéng zhōng kàn dào cáng zài sǎo zhǒu shàng de gāng
  
  · lián guàn xìngluó 'ēn cóng qīn shōu dào páo xiào xìn Howler, shāo hòu jiǔài 'ěr chuǎng liǎo jìn lái kàn dào fēng hóng de xìn shì kāi zhe dedāng luó 'ēn xìn cóng 'ài 'ěr de zuǐ lái de shí hòu men kàn dào luó 'ēn kāi xìn fēngzhè yàng cái néng yuè xìn jiàn
  
  · róng 'ēn páo wǎng jiǔ yòu fēn zhī sān yuè tái gǎn huò huá kuài chēniǎo lóng yīn pèng zhuàng kuài yào dǎo shí xiàn shì zhǐ jiǎ niǎo
  
  · yǐngpiān zhōng jué dǒu de jìng tóu zuǒ biān kàn dào rén yuán ( shè yǐng shī )。
  
  · shì zhōng kào jìn yuán jìng qián zhuāng zhe tóu de róng suí zǒu kāizhè shí hòu shēn biān chū xiàn hěn gāo de tiě zhuāng shì zhī qián zhè xiǎn shì bìng
  
  · chē shù lín biān tíng xià shíchē wěi yòu bèi zhuàng de hěn shēn de 'āo xiàn biān shàng yòu 'àng chē shāng biāo páijǐn jǐn zài men xià xíng hòu 'āo hén shāng biāo pái dōubù jiàn liǎo
  
  · yǐngpiān zhōng yòu xiǎo yǎn yuán de zuǒ liǎn shàng liǎng qiū zhěn wèi zhì rán shì huì dòng de
  
  · yòu shǒu 'àn zài shāng kǒu shàng ginny shuō huàdāng shí yòu shǒu bèi yòu zhe xuè suí zhe jìng tóu jìnxuè xiāo shī liǎo
  
  · jiā tíng jīng líng duō zài de fáng zhī jiāo tán de chǎng jǐng bèi hòu qiáng shàng xuán guà jiān de yòu jiào gǎi biàn
  
  · bēn páo zhōng men xíng chē xiāng zhuàngzǎi kàn shēng pèng zhuàng shí xíng chē yòu 5 gēn tiě tiáoliǎng rén dǎo hòu xíng chē zhǐ yòu 4 gēn tiě tiáozhè xiǎn rán shì tóng jià xíng chē
  
  · fēi tiān chē shàng róng 'ēn jiān jiào de jìng tóu shēn hòu yòu zhǐ shén de shǒu zhe niǎo lóng……


  Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets is the second novel in the Harry Potter series written by J. K. Rowling. The plot follows Harry's second year at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, during which a series of messages on the walls on the school's corridors warn that the "Chamber of Secrets" has been opened and that the "heir of Slytherin" will kill all pupils who do not come from all-magical families. These threats are followed by attacks which leave residents of the school "petrified" (that is, frozen). Throughout the year, Harry and his friends Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger investigate the attacks, and Harry is confronted by Lord Voldemort, who is attempting to regain full power.
  
  The book was published in the United Kingdom on 2 July 1998 by Bloomsbury and in the United States on 2 June 1999 by Scholastic Inc. Although Rowling found it difficult to finish the book, it won high praise and awards from critics, young readers and the book industry, although some critics thought the story was perhaps too frightening for younger children. Some religious authorities have condemned its use of magical themes, while others have praised its emphasis on self-sacrifice and on the way in which a person's character is the result of the person's choices.
  
  Several commentators have noted that personal identity is a strong theme in the book, and that it addresses issues of racism through the treatment of non-magical, non-human and non-living characters. Some commentators regard the diary as a warning against uncritical acceptance of information from sources whose motives and reliability cannot be checked. Institutional authority is portrayed as self-serving and incompetent.
  
  The film version of Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, released in 2002, became the third film to exceed $600 million in international box office sales and received generally favourable reviews. However, The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers won the Saturn Award for the Best Fantasy Film. Video games loosely based on Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets were also released for several platforms, and most obtained favourable reviews.
  
  Synopsis
  Plot introduction
  
  In the first novel in the Harry Potter series, the main character, Harry Potter, has struggled with the difficulties that come with growing up and the added challenge of being a famous wizard. When Harry was a baby, Voldemort, the most powerful evil wizard in living memory, killed Harry's parents but mysteriously vanished after trying to kill Harry. This results in Harry's immediate fame, and his being placed in the care of his Muggle, or non-magical, relatives Aunt Petunia and Uncle Vernon.
  
  Harry enters the wizarding world at the age of eleven, enrolling in the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. He makes friends with Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger, and is confronted by Lord Voldemort trying to regain power.
  Plot summary
  
  Soon after the start of Harry's second year at Hogwarts, messages on the walls of the corridors say that the mythical Chamber of Secrets has been re-opened and that the "heir of Slytherin" would kill all pupils whose parents are both non-magical – which includes Hermione. At intervals various inhabitants of the school are found petrified in corridors. Meanwhile, Harry, Ron, and Hermione discover Moaning Myrtle, the ghost of a girl who was killed the last time the Chamber was opened, and who now haunts the girls' toilet in which she died. Myrtle shows Harry a diary bearing the name Tom Marvolo Riddle. Although its pages are blank, it responds when Harry writes in it. Eventually the book shows him Hogwarts as it was fifty years ago. There he sees Tom Riddle, a pupil at the time, pin the blame for opening the Chamber on Rubeus Hagrid, who was then thirteen years old and already devoted to keeping dangerous magical creatures as pets.
  
  Four months later, the diary is stolen, and shortly afterward Hermione is petrified. However, she holds a note explaining that the culprit is a basilisk, a huge serpent whose gaze kills those who look into its eyes directly but only petrifies those who look into them by means of a reflecting surface, such as water or a mirror. Hermione concluded that the monster travels through the school's pipes and emerges through the toilet Myrtle haunts. As the attacks continue, Cornelius Fudge, the Minister for Magic, holds Hagrid in the wizards' prison as a precaution. Lucius Malfoy, a former supporter of Voldemort who claims to have reformed, then announces that the school's governors have suspended Dumbledore from the position of headmaster.
  
  After Ron's younger sister Ginny is taken into the Chamber, the staff insist that the Dark Arts teacher, Gilderoy Lockhart, should handle the situation. However, when Harry and Ron go to his office to tell him what they have discovered about the basilisk, Lockhart reveals that he is a fraud who took credit for the accomplishments of others and attempts to erase the boys' memories. Disarming Lockhart, they march him to Moaning Myrtle's toilet, where Harry opens the passage to the Chamber of Secrets. In the sewers under the school, Lockhart grabs Ron's wand and tries again to wipe the boys' memories – but Ron's wand had been damaged in an accident at the start of the school year and the spell backfires, inflicting total amnesia on Lockhart, collapsing part of the tunnel and separating Harry from Ron and Lockhart.
  
  While Ron attempts to tunnel through the rubble, Harry enters the Chamber of Secrets, where Ginny lies beside the diary. As he examines her, Tom Riddle appears, looking exactly as he did fifty years ago, and explains that he is a memory stored in the diary. Ginny wrote in it about her adolescent hopes and fears, and Riddle won her confidence by appearing sympathetic, possessed her, and used her to open the Chamber. Riddle also reveals that he is Voldemort as a boy. He further explains that he learned from Ginny who Harry was and about his own deeds as Voldemort. When Ginny realised that she had been responsible for the attacks, she attempted to throw the diary away, which is how it came into Harry's possession. Riddle then releases the basilisk to kill Harry. Dumbledore's pet phoenix, Fawkes, brings a magnificent sword wrapped in the Sorting Hat. Harry uses the sword to kill the basilisk – but only after being bitten by the creature's venomous fangs, one of which breaks off. As Riddle gloats over the dying Harry, Fawkes cures him with its tears. Harry stabs the diary with the broken fang, and Riddle screams and vanishes. Ginny revives after Riddle's disappearance and they return to Ron, who is still watching over the amnesic Lockhart. Fawkes carries all four out of the tunnels.
  
  Harry recounts the whole story to Dumbledore, who has been reinstated. The headmaster revokes his threat to expel the boys if they broke more rules and gives them special awards for services to the school. When Harry mentions his fears that he is similar to Tom Riddle, Dumbledore says that Harry chose Gryffindor House, and only a true member of that House could have used Godric Gryffindor's sword to kill the basilisk. Lucius Malfoy bursts in, and Harry accuses him of slipping the diary into one of Ginny's books while all the pupils were shopping for school books. Malfoy replies, "Prove it." Finally, all of the basilisk's petrified victims are revived by a potion, the preparation of which has taken several months.
  Publication and reception
  Development
  
  Rowling found it difficult to finish Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets because she was afraid it would not live up to the expectations raised by Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone. After delivering the manuscript to Bloomsbury on schedule, she took it back for six weeks of revision.
  
  In early drafts of the book, the ghost Nearly Headless Nick sang a self-composed song explaining his condition and the circumstances of his death. This was cut as the book's editor did not care for the poem, which has been subsequently published as an extra on J. K. Rowling's official website. The family background of Dean Thomas was removed because Rowling and her publishers considered it an "unnecessary digression", and she considered Neville Longbottom's own journey of discovery "more important to the central plot".
  Publication
  
  Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets was published in the UK on 2 July 1998 and in the US on 2 June 1999. It immediately took first place in UK bestseller lists, displacing popular authors such as John Grisham, Tom Clancy, and Terry Pratchett, and making Rowling the first author to win the British Book Awards Children's Book of the Year for two years in succession. In June 1999 it went straight to the top of three US bestseller lists, including The New York Times'.
  
  First edition printings had several errors, which were fixed in subsequent reprints. Initially Dumbledore said that Voldemort was the last remaining ancestor of Salazar Slytherin, instead of his descendant. Gilderoy Lockhart's book on werewolves is entitled Weekends with Werewolves at one point and Wanderings with Werewolves later in the book.
  Critical response
  
  In The Times, Deborah Loudon described Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets as a children's book that would be "re-read into adulthood" and highlighted its "strong plots, engaging characters, excellent jokes and a moral message which flows naturally from the story". Fantasy author Charles de Lint agreed, and considered the second Harry Potter book as good as Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, a rare achievement among series of books. Thomas Wagner regarded the plot as very similar to that of the first book, based on searching for a secret hidden under the school. However, he enjoyed the parody of celebrities and their fans that centres round Gilderoy Lockhart, and approved of the book's handling of racism. Tammy Nezol found the book more disturbing than its predecessor, particularly in the rash behaviour of Harry and his friends after Harry withholds information from Dumbledore, and in the human-like behaviour of the mandrakes used to make a potion that cures petrification. Nevertheless she considered the second story as enjoyable as the first.
  
  Mary Stuart thought the final conflict with Tom Riddle in the Chamber was almost as scary as in some of Stephen King's works, and perhaps too strong for young or timid children. She commented that "there are enough surprises and imaginative details thrown in as would normally fill five lesser books." Like other reviewers, she thought the book would give pleasure to both children and adult readers. According to Philip Nel, the early reviews gave unalloyed praise while the later ones included some criticisms, although they still agreed that the book was outstanding.
  
  Writing after all seven books had been published, Graeme Davis regarded Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets as the weakest of the series, and agreed that the plot structure is much the same as in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone. He described Fawkes's appearance to arm Harry and then to heal him as a deus ex machina: the book does not explain how Fawkes knew where to find Harry; and Fawkes's timing had to be very precise, as arriving earlier would probably have prevented the battle with the basilisk, while arriving later would have been fatal to Harry and Ginny.
  
  Dave Kopel describes the climactic scene in which Harry saves Ginny from Riddle's diary and the basilisk as Pilgrim's Progress for a new audience: "Harry descends to a deep underworld, is confronted by two Satanic minions (Voldemort and a giant serpent), is saved from certain death by his faith in Dumbledore (the bearded God the Father/Ancient of Days), rescues the virgin (Ginerva [sic] Weasley), and ascends in triumph."
  Awards and honours
  
  Rowling's Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets was the recipient of several awards. The American Library Association listed the novel among its 2000 Notable Children's Books, as well as its Best Books for Young Adults. In 1999, Booklist named Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets as one of its Editors' Choices, and as one of its Top Ten Fantasy Novels for Youth. The Cooperative Children's Book center made the novel a CCBC Choice of 2000 in the "Fiction for Children" category. The novel also won Children's Book of the Year British Book Award, and was shortlisted for the 1998 Guardian Children's Award and the 1998 Carnegie Award.
  
  Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets won the Nestlé Smarties Book Prize 1998 Gold Medal in the 9–11 years division. Rowling also won two other Nestlé Smarties Book Prizes for Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone and Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. The Scottish Arts Council awarded their first ever Children’s Book Award to the novel in 1999, and it was also awarded Whitaker's Platinum Book Award in 2001.
  Religious response
  
  Religious controversy surrounding Harry Potter and the Chamber of the Secrets and the other books in the Harry Potter series mainly deal with claims that the novel contains occult or Satanic subtexts. Religious response to the series has not been exclusively negative, however, and several religious groups have spoken in defense of the moralistic themes found in the book. The American Library Association even placed the series atop the "most challenged books" list for 1999–2001.
  
  The Orthodox churches of Greece and Bulgaria have campaigned against the series, and in the United States, calls for the book to be banned from schools have led to legal challenges. Most of these are held on the grounds that witchcraft is a government-recognised religion and that to allow the novels to be held in public schools violates the separation of church and state.
  
  Some religious responses have been positive. Emily Griesinger wrote that fantasy literature helps children to survive reality for long enough to learn how to deal with it, described Harry's first passage through to Platform 9¾ as an application of faith and hope, and his encounter with the Sorting Hat as the first of many in which Harry is shaped by the choices he makes. She noted that the self-sacrifice of Harry's mother, which protected the boy in the first book and throughout the series, was the most powerful of the "deeper magics" that transcend the magical "technology" of the wizards, and one which the power-hungry Voldemort fails to understand. Christianity Today published an editorial in favour of the books in January 2000, calling the series a "Book of Virtues" and averring that although "modern witchcraft is indeed an ensnaring, seductive false religion that we must protect our children from", the Harry Potter books represent "wonderful examples of compassion, loyalty, courage, friendship, and even self-sacrifice". "At least as much as they've been attacked from a theological point of view", commented Rowling, "[the books] have been lauded and taken into pulpit, and most interesting and satisfying for me, it's been by several different faiths".
  Themes
  
  Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets continues the examination of what makes a person who he or she is, which began in the first book. As well as maintaining that Harry's identity is shaped by his decisions rather than any aspect of his birth,Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets provides contrasting characters who try to conceal their true personalities: as Tammy Nezol puts it, Gilderoy Lockhart "lacks any real identity" because he is nothing more than a charming liar. Riddle also complicates Harry's struggle to understand himself by pointing out the similarities between the two: "both half-bloods, orphans raised by Muggles, probably the only two Parselmouths to come to Hogwarts since the great Slytherin."
  
  Opposition to class, prejudice, and racism is a constant theme of the series. In Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets Harry's consideration and respect for others extends to the lowly, non-human Dobby and the ghost Nearly Headless Nick. According to Marguerite Krause, achievements in the novel depend more on ingenuity and hard work than on natural talents.
  
  Edward Duffy, an associate professor at Marquette University, says that one of the central characters of Chamber of Secrets is a book, Tom Riddle's enchanted diary, which takes control of Ginny Weasley – just as Riddle planned. Duffy suggests that Rowling intended this as a warning against passively consuming information from sources that have their own agendas. Although Bronwyn Williams and Amy Zenger regard the diary as more like an instant messaging or chat room system, they agree about the dangers of relying too much on the written word, which can camouflage the author, and they highlight a comical example, Lockhart's self-promoting books.
  
  Immorality and the portrayal of authority as negative are significant themes in the novel. Marguerite Krause states that there are few absolute moral rules in Harry Potter's world, for example Harry prefers to tell the truth, but lies whenever he considers it necessary – very like his enemy Draco Malfoy. At the end of Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, Dumbledore retracts his promise to punish Harry, Ron, and Hermione if they break any more school rules – after Professor McGonagall estimates that they have broken over 100 – and lavishly rewards them for ending the threat from the Chamber of Secrets. Krause further states that authority figures and political institutions receive little respect from Rowling. William MacNeil of Griffith University, Queensland, Australia states that the Minister for Magic is presented as a mediocrity. In his article "Harry Potter And The Secular City", Ken Jacobson suggests that the Ministry as a whole is portrayed as a tangle of bureaucratic empires, saying that "Ministry officials busy themselves with minutiae (e.g. standardising cauldron thicknesses) and coin politically correct euphemisms like 'non-magical community' (for Muggles) and 'memory modification' (for magical brainwashing)."
  
  This novel implies that it begins in 1992: the cake for Nearly-Headless Nick's 500th deathday party bears the words "Sir Nicholas De Mimsy Porpington died 31 October 1492".
  Connection to Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
  
  Chamber of Secrets has many links with the sixth book of the series, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. In fact, Half-Blood Prince was the working title of Chamber of Secrets and Rowling says she originally intended to present some "crucial pieces of information" in the second book, but ultimately felt that "this information's proper home was book six". Some objects that play significant roles in Half-Blood Prince first appear in Chamber of Secrets: the Hand of Glory and the opal necklace that are on sale in Borgin and Burkes; a Vanishing Cabinet in Hogwarts that is damaged by Peeves the Poltergeist; and Tom Riddle's diary, which is later shown to be a Horcrux.
'ā bān qiú
qiáo 'ān · luó lín Joanne Rowlingyuèdòu
   de liǎng wèi hǎo yǒu róng 'ēn miào zài huò huá shù xué yuànyào mài sān xué nián liǎozhè qīng shàonián bèi miàn duì nèi xīn zuì de kǒng yào yìng wēi xiǎn de táo fànhái yòu yuán běn shì yào bǎo de qún cuī kuáng
  
   shí sān suì de xīn gānqíng yuàn jiā rényòu zhù liǎo shǔ jiǎguò zhù ānfèn shǒu de liáo shēng huóér qiě hái néng shǐ yòng rèn zhí dào zuì hòuwēi nóng zhàng 'ào màn yòu dào de lái fǎng zhí dōuduì hěn huàizhè hái dào liǎo xiànjiēguǒ xiǎo xīnràng chōng chéng de qiújiù zhè yàng fēi zǒu liǎo hài huì shòu dào zhàng de chéng dān xīn huò huá shù xué yuàn huì tīng dào fēng shēngyīn wéi men jìn zhǐ xué shēng zài guā shì jiè shī yòng zhòusuǒ néng huì shòu dào chǔfèn shì jiù chèn zhù wǎn shàng táo páo liǎo
  
  “ shì gōng chē shàng jiù lái jiē zǒu liǎozhè shì liàng de sān céng gōng chēxùn sòng jiǔ dào jiǔ jiù kàn dào cháng kāng liú zài děng zhù shì míng miào rán méi yòu chǔfá fǎn 'ér jiān chí yào liú zài jiǔ guò tiān zài huò huá
  
   yuán lái méi yòu kāi chú shì yīn wéi yòu wēi xiǎn yòu shén de shī tiān láng xīng lāi táo chū liǎo 'ā bān jiān shuō zài xún zhǎo de xià luòyáo chuán dāng chū jiù shì lāi yǐn lǐng zhǎo shàng de zuì hòu hài liǎo menshèn zhì hái xiǎng shā yīn wéi 'ān quán de bìnàn suǒjiù shì huò huá liǎo
  
   rán 'ér gèng zāo gāo de shìhuò huá hái yào jiē dài de 'ā bān shǒu wèi cuī kuáng men yào bǎo xué xiàoyuǎn lāi de wēi xié men huì liè de líng húnhěn xìng de shì men shòu dào suǒ yǐnràng jué máo sǒng ránér qiě yòu máng rán zhùzhí dào xīn lái de hēi fáng shù lǎo shī píng jiào shòuxùn liàn shǐ yòng xiàn shēnde zhòu cuī kuáng ràng duì shǒu quán shēn de
  
   wài zài huò huá de sān niánhái jiā liǎo xīn jiǎo yīng tóu shēn de guài yòu bèi chēng zhī wéiyīng ”; zhǐ yào kàn dào liǎogǒu líng”, dài biǎo zhù yīn sēn hài rén de shén jiāng chū xiàn de zhàohái yòu jīng xiǎn de mào xiǎnbāo kuò fǎng cūn zhuānghuó cūn”, jiē kāi yǐn cáng zài jié dào de hái yòu jiān jiào de kǒng zhī jiù shì quán yīng guó nào guǐ zuì yán zhòng de jiàn zhù zài zhōng xiǎng gǎo qīng chǔmiào zài róng 'ēn rén hǎi de xié zhù zhī xiàshì zěn me shén lái yǐng zōngzhè shì zhōng de hǎi jīng dāng shàng liǎo huò huá de zhào dòng lǎo shī
  
   shén táo fàn tiān láng xīng lāi kàn lái shì miǎn liǎo yào zhèng miàn jiāo fēng liǎo guò píng jiào shòu lāi zhī jiāndào yòu shénme guān shí nèi jiào shòu zhè me dàishì xiǎng yào jiē kāi shénme hēi 'àn de róng 'ēn de chǒng lǎo shǔ bān bānwèishénme huì liǎo fēng cóng de shǒu táo tuō yào zuì de yǒng xié zhùcái néng jiě zhè xiē wènjiē xiǎo tiān láng xīng lāi bèi hòu yǐn cáng de zhēn xiānghái yòu zhè wèi tiān bǐng de xiǎo shīguò yòu shénme shén de guān lián xìng
  《 · 'ā bān de qiú 》 [ diàn yǐng ]- xiāng guān xiāo
  
  
  《 · 'ā bān de qiú 》 [ diàn yǐng ]《 · 'ā bān de qiú
   zài · 'ā bān de qiú zhōng - rán shì xiǎo shī mǐn - lán jié luó 'ēn - wéi hái shì zuì hǎo de péng yǒudàn - zài běn zhōng miàn duì gèng de tiǎo zhàndāng - de péng yǒu men huí dào huò xué xiào sān nián shí men miàn duì de rén shì chòu míng zhāo zhù desuí shí duì yòu suǒ móu de táo fànzhè táo fàn bèi rèn wéi céng jīng shā hài liǎo - de zhè de biāo shì zài zhōng zhè míng táo fàn míng jiào 'ěr - lāi (SiriusBlack), yóu jiā - ào màn (GaryOldman) shì yǎn xiǎo yīng xióng yào miàn duì duì wáng de kǒng duì wáng shì de jué wàng shuō zài - shū zhōngshì zuì huān de fēnzài zhōng shì yǎn zhù rén gōng - xiàn nián shí suì de dān 'ěr - léi ( DanielRadcliffe) shuōzhēn shì hěn lìng rén gǎn dào yīn wéi zài běn zhōngduì - zhè rén jiǎn zhí jìn xíng liǎo chè gǎi zào biàn gèng yòu liǎo xiē nián xiāng fǎng de qīng shàonián yàng yòu qīn lüè xìngshì zhǐ suǒ yòu shí sān suì de hái dōuyòu de - zài běn zhōng duì xiē zhōng de yóu guài bāo kuò zhǒng yàng guài shēn biān shēng de hěn duō xiàn xiàng biǎo xiàn de hěn wéi cháng liǎozài qián liǎng zhōng ràng gǎn dào hěn jīng de shì xiàn zài dōuhěn píng chángzài chù xué xiào de xiē shì qíng zhōng biàn hěn qīng sōng liǎodàn shì què zài rén jiāo liú shàng biàn hěn piān zhí
  
   zhè xiē qīng chūn hái shēng shàng de gǎi biàn zài diàn yǐng zhōng tóng yàng dào liǎo biǎo xiànzài cǎi fǎng zhōng mǐn - lán jié de bàn yǎn zhě 'ài - sēn rán rén yuán 'ěr liǎo hòután liǎo zài diàn yǐng zhōng luó 'ēn - wéi xiāng qiān shǒu de zhè shí gèng shì zuò liǎo shí sān suì hái jīng cháng zuò de guǐ liǎn shuōyǐngpiān zhōng yào qiú shì yǎn luó 'ēn - wéi de - lín yào zuò lìng rén gān de yōng bàoliǎng rén bàn yǎn de juésè yīnggāi yòu zhǒng 'ài hèn jiāo jiā de guān
  
   zài tán dào zhè xiē juésè shàng de gǎi biàn shízhè wèi chū shēng de dǎo yǎn 'ā fāng suǒ - lǎng shuōhái men dào liǎo qīng chūn suǒ duì xiē shì qíng huì biàn yòu xiē fèn zài běn zhōng huì zhè xiē qíng yào ràng men shì fàng chū láizhè bìng děng chàng huò zhě jǐn jǐn shì ràng men shì fàng chū láibìng xiǎng ràng zhè xiē juésè zài gǎn qíng shàng měi xiáyòu shí men huì shī zhì zhè hěn zhèng cháng
  《 · 'ā bān de qiú 》 [ diàn yǐng ]- chuàng zuò
  
  
   zhè shì gèng jiāhēi de diàn yǐng lùn shì zài shì jué xiào guǒ shàng hái shì zài tīng jué xiào guǒ shàngdǎo yǎn suǒ guān zhù de jié gèng duō de zhōng zài rén fēng de shì jué xiào guǒ shàngwèile shǐ kàn lái gèng guò yǐn xiào guǒ tóng yàng néng lüèzài běn diàn yǐng zhōngyán de biàn huà fēi cháng míng xiǎnyǐngpiān zhōng 'àn wéi zhùyīnyuè gèng jiā shǐ rén gǎn jué yíng rào xīn tóuzhè shì dǎo yǎn de jiàng xīndǎo yǎn zài pāi shè zhōng gèng duō yùn yòng liǎo duō jiǎo de pāi shè shǒu wéi de jiù shì zēng jiā yǐngpiān de xiào guǒběn piàn de shè yǐng shī mài 'ěr - sài ruì cén( MichaelSeresin) shuō zhè diàn yǐng de qíng hěn shēng dòngsuǒ zhī pèi de dēng guāng yào qiú gēngshēng dòng xiē jiù shì yào cǎi yòng gāo duì yào yòu gèng duō de yīn yǐngběn piàn de biān 'ěr - léi ( StuartCraig) chōng shuōzài běn piàn zhōng huì yòu fēi cháng duō de zuò wéi bèi jǐng chū xiànhuì yòu gèng duō de guài chū xiànér qiě zhì zuò xiào guǒ gèng jiā fēng pāi shè de jié gèng jiā chū
  
   zài · 'ā bān de qiú zhōng huì chū xiàn gèng duō de juésèchú liǎo yóu jiā - ào màn shì yǎn de táo fàn 'ěr - lāi wàixīn zēng jiā liǎo yóu dài wéi - xiū ( DavidThewlis) shì yǎn de láng rén jiào shòu bīn( werewolfProfessorLupin); āi - tānɡ sēn( EmmaThompson) shì yǎn de léi luó tài tài( MadameTrelawney); hái yòu huī piāo páo zhe shēnyòu guài guàn de tiān jiè yán lǎo shītóng shí zài diàn yǐng zhōng huò de diàn cǎi yòng liǎo wéi duō jiàn zhù fēng kàn lái gèng jiā diǎnhái men zuì huān de táng guǒ zhōng duō liǎo hěn duō shì de nǎi táng bàng bàng tángzhè shì dǎo yǎn de jiàng xīn suǒ zài
  《 · 'ā bān de qiú 》 [ diàn yǐng ]- yǐngpiān píng jià
  
  
   zhè jiāng xīn xiān hēi 'àn hùn zài de xīn zuò dàn huì ràng men mǎn hái huì ràng gèng duō guān zhòng jiā de zhèn yíng
  
   héng héng xīn wén zǎo bào
  
   běn piàn dàn shì qián sān · diàn yǐng zhōng zuì bàng de ér qiě shǐ guān zhòng méi tīng shuō guò luó lín de zuò pǐn rán huì bèi shēn shēn yǐn
  
   héng hénggǔn shí
  《 · 'ā bān de qiú 》 [ diàn yǐng ]- hòu zhì zuò
  
  
  《 · 'ā bān de qiú 》 [ diàn yǐng ]《 · 'ā bān de qiú
   wéi liǎo ràng zhuāng tóng yǐngpiān de dāng dài fēng xiāng zhì zhuāng shè shī jié · mǐn jiù zuò chū liǎo wēi tiáozhěngjiāng yán biàn dànbìng qiě gōng liǎo hàn shāntào tóu shān yáng máo shān děng duō zhòng xuǎn shèn zhì zài · kuí de duàn zhōng 'ān pái liǎo jǐng shì zhǒng xīn xíng de fáng shuǐ miàn liào yìng yòng
  
   shuō dào jǐng wèi zhèng hǎo yíng liǎo běn piàn yōu de fēng yīn wéi běn piàn de shì guò de liǎng gèng yīn 'ànsuǒ zhào míng gèng chén mènbìng jiā zhe gèng duō de yīn yǐng lóng hěn jǐn shèn de shǐ yòng xiě jìng tóuér shì yòng liàng de guǎng jiǎo jìng tóu jiǎng shù shìyǐngpiān zài lán de xiá pāi shè shí qiǎo liǎo cháng 28 tiān de yīn tiān pāi shè yào qiú móu 'ér lìng shè yǐng shī mài 'ěr · sài ruì cén huān kuài jiāng bàn yīng bàn de bān shàng yín wèi ràng zhù chuàng rén yuán shàfèi xīnjǐn wán chéng lán běn jiù yòng liǎo yuè de shí jiānjiàn zào xíng yòng liǎo jiāng jìn 1 nián shí jiānyòng CG shēng chéng yùn dòng zhōng de shì jīng zhōu zhéér zhōng zuì shǒu de shù guò ràng yīng de máo tóng shēn de yùn dòng xiāng xié diào
  
   sān céng de shì gōng chēshì piàn zhōng yòu liàng yǎn zhuāng bèizhì zuò néng zài gōng shàng bēn páo de sān céng shì bìng fēi shìchē lún dūn shì pán shì chóngxīn zhì zuò de biàn néng chéng shòu zhì de chē shēnpiàn zhōng shì shì 100 yīng shí zài gōng shàng fēi bēn de chǎng jǐng shì zài lún dūn pāi shè deyòng liǎo shù zhōu cái pāi shè wán chéngzài shí pāi shè zhōnggōng chē de shí zhǐ yòu 30 yīng ér chē liàng de shí jiàng zhì 8 yīng
  《 · 'ā bān de qiú 》 [ diàn yǐng ]- hòu huā
  
  
  《 · 'ā bān de qiú 》 [ diàn yǐng ]《 · 'ā bān de qiú
   ài · tānɡ sēn jiē pāi běn piàn shì wéi liǎo 4 suì de 'ér
  
   · ruì (CallieKhouri) kěn · céng shì běn piàn dǎo yǎn de rén xuǎn
  
   zài chá · hòu tuō · 'ān · mài lāi 'ēn chá · ā téng céng shì bàn yǎn xiào cháng de rén xuǎn
  
   de xiào guǒ mén yòng liǎo 6 yuè cái chuàng zào chū shè hún guài
  
   shù shī bǎo luó · rèn běn piàn wènbìng xiàng dān 'ěr · léi ài · sēn děng yǎn yuán chuán shòu shù shì zài suǒ yòu liè yǐngpiān zhōng chū xiàn de wèi shù shī wènhái zài piàn zhōng chuàn liǎo juésè
  
   zhì piàn fāng céng wàng 'ěr · 'ěr · tuō luó zhí dǎo běn piàndàn tuō luó hòu lái xuǎn liǎo nán jué》。
  
   · céng jué zhí dǎo běn piànér pāi shè liǎoxún zhǎo mèng huàn dǎo》。
  
   xiǎo tiān láng xīng lāi shēn shàng de wén shēn yuán 'é luó jiān zhè zhǒng wén shēn wèi zhe zhè qiú fàn zhí jìng wèi
  
   jiā · ào màn chēng zhī suǒ chū yǎn běn piàn shì yīn wéi yào zhè fèn gōng zuòyīn wéi jīng 1 nián duō méi pāi liǎo
  
   wéi liǎo ràng dān 'ěr · léi biǎo xiàn chū jìng wèi de biǎo qíngdǎo yǎn 'ā fāng suǒ · lóng ràng shè xiǎng kàn dào liǎo guà díkǎ méi lóng ·
  
   tóng zhōng céng biāo míngdǎo yǎn 'ā fāng suǒ · lóng zài piàn chǎng de 'ér tóng miàn qián rén
  
   wèile jiān běn piàn de hòu zhì zuòdǎo yǎn 'ā fāng suǒ · lóng jué zhí dǎo 2005 nián de · huǒ yàn bēi》。
  
   yǐngpiān 530 wàn yīng bàng liǎo yīng guó shǒu yìng dāng piào fáng
  
   wèile fáng zhǐ fēi tōu pāihuá xiōng gōng wéi yǐng yuàn yuán gōng gōng liǎo shì
  
   jiā · ào màn sòng gěi dān 'ěr · léi yīn diàn zuò jiàn miàn
  
   dǎo yǎn 'ā fāng suǒ · lóng zài piàn zhōng chuàn liǎo zài zhàn zhōng shǒu chí zhú de rén
  
   ā fāng suǒ · lóng céng xiǎng zài piàn zhōng jiā zhū dàn luó lín jiān jué fǎn duì


  Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban is the third novel in the Harry Potter series written by J. K. Rowling. The book was published on 8 July 1999. The novel won the 1999 Whitbread Book Award, the Bram Stoker Award, the 2000 Locus Award, and was short-listed for other awards, including the Hugo. This placed the novel among the most-honoured works of fantasy in recent history. A film based on the novel was released on 31 May 2004, in the United Kingdom and 4 June 2004 in the U.S. and many other countries. This is the only novel in the series that does not feature Lord Voldemort in some form.
  
  Plot
  
  Having lost his temper with his Aunt Marge and inadvertently causing her to magically inflate, Harry Potter flees the Dursleys'. Harry takes the Knight Bus to The Leaky Cauldron, where he meets Cornelius Fudge, the Minister of Magic. Fudge informs Harry that Aunt Marge has been deflated and that he will not be punished. The Ministry of Magic is simply concerned about Harry's safety due to the escape of mass-murderer Sirius Black from the wizarding prison Azkaban. Black was a great friend of the Potter family and Harry's godfather, but betrayed the family to the evil Lord Voldemort. Voldemort killed Harry's parents but, when he tried to kill Harry, mysteriously vanished. Afterward, Black murdered their friend Peter Pettigrew along with 12 bystanders.
  
  Harry and his friends Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger return to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry and find security has been tightened because of Black's escape. The grounds are now guarded by Dementors, dark, sinister beings that drain the happiness of anyone nearby and guard Azkaban prison. They also cause Harry to pass out. Remus Lupin, the school's new Defense Against the Dark Arts teacher tells Harry he is more vulnerable to the Dementors because he has seen genuine horrors in his past. Lupin agrees to teach Harry the Patronus Charm, a shield against the Dementors.
  
  Harry is depressed to learn he will not be allowed to visit Hogsmeade, the local village most students are allowed to visit on weekends. He is also angry with Draco Malfoy for ruining Hagrid's first lesson as Care of Magical Creatures teacher. Malfoy deliberately allows himself to be attacked by Buckbeak, Hagrid's beloved Hippogriff, and his father ensures that Buckbeak is sentenced to be executed at the end of the school year. Over the course of the year, Hermione uses a Time-Turner to travel in time and attend classes held at the same time. Black manages to break into the castle twice, but is unable to reach Harry. Fred and George Weasley show Harry a secret passageway to Hogsmeade and give him the Marauder's Map.
  
  During one illicit visit to the village, Harry is nearly caught while Ron discovers that Scabbers, Ron's rat, has disappeared. Ron believes he has been eaten by Crookshanks, Hermione's cat, causing a falling-out between him and Hermione. Hermione later finds Scabbers in Hagrid's hut when the three of them visit him before Buckbeak's execution. On their way back from the hut, Ron is suddenly attacked by a large black dog and dragged into a passage beneath a magical tree, the Whomping Willow.
  
  Harry and Hermione follow them in and find themselves in an old, boarded-up shack known as the Shrieking Shack. They also discover that the dog is the animagus Sirius Black. Harry attempts to attack Black when Lupin arrives. Hermione confronts Lupin about habits she has observed during her classes with him and Lupin admits to being a werewolf. Lupin explains that he, Black, Pettigrew, and James Potter, Harry's father, were great friends and called themselves the "Marauders". To make Lupin's transformations more enjoyable, his friends all became Animagi, humans who can turn into animals at will. The Marauders remained friends after growing up, and when they learned Voldemort was after the Potters, Black became their Secret-Keeper. However, Black then reveals that he had secretly switched this duty with Pettigrew in order to serve as a decoy. Black states Pettigrew is the betrayer and, rather than being murdered by Black, is actually Scabbers.
  
  Lupin and Sirius force Pettigrew to reveal himself, and Pettigrew transforms from Scabbers and back into human form. He admits to the story, but Harry stops Black and Lupin from killing him and becoming murderers themselves. Instead, Harry persuades them to take Pettigrew back to Hogwarts castle in order to clear Sirius's name. However, as they and they return to the castle the full moon emerges and Lupin transforms. Pettigrew escapes while Dementors descend on the others. They are saved at the last minute by a Patronus Harry believes was cast by his father.
  
  Harry awakes in the castle to learn that Black has been captured. To save him, Harry and Hermione use the Time-Turner to travel back in time and prevent his capture. Harry and Hermione rescue Buckbeak and re-watch the scenes of the night, until they see the Dementors cornering Harry and Sirius. Harry is determined to see who sent the Patronus, only to realize that it was himself. Sirius is rescued and flees on Buckbeak. Lupin, outed as a werewolf, resigns. Harry is worried that Pettigrew may help Voldemort to return, but Dumbledore says Harry may be grateful that he helped save Pettigrew's life.
  Pre-release history
  
  Of the first three books in the series, Prisoner of Azkaban took the shortest amount of time to write - Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone took five years to complete and Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets needed two years, while Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban was written in one year. Rowling's favorite aspect of this book was introducing the character Remus Lupin.
  Film adaptation
  
  The film version of Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban was released in 2004. Steve Kloves wrote the screenplay, and Alfonso Cuarón was the director. The movie débuted at number one and held that position for two weeks. The Prisoner of Azkaban made a total of $795.6 million worldwide, which made it the second highest-grossing film of 2004 behind Shrek 2 but is the lowest grossing film of the Harry Potter Series.
huǒ yàn bēi
qiáo 'ān · luó lín Joanne Rowlingyuèdòu
   · zài huò xué xiào jīng guò sān nián de xué liànzhú jiàn chéngzhǎng wéi chū de shīxīn xué nián kāi shǐ qián hǎo péng yǒu luó 'ēn mǐn guān kàn jīng cǎi de kuí shì jiè bēi sài jiān xiàn liǎo xiāo shī shí sān nián de hēi biāo de xīn tóu lóng shàng liǎo tuán nóng zhòng de yīn yúndàn sān shàonián rán yōng yòu men de diàn yuánrán 'érshǎo nán shàonǚ de xīn shì yàng nán zhuō sān rén zhī jiān de měi hǎo yǒu qíng jìng shì yàng sān zhé qíng …… wàng měi de qiū · zhāng gòng tóng zǒu jìn měi de shìdàn zhè méng méng lóng lóng de chōng jǐng què zāo shòu liǎo xiǎo xiǎo de shī yào zuò tōng tōng de nián xué shēng xìng de shì zhù dìng yǒng yuǎn dōubù néng píng píng cháng cháng héng héng shǐ jiè de biāo zhǔn lái héng liànghēi de yīn yǐng shǐ zhōng huī zhī zhǒng zhǒng 'àn cáng shā de shén shì jiàn jiāng tuī xiàng liǎo de zhǎo wàng zài bǎi nián de sān qiáng zhēng sài zhōng zhàn shèng wán chéng sān jīng xiǎn jiān de xiàng shuí zhī zhěng jìng sài jìng shì tiān de hēi yīn móu


  Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire is the fourth novel in the Harry Potter series written by J. K. Rowling, published on 8 July 2000. The book attracted additional attention because of a pre-publication warning from J. K. Rowling that one of the characters would be murdered in the book.
  
  The novel won a Hugo Award in 2001; it was the only Harry Potter novel to do so. The book was made into a film, which was released worldwide on 18 November 2005.
  
  Synopsis
  Plot introduction
  
  Throughout the three previous novels in the Harry Potter series, the main character, Harry Potter, has struggled with the difficulties that come with growing up and the added challenge of being a famous wizard. When Harry was a baby, Voldemort, the most powerful evil wizard in living memory, killed Harry's parents but mysteriously vanished after unsuccessfully trying to kill Harry. This results in Harry's immediate fame, and his being placed in the care of his muggle, or non-magical, relatives Aunt Petunia and Uncle Vernon, who have a son named Dudley Dursley.
  
  Harry enters the wizarding world at the age of 11, enrolling in the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. He makes friends with Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger, and is confronted by Lord Voldemort trying to regain power. After returning to the school after summer break, several attacks on students take place at Hogwarts after the legendary "Chamber of Secrets" is opened. Harry ends the attacks by killing a Basilisk and defeating another attempt by Lord Voldemort to return to full strength. The following year, Harry hears that he has been targeted by escaped murderer Sirius Black. Despite stringent security measures at Hogwarts, Harry is confronted by Black at the end of his third year of schooling and Harry learns that Black was framed and is actually Harry's godfather.
  Plot summary
  
  The book opens with Harry Potter having a dream about Frank Bryce, the ex-caretaker at the Riddle family mansion, who is caught eavesdropping on a deformed Tom Riddle and his servant, Peter Pettigrew. In Harry's dream, Bryce is killed by Voldemort. Later in the summer, Harry, Hermione Granger, and the Weasley family take a trip to the Quidditch World Cup. While there, Death Eaters, Voldemort's servants, storm the grounds, harass some muggles, and run away when they see the Dark Mark in the sky.
  
  Albus Dumbledore announces during the welcoming feast that the school will host the Triwizard Tournament, an inter-school competition. One student from each of three magical schools will be chosen by the Goblet of Fire to compete. The other two magical institutions, Beauxbatons Academy, and Durmstrang Institute, arrive at Hogwarts two months into the school term. The champions chosen by the goblet were: Fleur Delacour from Beauxbatons, Viktor Krum of Durmstrang, and Cedric Diggory of Hogwarts. Mysteriously, Harry is also chosen, even though he did not submit his name, and is underage and ought to have been magically blocked from doing so. Ron Weasley is instantly infuriated, thinking Harry submitted himself, and their friendship suffers.
  
  The new Defense Against the Dark Arts professor is Alastor "Mad-Eye" Moody, a former Auror and Dumbledore's friend. He teaches his students the three Unforgivable Curses in class, a lesson which is illegal. Those curses are the Imperius Curse, which forces the victim to do the caster's bidding; the Cruciatus Curse, a spell that tortures its victim; and the killing curse called Avada Kedavra. Harry learns he is the only known person to have survived the killing curse, cast against him by Voldemort when Harry was a baby.
  
  In the first task of the tournament, the champions each are to retrieve a golden egg from a dragon, which contains a clue for the second task. Harry completes the task with help from Rubeus Hagrid and Prof. Moody. Following the end of the first task, Ron and Harry mend their broken friendship. The second tournament task requires retrieving something important taken from each champion hidden in the Black Lake. Ten minutes before the task, Harry is given gillyweed by Dobby the house elf so he can breathe underwater. Harry finds the four "important objects" of the tournament's contestants: Ron, Hermione, Cho, and Fleur’s little sister, Gabrielle Delacour. He is forced to rescue Gabrielle along with Ron when Fleur does not come, which causes him to lose the challenge, but he gain points for 'moral fibre.'
  
  One night after the second task, Harry and Krum are startled when a dishevelled Barty Crouch, Sr. emerges from the forest, mumbling nonsense and demanding to see Dumbledore. Harry runs for help, but when he returns with Dumbledore, they find Krum unconscious and Crouch missing. Harry learns more about the Crouches when he sees one of Dumbledore's memories in the Pensieve, a memory storing tool. The memory shows Barty Crouch, Jr., a Death Eater, sentenced to Azkaban by Barty Crouch Sr for helping Bellatrix Lestrange torture Frank and Alice Longbottom (Neville's parents) into insanity.
  
  The third and final tournament task involves navigating a labyrinth located on the Quidditch Pitch which is filled with magical obstacles. Harry and Cedric successfully help each other navigate the maze. They reach the Triwizard cup and agree to take hold of it simultaneously, making both of them the winners. The Cup turns out to be a portkey that transports them to an old graveyard in Little Hangleton. Pettigrew and a deformed Lord Voldemort, are there. Pettigrew kills Diggory, and ties Harry's hands and feet to the Riddle tombstone. He then uses a bone from Voldemort's father's grave, some of Harry's blood, and his own cut-off hand in a magical ritual that restores Lord Voldemort to a new body.
  
  Voldemort summons Death Eaters, and reveals that a servant of his at Hogwarts ensured that Harry would participate in the tournament, win it, and thus be brought to the graveyard. Harry tries to disarm Voldemort with the Expelliarmus spell, at exactly the same time as Voldemort uses the killing curse. The two spells meet and interlock, causing a bond between the wands that displays the "echoes" (described by Dumbledore) of Voldemort's most recent murdered victims, including Cedric, James Potter and Lily Potter. The "echoes" provide protection to Harry, allowing him to escape with Cedric's body and leaving Voldemort behind in a rage.
  
  Harry, carrying Cedric's body, returns to the school grounds. Moody rushes Harry to his office, where he reveals that he was Voldemort's servant, and attempts to kill Harry himself. Moody is stopped by Dumbledore, Severus Snape, and Minerva McGonagall. Dumbledore feeds Moody Veritaserum, and they discover that "Moody" is actually Barty Crouch, Jr., who was smuggled out of Azkaban and was using a Polyjuice Potion to impersonate the real Alastor Moody. Cornelius Fudge, the Minister for Magic, arrives at Hogwarts accompanied by a Dementor. When the Dementor enters the room where Crouch, Jr. stands, it swoops down and gives him the "Dementor's Kiss", sucking out his soul. Fudge refuses to believe Dumbledore's and Harry's word that Voldemort is back.
  
  Harry is crowned Triwizard Champion and awarded with 1,000 galleons. Days later, Dumbledore then makes an announcement at the gloomy Leaving Feast, telling everybody about Voldemort and saying that to deny the true way Cedric died would be 'an insult to his memory.' While leaving the Hogwart’s Express on King's Cross Station, Harry gives his winnings to Fred and George to start a joke shop and Harry sets off for another summer at the Dursleys'.
  Rita Skeeter subplot
  
  Rita Skeeter, a writer for the Daily Prophet, spends much of the story writing lies about Harry (about the time his scar hurt after a strange dream in Divination), Hagrid (about the time he told Madame Maxime about his mother), and Hermione (in love with Viktor Krum). Skeeter carries out secret interviews with Slytherin students to get the fodder for some of her stories, but the sources for others are inexplicable. Initially, Harry suspects that she has an Invisibility Cloak, but Hermione knows that "Mad-Eye" Moody would have been able to see through the cloak with his magical eye. Next, Harry thinks that she may have had areas of the school bugged. However, Hermione tells them that electronic devices do not work in Hogwarts because of the magic in the air. Near the end of the book, Hermione finally realises how Skeeter was doing this: she is an unregistered Animagus and can turn into a beetle. Harry and Ron realise that there was a beetle on the statue near Hagrid's hut, and later in Hermione's hair after the second task, and on the window of Divination class when Harry's scar hurt, and that the Slytherins knew about it all along. Hermione eventually traps Skeeter, in beetle form, in a jar and does not release her until the train reaches London.
  Foreshadowing
  
   * Ron's jealousy comes to the fore when Harry's name is pulled from the Goblet of Fire. He thinks Harry is lying about putting his name in for the contest, and abandons his friend. Ron later returns when he sees how dangerous the competition is. Also, Ron's feelings towards Hermione, which were more subtle prior to Goblet of Fire, now become obvious, with their relationship blossoming in Half-Blood Prince and finally being consummated with their first kiss in Deathly Hallows. Both of these are faced in the seventh book when Ron, angered by Harry's lack of a concrete plan and the lack of the usual comforts of home, leaves Hermione and Harry (though regrets this instantly).
   * Fleur looks interested in Bill Weasley, whom she later dates (Order of the Phoenix), is engaged to (Half-Blood Prince), marries (Deathly Hallows) and has children with (Nineteen Years Later).
   * During the Yule Ball, Dumbledore mentions that he was wandering through the corridors in search of a bathroom when a room full of chamber pots suddenly appeared in a place he had not previously known existed. In Order of the Phoenix we learn that this is the Room of Requirement.
   * At the end of Goblet of Fire, Dumbledore asks Sirius to round up "the old crowd". This includes Arabella Figg, who is mentioned as early in the series as the second chapter of the first book. However, she is introduced as a crazy old Muggle who lives a street or two over from Privet Drive. In Order of the Phoenix, it is revealed that she is a Squib who has been assigned to keep an eye on Harry. The only reason she never let him have fun while at her house was that she (and Dumbledore) feared that if the Dursleys believed Harry enjoyed himself there, they would find a different babysitter.
   * Towards the end of the 4th book, Harry tells his tale of his night in the graveyard to Dumbledore and Sirius. He mentions his arm, sliced by Pettigrew, and there is 'a gleam of triumph' in Dumbledore's eye. This is because Dumbledore knows that using Harry's blood to bring Voldemort back will keep Harry alive should Voldemort try to kill him.
  
  Release history
  
  Until the official title's announcement on 27 June 2000, the fourth book was called by its working title, Harry Potter and the Doomspell Tournament. J. K. Rowling expressed her indecision about the title in an Entertainment Weekly interview.
  “ I changed my mind twice on what [the title] was. The working title had got out — 'Harry Potter and the Doomspell Tournament.' Then I changed 'Doomspell' to 'Triwizard Tournament.' Then I was teetering between 'Goblet of Fire' and 'Triwizard Tournament.' In the end, I preferred 'Goblet of Fire' because it's got that kind of 'cup of destiny' feel about it, which is the theme of the book. ”
  
  Rowling also admitted that the fourth book was the most difficult to write at the time, because she noticed a giant plot hole halfway through writing. In particular, Rowling had trouble with the ninth chapter, "The Dark Mark", which she rewrote 13 times.
  U.K./U.S. Release
  
  Goblet of Fire was the first book in the Harry Potter series to be released in the United States on the same date as the United Kingdom, on 8 July 2000. The three previous books had been released in the United Kingdom several months before the U.S. edition.
  James and Lily plot error
  
  In the original, first edition printings of Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, there is a plot error concerning the order in which the ghosts of Lily and James Potter appear out of Voldemort's wand. The ghosts appear in reverse order of their deaths with the latest killing first and the oldest killing last. Over the books as written up to this point, the killings in order are James Potter, Lily Potter, Bertha Jorkins, Frank Bryce, and Cedric Diggory. Lily should emerge before James but in the first edition she doesn't. Rowling admitted the mistake and subsequent editions of the book corrected the mistake, and the text appears correctly.
fèng huáng shè
qiáo 'ān · luó lín Joanne Rowlingyuèdòu
   huó zhī hòu guò liǎo shēng mìng zhōng zuì màn chángzuì de shǔ jiǎdāng rán réng rán dàngchéng chòu chóng bān de lái biǎo méi shì jiù dàngchéng shā bāo liàn quán shèn zhì hái yòu liǎng zhǐ shí líng hún wéi shēng de shè hún guài tuō liǎo de zhǎng kònglái dào zhēn shàng hǎo zài yǒng gǎn de yòng shǒu shén zhòu gǎn zǒu liǎo shè hún guài
    
   yīn xiǎn de běn xiǎng tōng guò shè hún guài shì jiàn xiàn zài xiào wài shǐ yòng 'ér wéi fǎn liǎoduì wèi chéng nián shī jiā yuē shù héng héng jìn zhǐ wèi chéng nián rén zài xiào wài làn yòng suàn jiù kāi chú lái dào shòu shěndèng duō zuò zhèng rénzhōng bāng bǎi tuō liǎo zhǐ kòng
  
   lián de zài shǔ jiǎ jīng liǎo lián chuàn de biàn hòuzhōng děng lái liǎo kāi xué…… de cháng chéng wéi zhè nián de hēi fáng shù de xīn lǎo shī shì dài biǎo lái zhěng zhì huò de liáng fēng de táng jiù yīn wéi guǎn zhù 'ér liǎo chōng zuì zhōng bèi guān jìn guǒ rèn wéi jiào shòu kǒu zhōng dejìn zhǐ shì tōng de chāo xiě wén de huà jiù cuò liǎoyīn wéi gěi zhī shén de yòng de xiān xuè zuò shuǐměi shēn shēn zài liǎo de shǒu bèi shàng
  
   cóng huó hòu bèi yuè lái yuè duō de mèng yǎn suǒ kùn rǎo zheyīn wéi tóu shàng dào shāng shǐ de xiǎng chǎn shēng liǎo mǒu zhǒng lián zhèng shì zài yīcháng mèng jìng luó 'ēn de bèi shé yǎo shāng shí chū liǎo jǐng gàowǎn jiù liǎo de shēng mìng
    
   duì lái shuōqíng rén jié biàn yòu yīn wéi zhāng qiū yuē hǎo huò cūnrán 'éryuē huì de guò chéng què jìn rén shǔ diǎn xíng xiǎo rén de zhāng qiū yào rén hōng yào rén téngér què piān piān shì tóu jiēguǒ liǎng rén huān 'ér sàn
    
   yóu D.A. nèi chéng yuán de bèi pàn zuì zhōng hái shì xiàn liǎo zài bēizhe jiào jiā hēi fáng shùsuǒ yòu rén lián gǔn dài zǒng suàn táo tuō shēng tiānzuì zhōng zhǐ yòu yīn wéi duàn hòu 'ér bèi zhuā zhù héng héng gào de rén jìng rán jiù shì zhāng qiūér dèng duō dài shòu zuìbèi gǎn chū liǎo huò
    
   yuán lái zhí xiǎng dào de shì yǐn cáng zhe wèi lái mìng yùn de yán qiú…… qīn de xiǎng zhī xiǎo tiān láng xīng shì shēng mìng zhōng zuì zhòng yào de rén yòng zhǒng jiǎ xiāng jiāng piàn zhì yīcháng hùn zhàn jiù zhǎn kāirán 'ér ràng xiǎng xiàng dào de shìsuī rán D.A. de chéng yuán dōushì xiē bàn de hái què shí dǒu liǎo xiāng zhòngzhí dào fèng huáng shè de chéng yuán gǎn lái zēng yuánzhè chǎng hùn zhàn zhōngshí fèng huáng shè yòu shāng wángdàn shàng wàn fēn zhī de tòng shēng mìng zhōng zuì hòu wèi qīn rén 'ér héng héng zài jiànxiǎo tiān láng xīng
  《 · fèng huáng shè》 [ diàn yǐng ]- zuò zhě jiǎn jiè
  
  J.K. luó lín J.K. luó lín
  
  (1966 héng ), yīng guó zuò jiā xiǎo huān xiě zuòdāng guò duǎn shí jiān de jiào shī shū。 24 suì nián zài qián wǎng lún dūn de huǒ chē shàng méng shēng liǎo chuàng zuò · liè xiǎo shuō de niàn tóu nián hòu,《 · shí》 (1997) wèn shìsuí jīhū měi nián běn de chuàng zuò liǎo · shì》 (1998)、《 · 'ā bān de qiú 》 (1999)、《 · huǒ yàn bēi》 (2000),“ · fēng xíjuǎn liǎo quán qiú。 2003 nián 6 yuè de zuò pǐn · fèng huáng shèzài quán shì jiè · de qiáo shǒu pàn zhōng wèn shìzài zài quán shì jiè xiān · kuáng cháojié zhǐ jīn nián 6 yuè zuò pǐn bèi fān chéng 60 duō zhǒng yánzài 200 duō guó jiā lěi xiāo shòu 2 duō
  
   céng jīng zuò wéi dān shēn qīn de J.K. luó línshēng huó jiān xīndàn · gěi dài lái liǎo de róng cái jīn de shì chéng gōngxìng de rén。 2001 nián 12 zuì shī 'ěr · zài jié lián jīn nián 3 yuè men yòu liǎo 'ér míng jiào dài wéixiàn J.K. luó lín de zhàng duì 'ér shēng huó hěn xìng
  《 · fèng huáng shè》 [ diàn yǐng ]- yǎn zhí yuán biǎo
  
   zhì piàn: DavidBarronDavidHeyman
  
  TimLewisLionelWigram
  
  LorneOrleans
  
   yuán chuàng yīnyuè · huò
  
   shè yǐng: SlawomirIdziak
  
   jiǎn ji: MarkDay
  
   xuǎn jiǎo dǎo yǎn: FionaWeir
  
   shù zhǐ dǎo 'ěr · lāi StuartCraig
  
   měi shù shè : AndrewAckland-Snow
  
  MarkBartholomew
  
  AlastairBullock
  
  GaryTomkins
  
   shì jué xiào: TimAlexanderTimBurke
  
  GregButlerPaulJ.Franklin
  
  MichaelIllingworthCraigLyn
  
  ChrisShaw  KatSzuminska
  
  GavinToomeyValWardlaw
  《 · fèng huáng shè》 [ diàn yǐng ]- yǐngpiān huā
  
  
  
   pāi shè
    
   shì shí shàngzài zhěng de pāi shè guò chéng zhōng wèi · xiǎn shì chū liǎo duì de zhǎng kòng néng duì zhè fēngmǐ quán qiú de shì de bié jiěbāo kuòzài duì yǎn yuán de zhēn xuǎnbiǎo yǎn de zhǎng duì xiē xiào chǎng miàn de tuī qiāo chuí liàn shàng wèi dàn xīn jiè jiàn shǎo qián rén de yōu xiù zhī chùhái yǒng chuàng xīnkāipì liǎo de xīn fāng zài pāi shè mǐnyǐn yòu chuǎng jìn lín bìng jiù jiù fàn de chǎng shí wèi chōng fēn diào dòng liǎo yǎn yuán de zhù guān néng dòng xìngràng qiáo duàn de zhù yǎn 'ài · sēn yòu liǎo wéi jīng cǎi de huīxiǎo měi jiù nián zài · huǒ yàn bēide shèng dàn huì zhōng jīng yàn zhī hòuzài zhèng míng liǎo de yǎn tóng měi mào shēn cái bān gòng tóng chéngzhǎng liǎo shǎoxiǎn rán wéi hòu quán miàn jìn jūn hǎo lāi jìn xià jiān shí de chǔlìng wàizhí de shìzài pāi shè zhè jìng tóu shí yào jiā juésè chéng zhè zhǒng shén shēng de jìng tóuyuán zhù zhōng dàozhǐ yòu jiàn guò rén de rén cái néng kàn dào suǒ zài pāi shè shí wèi gōng zuò rén yuán bié xiǎng dào liǎo zhì zuò chū bié de 'ān ràng yǎn yuán shàngrán hòu kào zhòng shēng dào bàn kōng zhōngzài de qián yǎn chū fēi xíng de xiào guǒ
  
   jǐng
     
   zài jǐng fāng miàndǎo yǎn wèi · jīng shòu liǎo yán jùn de kǎo yàn guòzài jīng gān de zhòng duō shè shī de bāng zhù xiàyǐngpiān zhōng jué duō shù de jǐng xiāng dāng jīng cǎiyóu shì yǐngpiān zhōng zhòng tóu de shēng héng héng kān chēng jīn huī huáng pài shí shàng shì guāng jiàn rén de shēn bǎnshàng miàn shì kǒng què lán de tiān huā bǎnhái yòu chù shì shǎn shǎn guāng duàn biàn huà de jīn hàohuá cháng tīng zhōng jiān de xiōng pēn quán shì de biāo zhìyóu zhēn rén hái de chún jīn diāo xiàng chéngzuì gāo de shì fēng gāo guì de nán bàng biān shì měi yāo ráo de yāo guàijīng líng rén chóng bàiyǎng yǎn guāng kàn zhe liǎng wèi shī…… zhěng chǎng jǐng de shè zhì shèn zhì lián yuán zhù zuò zhě J.K. luó lín kàn liǎo pāi shǒu chēng hǎodíquè zhàn shì · fèng huáng shèzhōng zuì zhòng yào de yīcháng lùn dào jǐnghái shì xiàochǎng miàn kòng zhì xiāng dāng kǎo yàn dǎo yǎn de gōng ér qiě zhè chǎng zhàn huì yòu hěn duō bào de chǎng miàn guǒ chǔlǐ dāngjiāng zài hěn chéng shàng yǐng xiǎng dào yǐngpiān de fēn yīn diàn yǐng xīn shǒu wèi · zài miàn lín de tiǎo zhàn nán men shì dài
    
   shān jiǎn
    
   yóu · fèng huáng shèshì běn liè cóng shū zhōng shù zuì duō de běncháng 870 héng héng · wáng shèng de shù jīng qiāo dìng wéi 784 suǒ yǐngpiān de biān zhǐ néng jiāng xiǎo shuō zhōng guān téng yǎngde biān biān jiǎo jiǎo rěn tòng 'ài jīn jīng què dìng yòu chù nèi róng cǎn zāo shān jiǎn
    
  1、 suǒ yòu kuí xiāng guān de chǎng jǐng…… zhè dǎo shì nán cāi yóu zài · 5》 zhōng duō shí jiān dōubèi jiào shòu guān jìn dàn méi zěn me cān jiā kuí de xùn liànhái cuò guò liǎo chǎng zhòng yào de sài guòzhè duì shì yǎn luó 'ēn de · lín lái shuōquè chì wéi 'è hàoyīn wéi luó 'ēn jiāng zài zhè zhōngjiàng cān jiā lán fēn duō xué yuàn de kuí dài biǎo duìduì lín zhǐ néng hàn biǎo shì:“ wàng míng nián。” rán kuí sài méi yòu liǎo men jiù yuán tīng dào shǒu zhī xiāng guān dewéi lāi shì men de wángliǎo
  2、 wéi lāi rén xiǎo tiān láng xīng zài fèng huáng shè jiù de wèn liǎo xiē zhēng zhí…… bèi shān
  3、 jiā yǎng xiǎo jīng líng duō zài chū xiàn……《 · 4》 zhōngduō de suǒ yòu fēn jiù bèi wēi dài liǎosuǒ nán cāi zhè juésè wèihé huì yuán shì wéi duì gǎn dào gāo xīng de dāng shǔ mǐn liǎoyīn wéi zhè zhǒng zuò xiǎn rán chù fàn liǎo chuàng jiàn dejiā yǎng xiǎo jīng líng quán jìn huì” (S.P.E.W.)。
  4、 wēi de …… men dāng nián dōushì yīng yǒng de 'ào luóyóu shòu dào liǎo de zhé 'ér fēngxiàn zhù zài shèng máng shāng bìng yuàn liáo yǎngzhè zhēn shì xìng de xiāo yīn wéi suí zhe wēi de zuò yòng zhòng yào de běn yīnggāi dào xiāng yìng dezūn zhòng”, ér shì bèi qíng shān diào
  5、 děng rén wéi lāi jiāfèng huáng shè de zǒng jìn xíng sǎo chú…… ràng rén jué fēi cháng yīn wéi men méi bàn kàn dào zài zhè chū xiàn de shén shēng huó shēng shēng de yàng liǎo
  《 · fèng huáng shè》 [ diàn yǐng ]- yǐngpiān liàng diǎn
  
  
  
   xīn dǎo yǎnxīn cháng shì
    
   zài huò xué xiào de 5 nián tóuduì · lái shuō shì guān jiàn niányīn wéi zài shì hái ér shì xué zhe miàn duì chéng nián rén yào zuò chū de xuǎn tiǎo zhàn dàn yào chǔlǐ de huí guīhái rěn shòu zhe shī hǎo yǒu sài · de tòng shēng zài shēn shàng de qiē shǐ tóng líng rén zài xīn zhì fāng miàn yào gèng jiā chéng shúyīn wéi dān dedōu shì xiē xiǎng dào de zhòng rèn…… wèile néng gòu zhǎo dào jìn · de shì jiè de kǒudǎo yǎn wèi · zài pāi shè zhī qián zuò liǎo hěn duō zhǔn bèi gōng zuòchè fēn liǎo · liè zǒu guò lái suǒ jīng de qián yīn hòu guǒ:“ zhè shì zài quán tào xiǎo shuō zhōng zhàn yòu zhe fēi cháng zhòng yào de wèi zhìyīn wéi dào liǎo zhè shí hòu men de xiǎo zhùjué zhèng zài zǒu xiàng chéng shúzhōu wéi de shì qíng biàn yuè lái yuè men kāi shǐ xiàn zhè shì jiè de bàn bànkāi shǐ jīng chéngzhǎng de fán nǎo 。”
    
   zuò wéi · liè de zhì piàn rén, [ wèi · hǎi màn ] biǎo shìzhèng shì zhè shì zhòng tóng de zhìcái ràng zuì zhōng xuǎn liǎo wèi · lái wéi yǐngpiān zhí dǎo:“ fēi cháng shàn chǔlǐ zhè zhǒng huàn lèi de shì zhù ér qiě hái zhǎn xiàn chū néng gòu fēi cháng de fāng shì chǔlǐ zhèng zhì wèn de néng dāng rán,《 · 5》 bìng fēi zhèng zhì cǎi nóng hòu de yǐngpiāndàn shì què liàng yǎn liǎo shì jiè suǒ zūn xún de zhèng zhì xué shuō shì dài zhe xiàn de qíng jiā méng jìn lái deér kàn zhe hái men zhī jiān cóng shēng dào xìn rèn de guò chéng jiù huì xiàn què shí shì néng gòu diào dòng yǎn yuán xìng de gāo shǒu míng báigēn suí zhe liè chéngzhǎng de wèi xiǎo yǎn yuán rèn réndōu gèng jiā liǎo jiě men zài yǐngpiān zhōng de juésèsuǒ jīng cháng men yào dǎn shuō chū de xiǎng jìn liàng zhēn shí de xìng zhù dào jiǎo zhī zhōng 。”
    
   lián shì yǎn · de dān 'ěr · léi biǎo shì:“ huān wèi · gōng zuògèng huān bīn bīn yòu de wēn xìng guò shì shì pāi shè de zuì nán de yǐngpiān fēn shì yīn wéi zhè zhāng nèi róng de shū xìngshèng xià de zài lái liǎo zhè wèi xīn dǎo yǎn zǒng shì ràng gèng jiā shēn fēn zhè juésè xiàn zhè zhǒng zuò shì fēi cháng yào de zhēn de shì wèi cái huá héng de tiān cái dǎo yǎn。”
    
   luó 'ēn · wéi lāi de bàn yǎn zhě · lín duì biǎo shì tóng :“ wèi · de zhí dǎo fāng shì wèi dǎo yǎn cún zài zhe hěn de chā dàn shì zǒng néng tōng guò zuì qīng sōng de fāng shì dào zuì wěi de chéng guǒ。” ér shì yǎn yǒng yuǎn zhōng chéng de péng yǒu mǐn · lán jié de 'ài · sēn chōng dào:“ zuì 'ài de fāngjiù shì rèn zhēn qīng tīng men tán lùn de juésè de shí hòuduì men néng gòu lián zài yǐngpiān shì yǎn tóng juésè gǎn dào liǎo yóu zhōng pèi fēi cháng zhòng shì dān 'ěr · léi · lín zhī jiān de guān yīn wéi zhè yòu zhù men zài yǐngpiān zhōng de juésè zhī jiān de yǒu qíng de zhēn shí xìng。”
    
   chú liǎo wèi · biān mài 'ěr · dēng duì · liè lái shuō shì wèi xīn rén:“ dāng wèi · hǎi màn zhǎo dào de shí hòu xīng fèn quán shēn dǒu zhī dào de shuō néng yòu diǎn lǎo tàodàn néng gòu jiā zhè huàn liè shìzài tōng guò de ràng zhǎn shì zài yín shàng néng xiǎng xiàng dào huì shì shénme yàng de gǎn jué wèi · suī rán gěi liú liǎo gòu de chuàng zuò kōng jiān shì duì běn yòu yào qiú jiù shì shì de měi shí dōuyào jìn néng zhēn shíxiǎn rán běn shǒu xiān yào zuò dào de diǎnjiù shì bǎo liú zhù yuán zhù xiǎo shuō zhōng de jīng suǐ líng hún shuō shì shì zhěng liè zhōng zuì zhòng yào de fēn cóng xiǎo hái tuì biàn chéng měng dǒng de shàonián kāi shǐ shí dào rèn shì qíng dōubù shì jué duì dehuài rén yòu hǎo de miànhǎo rén yòu xié 'è de miàn…… xiànchéng rén de shì jiè bìng méi yòu xiǎng xiàng zhōng de me hǎo cún zài zhe quē xiàn héng héng zhè xiē dōushì yào men zài yǐngpiān zhōng chū de zhù 。”
    
   shén de
    
   zài zhēn zhèng miàn duì de tiǎo zhàn zhī qiánhái yòu shì qíng yào jiě jué jiù shì táo guò shòu shěn de zhè jié…… zhè dào zuì de xiàn de jiù shì de tīngměi gōng shè shī · léi (StuartCraig) yòng zhāng hěn yòu lián de cháng de xíng hǎi bàogài mǎn liǎo zhěng zhěng miàn qiáng léi hái biǎo shìjìn guǎn zài de shī dōushì yòng fēi xíng dài xíng zǒuyòng zhǐ fēi dài diàn huàquè méi bàn yǎn gài zài běn zhì shàng shì chún cuì de guān liáo gòu de shì shí:“ zài yīng guó, ZF lóu dōuyòu zhe 19 shì wéi duō shí dài de jiàn zhù lóu shēn shàng de zhuāng shì fán duōyóu bèi shè zhì zài liǎo xiàsuǒ men zuò de jiàn shì jiù shì zǒu biàn liǎo lún dūn suǒ yòu zuì lǎo de tiě zhàngǎn shòu zhōng de yīn lěng shè fēng men zhù dàohěn duō tiě zhàn shǐ yòng liǎo liàng cǎi de zhuān zuò zhuāng shì héng héng jié liǎo zhè diǎn men zhōng míng liǎo xià de shì jiè héng héng zài měi miàn qiáng mǎn liǎo huá měi zhuāng zhòng de hēi zhuān hòu zhǒng shì jiù xiǎn xiàn chū lái liǎo guòzhè zhǒng zuò duì shè yǐng shī 'ěr · āi zhā (SlawomirIdziak) lái shuō shì xiǎo de tiǎo zhànyīn wéi zài pāi shè de shí hòu děibǎ zhuān fǎn guāng zhè yuán kǎo jìn 。”
    
   tōng guān suǒ yòu · liè yǐngpiān de měi gōng shè kān chēng zuì de chù jǐng chāo guò 200 yīng chǐ cháng、 120 yīng chǐ kuān、 30 yīng chǐ gāozhì shǎo liǎo 3 wàn kuài zhuān héng héng dōushì rén gōng nián shàng deér qiě dào liǎo yǐngpiān zhōngzhè tīng hái huì tōng guò shù chǔlǐkōng jiān biàn gèng
    
   shì zài wéi lāi xiān shēng de péi bàn xiàcónglái bīn kǒujìn de héng héng kàn lái jiù shì lún dūn jiē tóu zuì tōng de diàn huà tíng · léi xiào zhe shuō:“ rèn wéizhè yàng de shè zhì huì ràng wèi guā ZF lóu zhèng xià fāng de biàn gèng yòu wèi xìngsuǒ men xuǎn liǎo guó fáng fēi cháng jìn de diàn huà tíng…… guā kěn dìng huì chī jīngyuán lái jiù wèi yīng guó guó fáng de xià。” wèi · biǎo shì:“ xiāng xìn · liè zuì yòu de shì diǎnjiù shì zhǎn shì shì jiè shì yǐn cángzài guā de shēng huó zhōng deshì shí shàngzhè liǎng shì jiè shì xiāng róng dezhǐ shì guā men méi shí dào zhè diǎn 'ér 。”
   
   fěn dài biǎo zhǒng xīn dehēi shì
    
   xīn xué xué xiào lái liǎo wèi xīn de hēi fáng shù lǎo shī héng héng jiào shòuyóu méi 'ěr · tānɡ dùn shì yǎncóng tóu dào jiǎo bèi fěn bāo guǒ zhe jiào shòu yōng yòu lǎo liàn de jiǎ xiào tián dào de shēng yīn shì de běn xìng què zhè wán quán xiāng fǎn wèi · biǎo shì:“ rèn wéi dèng duō zài cháng de wèi zhìsuǒ pài lái liǎo zuì xìn lài de cháng zài huò chá míng zhēn xiāng què rèn wéi de rèn shì wéi sǎo qīng qiē qián zài de wēi xiéjiēguǒ huò gǎo yān zhàng chún shì zhǐ zhe yáng de láng。” tānɡ dùn biǎo shì tóng :“ hěn duō rén huì xiàng yàngbiǎo miàn shàng mèi shí shí huài shuǐsuǒ shì yǎn zhè yàng juésè shì yuàn jiē shòu de tiǎo zhàn。”
    
   suī rán shì wèile yuán zhù xiǎo shuō bǎo chí zhì méi 'ěr · tānɡ dùn yòu shí hòu réng rán huì duì shì yǎn zhè juésè gǎn dào yòu diǎn nǎo huǒ:“ zài xiǎo shuō zhōng bèi miáo shù chéngzhǎng fēi cháng chǒu lòuxiàng shì lìng rén tǎo yàn de suǒ dāng yòu rén duì shuō shì zhè juésè zuì shì de rén xuǎnshí tīng zhe zǒng jué me shū 。”
    
   méi 'ěr · tānɡ dùn shì suǒ yòu yǎn yuán zhōng zhuāng shè shī zhēn · tài mǐn (JanyTemime) zǒude zuì jìn de yīn wéi zhěng de xíng xiàng shè shì tài mǐn zài zhěng yǐngpiān zhōngzuì jiān de gōng zuò zhī tānɡ dùn shuō:“ men wéi zhè shēn cái yòu diǎn yuán de shì xiǎng chū liǎo hěn duō yòu de fāng 'àn wàng de lún kuò tài guò xiān míng héng héng suī rán gěi rén de yìn xiàng shì wēn róu shàn liáng shí xīn cháng shí zài shì zěn me 。”
    
   wèile néng gòu zài wài guān shàng zhǎn shì jiào shòu dewēn róu”, zhēn · tài mǐn biǎo shì:“ men wǎng méi 'ěr · tānɡ dùn de tián liǎo hěn duō dōng yīn wéi běn rén bié shòu。” tài mǐn hái zài shàng shǐ yòng liǎo duō róu ruǎn de liàojiù shì wèile zēng qiáng zhǒng xìng shàng de wēn gǎn guò de yán què shì zài xiǎo shuō zhōng jiù jīng jué dìng hǎo defěn gèng fěn zuì fěntài mǐn jiē zhe shuō:“ měi men kàn dào shēn shàng de fěn chú liǎo yán yàng shì dōushì yàng dedāng màn màn zài huò zhǎn shì de quán shíyán de liàng huì suí zhī biàn qiángshí fēn zhā yǎnzuì zhōng biàn chéng liǎo zhǒng zuì shēn de yīng táo fěn。”
  
   fěn de zhù hái huì bèi yán yòng zhì jiào shòu de bàn gōng shì zhōngzhè fēn chǎng jǐng shì yóu měi gōng shī · léi de shè yòng zhǒng fěn de dōng zhuāng shì chū lái debāo kuò dài yòu huā biānxiàng tiān 'é róng yàng guāng huá de chuāng lián zhōu wéi zhǒng 'ài de xiǎo bǎi shèjiā de fēng lái yuán guó léi de shuō jiù shìfēi cháng yòu xiàn tiáo gǎnhéng héng cóng fāng miàn jìn xíng 'àn shìzhè jiān bàn gōng shì de zhù rén shí zài shì tài yòu xìng liǎo guòzhè jiān bàn gōng shì zuì yòu de fānghái zài qiáng shàng 200 duō yìn yòu xiǎo māo de pán shàngàn shì zhe zhǒng māo hěn xiāng fǎn cháng de xìng xiāng duì zhào 'ér yán jiào shòu shǐ yòng de jiào shì jiù xiǎn yán jiǎn duō liǎojiù xiàng duì xué shēng yán xiàn zhì de jiāokè fēng yàng héng héng zhǐ yǔn men zuò zài de wèi zhì shàng mái tóu zhǐ dìng de jiāokè shū · lín shuō:“ xué shēng men duì jiào shòu de hēi fáng shù gǎn dào shēngdàn shì què jiān xìn men yào xué lùnér qiě wán quán méi yòu shí jiàn guò chéngyào zhī dàozhè zhǒng zuò zài suǒ xué xiào shì fēi cháng huāng miù de。”
  
  
   shēng xià de chū wěn
  
   dāng huò yīn wéi jiāng dào lái de shèng dàn jié 'ér jìn jiàqī shí jiàn de D.A. xué xiǎo zhōng duàn duàn shí jiānzuì hòu táng guò hòu, D.A. suǒ yòu de chéng yuán jié bàn kāi liǎoqiū · zhāng què liú liǎo xià lái zǎo zài nián jiù huān shàng liǎo rán 'ér liǎng rén de guān què yīn wéi sài · de bèi hài 'ér shāo xián shì dòng liǎo men xīn zhōng 'àn cáng de xiǎng suǒ zhī deyòu qiú yìng zài zuì hòu D.A. huì de shí hòu yòng zhī shēng zuò wéi zhuāng shì zhōng dài lái liǎo suǒ yòu rèqiè pàn wàng zhe de shí héng héng de chū wěn
    
   dān 'ěr · léi huí zhè fēn de pāi shè shí shuō:“ yòu xiē 'ānyīn wéi xiàn liáng pèi shī hěn jǐn zhāngzhè jǐn jǐn shì wěn me jiǎn dān 'àn shì zhe zhāng qiū zhī jiān de guān dāng men cháng shì liǎo hòu xiàn shí méi me hái tǐng yòu de。” liáng pèi shī shuō:“ zhī suǒ bié jǐn zhāngyīn wéi zhè shì zài yín shàng de chū wěnhǎo zài dǎo yǎn wèi · fēi cháng zhuān gào liǎo men xiǎng yào shénme yàng de xiào guǒzhè yàng men jiù huì gǎn jué zhè chǎng jǐng yòu duō me nán pāi liǎo kāi shǐ de shí hòushì yòu diǎn nán kāndàn shì dān 'ěr · léi hěn huì dài ràng pāi shè biàn hěn jiǎn dānér qiě shì jiē wěn gāo shǒu。”
    
   dǎo yǎn de zuò xiāo liǎo liǎng wèi xiǎo yǎn yuán de què wàng liǎo bàng tóng yàng jǐn zhāng de gōng zuò rén yuányīn wéi zhè xiē rén jīhū shì kàn zhe dān 'ěr · léi suí zhe · liè diàn yǐng diǎn diǎn chéngzhǎng lái dezhì piàn rén wèi · hǎi màn shuō:“ men zhōng de duō rén zài léi 10 suì de shí hòu jiù rèn shí liǎorán hòu jiù zài men de yǎn qián zhǎngdà liǎo…… suǒ men guān xīn xiǎng yào bǎo zài zhè kàn zhe jīng zheyín chū wěn’, zhǒng gǎn jué hěn guài zhí gào jiè yào kàn shì què rěn zhù xiǎng kànhǎo zài zhè chǎng jǐng pāi hěn wán měixiāng xìn guān zhòng kěn dìng néng gòu cóng zhōng gǎn jué dào wēn róu měi de tián 。”
  
   rén xiōng luò
  
   zài zhī dào chí zǎo huì bèi gǎn chū huò zhī hòushòu liè chǎng kānshǒu hǎi gěi luó 'ēn mǐn zhìliǎo shū de rèn bāng zhù zhào kàn tóng de luò héng héng gāng hǎo shì shēn gāo 16 yīng chǐ de rén
    
   wéi liǎo ràng luò zài yín shànghuóguò láizhè dàn jié liǎo shǒu gōng shè dòng zuò zhuōdiàn nǎo xiào de zhì huìhái bāo kuò míng jiào tuō · máo lāi (TonyMaudsley) de yǎn yuán de tiān cái biǎo yǎn wèi · hǎi màn shuō:“ zài men de jiǎ shè zhōng luò shì fēi cháng tiān zhēn de rénzhǐ shì jiào hàodòngméi bàn tài cháng shí jiān zhōng zhù 'ér máo lāi wèi · huā liǎo hěn cháng shí jiān tǎo lùn xiē biǎo yǎn shàng de jiéyīn wéi luò shì yào kàodòng zuò zhuō shù bāng zhù de shù rén。” duì máo lāi de biǎo xiàn jiā zàn yáng:“ wán quán róng jìn lái liǎozhè cóng měi wēi de biǎo yǎn zhōng jiù néng kàn chū lái shǐ zhè juésè jīhū wán quán shì yóu shù shù shēng chéng de shì máo lāi què gěi liǎo luò shēng mìng líng hún。”
  
   dāng luò mǐn dài zài shí néng cóng men zhī jiān de guān kàn chū luò bìng zhǐ shì miàn zēng de rénài · sēn shuō:“ luò yòu 'ài de miànzài mǐn miàn qián jiù xiàng zhǐ xiǎo māo yàng wēn shùn mǐn shì wéi néng gòu ràng 'ān jìng xià lái de rén…… zhī dào luò shì yóu diàn nǎo zhì zuò chū lái de shù rén shì gōng zuò rén yuán jīng jìn liàng ràng xiǎn zhēn shí liǎo yòu shuāng xiàng xiǎo gǒu yàng 'ài de yǎn jīng shí zài shì tài huān liǎo。”
  
   shēng xiào shī · màn (NickDudman) biǎo shì men hái gěi luò zhì zuò liǎo yuán chǐ cùn xiǎo de nǎo dàiyòng lái pāi shè yǎn yuán zài de chǎng jǐng · lín xīng fèn shuō:“ luò pāi shè de fēn tài jīng cǎi liǎoxiàn chǎng yòu de tóu jiān bǎng zhēn dào mendōu wàng liǎo men yǎn dezhǐ shì shēn de fēn 'ér zhì zhōng zuì zhòngyì de fēn jiù shì luò fēi cháng huān mǐnyòng shǒu tuō liǎo lái shì luó 'ēn liǎocháng shì zhuóxiǎng ràng luò mǐn fàng xià lái xiǎng yīng xióng jiù měijiù shì shǐ jìn qiāo rén…… dìng jīng cāi chū jiēguǒ liǎoluó 'ēn xià jiù bèi luò gěi dàn fēi liǎo。”
  《 · fèng huáng shè》 [ diàn yǐng ]- yǐngpiān píng jià
  
   qiū · zhāng de 'ài qíng shì bēi
  
   jìn guǎn qián · qiū · zhāng de liàn qíng chéng wéi jiā guān zhù de jiāo diǎndàn gāng gāng bàoguāng de · fèng huáng shèzhōng de qíng jié kàn chū lái shí men zhī jiān de gǎn qíng bìng fēi wán měi wěn liǎo qiū · zhāngdàn zuì zhōng liǎng rén bìng méi yòu zǒu dào
    
   shì cóng de nián kāi shǐ jīng xiàn qiū · zhāng duō zhǎo bìng shì tóng tán huà xìng de shì měi tóng qiū · zhāng de jiàn miàn bìng kuài zài qiū · zhāng jiàn miàn de shí hòu jiù bèi de zhī jiàn liǎo shēnzhī hòu de jiàn miànqiū · zhāng shèn zhì tóng zuì hǎo de péng yǒu luó 'ēn wéi kuí qiú duì 'ér zhēng zhí lái
    
   zuì lìng rén guān zhù de shì qíng rén jié shízài huò qiū · zhāng zuì zhōng tóng yuē huìliǎng rén shèn zhì yòu liǎo chū wěndàn shì qiū · zhāng què rán wéi de sài zhī qián de nán yǒu hái tǎn yán mǐn tóng de yǒu qiě yóu háo jīng yàn de zhī suǒ cuòyīn zhè yuē huì huān 'ér sànsuǒ liǎng rén de chū liàn bìng shì hěn wán měi
    
   cóng jīng bàoguāng de qíng jié zhōng men kàn chū zhāng qiū zài · fèng huáng shèzhōng de fèn zēng jiāzài jiē shòu cǎi fǎng de shí hòuzhè wèi míng jiào liáng kǎi de huá hái zhè yàng jiě shì de juésè:“ yuán lái shì yòu nán péng yǒu desài ), dàn shì hòu lái shì liǎosuǒ · zhǎn liǎo duàn gǎn qíngdàn shì zhè duàn gǎn qíng bìng wěn dìngyīn wéi shǐ zhōng wàng de nán yǒuyīn zhè shì nèi xīn de háizuì zhōngzhè shì bēi 。” tán dào de chū wěn shuō:“ shì hěn yōu xiù de jiē wěn zhě hěn xiǎng shòu zhěng guò chéng。”
    
   ér bàn yǎn de léi guān biǎo shì guǒ méi yòu wài de huàzhè chǎng wěn huì yǐn liàng de yǐng qián yǐng yuàn guān kàn piàn shuō:“ guǒ shuō guān zhòng kàn zhè diàn yǐng zhǐ yòu yuán yīn de huà cāi jiù shì zhè chǎng wěn 。”
    
   fǎn pài huì xiǎo tiān láng xīng shū dǒu
    
   lìng wàizài piàn zhōng bàn yǎn zhuī suí zhě xiū · 'ěr de yǎn yuán jié sēn · tòu liǎo xiē fèn suǒ bàn yǎn de zhè juésè shì zhōng zhù yào de fǎn pàiér qiě jiāng huì de jiào héng héng héng xiǎo tiān láng xīng zhǎn kāi shū dǒu
    
   chēng bàn yǎn de jiāng shì · tiān láng xīng zài huò de héng héng héng 'ěr zài zhōng 'ěr bèi zhèng míng shì shí gēn suí zhě de zǒng chēng), zhōng xīn gěng gěng wéi de zhù rén xiào zhōnggèng zhòng yào de shìzhè wèi 'ěr hái jiāng zài piàn zhōng tiān láng xīng yòu shū jué dǒubàn yǎn zhè juésè de biǎo shì:“ jiāng huì jiā · ào màn bàn yǎn de tiān láng xīng yòu fān jué dǒu néng shì zhè xīng qiú shàng zuì wěi de yǎn yuán zhī suǒ jīng cháng dān xīn huì yǎn hǎo zhī dào men zhī jiān de jué dǒu jiù hǎo xiàng shì liǎng shí suì de hái zài nàoyīn wéi yào liàng de hòu diàn nǎo zhì zuò guòzhè guò chéng zài yín shàng zhǎn xiàn chū láizhēn de hěn bàng!”
  
   jìn guǎn zhè juésè zài zhōng fèn duōdàn shì què dān xīn zài hòu miàn liǎng zhōngshī zōng”。 wèicǐ zhuān mén bài fǎng liǎo J·K· luó lín wàng zhè zuò jiā yào ràng xiāo shī”。


  Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix is the fifth novel in the Harry Potter series written by J. K. Rowling. The novel features Harry Potter's struggles through his fifth year at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, including the surreptitious return of Harry's nemesis Lord Voldemort, O.W.L. exams, and an obstructive Ministry of Magic.
  
  It is the longest book in the series, and was published on 21 June 2003 by Bloomsbury in the United Kingdom, Scholastic in the United States, and Raincoast in Canada. The book has been made into a film, which was released in 2007, and has also been made into several video games by Electronic Arts. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix has won several awards, including being named an American Library Association Best Book for Young Adults in 2003.
  
  Synopsis
  Plot introduction
  
  Throughout the four previous novels in the Harry Potter series, the main character, Harry Potter, has struggled with the difficulties that come with growing up and the added challenge of being a famous wizard. When Harry was a baby, Voldemort, the most powerful evil wizard in living memory, killed Harry's parents but mysteriously vanished after trying to kill Harry. This results in Harry's immediate fame, and his being placed in the care of his muggle, or non-magical, relatives Aunt Petunia and Uncle Vernon.
  
  Harry enters the wizarding world at the age of 11, enrolling in the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. He makes friends with Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger, and is confronted by Lord Voldemort trying to regain power. After returning to the school after summer break, several attacks on students take place at Hogwarts after the legendary "Chamber of Secrets" is opened. Harry ends the attacks by killing a Basilisk and defeating another attempt by Lord Voldemort to return to full strength. The following year, Harry hears that he has been targeted by escaped murderer Sirius Black. Despite stringent security measures at Hogwarts, Harry is confronted by Black at the end of his third year of schooling and Harry learns that Black was framed and is actually Harry's godfather. Harry's fourth year of school sees him entered in a dangerous magical competition called the Triwizard Tournament. At the conclusion of the Tournament, Harry witnesses the return of Lord Voldemort to full strength.
  Plot summary
  
  This novel begins when Harry and his cousin, Dudley, are attacked by dementors. Harry uses magic to fight them off, and must attend a disciplinary hearing for it. In response to Voldemort's reappearance, Dumbledore re-activates the Order of the Phoenix, a secret society which works to defeat Voldemort's minions and protect Voldemort's targets, including Harry. Despite Harry's description of Voldemort's recent activities, the Ministry of Magic and many others in the magical world refuse to believe that Voldemort has returned.
  
  In an attempt to enforce its version of school curriculum, the Ministry appoints Dolores Umbridge as the new High Inquisitor of Hogwarts. She transforms the school into a quasi-dictatorial regime and refuses to allow the students to learn ways to defend themselves against dark magic. Harry's friends, Ron and Hermione, persuaded Harry to form a secret study group and begin to teach his classmates the higher-level skills he has learned. The novel introduces Harry to Luna Lovegood, an airy young witch with a tendency to believe in oddball conspiracy theories. Moreover, it reveals an important prophecy concerning Harry and Voldemort. Harry also discovers that he and Voldemort have a telepathic connection, allowing Harry to view some of Voldemort's actions. In the novel's climax, Harry and his school friends face off against Voldemort's Death Eaters. The timely arrival of members of the Order of the Phoenix saves the children's lives, but Sirius Black, Harry's godfather, is murdered by Bellatrix Lestrange. Many Death Eaters are captured and, most importantly, the return of Voldemort is confirmed within the magical world.
  Development, publication, and reception
  Development
  
  In an interview with BBC News, Rowling suggested the death of a principal character which made her sad. She added that although her husband suggested she undo the character's death to stop her sadness, she needed to be "a ruthless killer." However, Rowling revealed in a 2007 interview that she had originally planned to kill off Arthur Weasley in this book, but ultimately could not bear to do it. In another interview, when asked if there was anything she would go back and change about the seven novels, Rowling replied that she would have edited Phoenix more, as she feels it is too long.
  Publication and release
  
  Potter fans waited three years between the releases of the fourth and fifth books.
  
   Before the release of the fifth book, 200 million copies of the first four books had already been sold and translated into 55 languages in 200 countries. As the series was already a global phenomenon, the book forged new pre-order records, with thousands of people queuing outside book stores on 20 June 2003 to secure their copy at midnight. Despite the security, thousands of copies were stolen from an Earlestown, Merseyside warehouse on 15 June 2003.
  Critical response
  
  Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix was met with generally good reviews, and received several awards. The book was named as a Best Book for Young Adults and as a Notable Book by the American Library Association in 2004. It also received the Oppenheim Toy Portfolio 2004 Gold Medal along with several other awards.
  
  The novel was also received generally well by critics. Rowling was praised for her imagination by USA Today writer Deirdre Donahue. Most of the negative reviewers were concerned with the violence contained in the novel and with morality issues occurring throughout the book. There has also been a strong religious response to the publishing of Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix.
  
  New York Times writer John Leonard praised the novel, saying "The Order of the Phoenix starts slow, gathers speed and then skateboards, with somersaults, to its furious conclusion....As Harry gets older, Rowling gets better." However, he also criticizes "the one-note Draco Malfoy" and the predictable Lord Voldemort. Another review by Julie Smithouser, of the Christian-right group Focus on the Family, said the book was, "Likely to be considered the weakest book in the series, Phoenix does feel less oppressive than the two most previous novels." Smithouser's main criticism was that the book was not moral. Harry lies to authority to escape punishment, and that, at times, the violence is too "gruesome and graphic."
  
  Several Christian groups have expressed concerns that the book, and the rest of the Harry Potter series, contain references to witchcraft or occultism. Despite these views, several religious groups have also expressed their support for the series. Christianity Today published an editorial in favour of the books in January 2000, calling the series a "Book of Virtues" and averring that although "modern witchcraft is indeed an ensnaring, seductive false religion that we must protect our children from", this does not represent the Potter books, which have "wonderful examples of compassion, loyalty, courage, friendship, and even self-sacrifice".
  Prequels and sequels
  
  Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix is the fifth book in the Harry Potter Series. The first book in the series, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone was first published by Bloomsbury in 1997 with an initial print-run of 500 copies in hardback, three hundred of which were distributed to libraries. By the end of 1997 the UK edition won a National Book Award and a gold medal in the 9 to 11 year-olds category of the Nestlé Smarties Book Prize. The second book, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, was originally published in the UK on 2 July 1998 and in the US on 2 June 1999. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban was published a year later in the UK on 8 July 1999 and in the US on 8 September 1999. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire was published on 8 July 2000 simultaneously by Bloomsbury and Scholastic.
  
  After the publishing of Order of the Phoenix, the sixth book of the series, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, was published on 16 July 2005, and sold 11 million copies in the first 24 hours of its worldwide release. The seventh and final novel, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, was published 21 July 2007. The book sold 11 million copies within 24 hours of its release: 2.7 million copies in the UK and 8.3 million in the US.
  Adaptations
  Film
  
  In 2007, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix was released in film version directed by David Yates, produced by David Heyman's company Heyday Films, and written by Michael Goldenberg. The film's budget was reportedly between £75 and 100 million ($150–200 million), and it became the unadjusted seventh-highest grossing film of all time, and a critical and commercial success. The film opened to a worldwide 5-day opening of $333 million, third all-time, and grossed $939 million total, the second to Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End for the greatest total of 2007.
  Video games
  
  A video game adaptation of the book and film versions of Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix was made for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 2, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, PSP, Nintendo DS, Wii, Game Boy Advance and Mac OS X. It was released on 25 June 2007 in the U.S., 28 June 2007 in Australia and 29 June 2007 in the UK and Europe for PlayStation 3, PSP, PlayStation 2, Windows and the 3 July 2007 for most other platforms. The games were published by Electronic Arts.
  Religious response
  
  Religious controversy surrounding Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix and the other books in the Harry Potter series mainly deal with the claims that novel contains occult or Satanic subtexts. Religious response to the series has not been exclusively negative. "At least as much as they've been attacked from a theological point of view", notes Rowling, "[the books] have been lauded and taken into pulpit, and most interesting and satisfying for me, it's been by several different faiths".
  Opposition to the series
  
  In the United States, calls for the book to be banned from schools have led occasionally to widely publicised legal challenges, usually on the grounds that witchcraft is a government-recognised religion and that to allow the novels to be held in public schools violates the separation of church and state. The series was at the top of the American Library Association's "most challenged books" list for 1999–2001.
  
  Religious opposition to the series has also occurred in other nations. The Orthodox churches of Greece and Bulgaria have campaigned against the series. The books have been banned from private schools in the United Arab Emirates and criticised in the Iranian state-run press.
  
  Roman Catholic opinion over the series is divided. In 2003 Catholic World Report criticised Harry's disrespect for rules and authority, and regarded the series' mixing of the magical and mundane worlds as "a fundamental rejection of the divine order in creation." In 2005, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, who became Pope later that year but was at the time Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, described the series as "subtle seductions, which act unnoticed and by this deeply distort Christianity in the soul before it can grow properly," and gave permission for publication of the letter that expressed this opinion. However, a spokesman for the Archbishop of Westminster said that Cardinal Ratzinger's words were not binding as they were not an official pronouncement of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
  Positive response
  
  Some religious responses have been positive. Emily Griesinger wrote that fantasy literature helps children to survive reality for long enough to learn how to deal with it, described Harry's first passage through to Platform 9¾ as an application of faith and hope, and his encounter with the Sorting Hat as the first of many in which Harry is shaped by the choices he makes. She noted that the self-sacrifice of Harry's mother, which protected the boy in the first book and throughout the series, was the most powerful of the "deeper magics" that transcend the magical "technology" of the wizards, and one which the power-hungry Voldemort fails to understand.
  
  There is some positive Roman Catholic opinion on the books. In 2003, Monsignor Peter Fleetwood, a member of a Church working party on New Age phenomena, said that the Harry Potter stories "are not bad or a banner for anti-Christian theology. They help children understand the difference between good and evil," that Rowling's approach was Christian, and that the stories illustrated the need to make sacrifices to defeat evil.
  Translations
  
  The first official foreign translation of the book appeared in Vietnamese on 21 July 2003, when the first of twenty-two installments was released. The first official European translation appeared in Serbia and Montenegro in Serbian, by the official publisher Narodna Knjiga, in early September 2003. Other translations appeared later, e.g. in November 2003 in Dutch and German. The English language version has topped the best seller list in France, while in Germany and the Netherlands an unofficial distributed translation process has been started on the internet.
  
  In the Czech Republic, several young children translated half of the book in two weeks after its English release, long before its intended Czech release date. This led the official Czech publisher Albatros to sue the children for copyright infringement.
hùn xuè wáng
qiáo 'ān · luó lín Joanne Rowlingyuèdòu
  《 · hùn xuè wáng zhōng jiāng yíng lái zài xué xiào de liù nián nèi zhōng yuàn cháng dāng shàng liǎohēi fáng shù de jiào shòuér xiàng tóu téng yào de píng jiè zhe běn jiù de yào běn chéng wéi yào xīn lǎo shī de chǒng 'ér tóng shídèng duō kāi shǐ wéi dān shòu zài shàng men tóng tàn suǒ liǎo de shén shēn shìwéi zuì zhōng de zhàn yùn chóu wéi
  
  “ měi dān rèn gāi zhí zhě yòu wèn de hēi fáng shù zhōng huàguī duì chuí xián jiǔ de nèi jiào shòu míng xiàér kòngquē de yào jiāo yóu xīn lái de huò xiān shēng zǒu shàng rèn ( zhè wèi 'ào zuì jiā nán pèijué zhù tóng shí shì 'ěr chuán 1: shī guì de jiào shòu -- guì de suǒ yòu zhě )。 lìng fāng miàndèng duō gěi dān kāi xiǎo zàozhǔn bèi yíng jiē zǒng cái de xīn lún gōng shì méi xiǎng dào shìdāng shí shā jìn huò shíhēi fáng shù de lǎo shī dào hái shì chū liǎo wèn
  
   kàn guò shū de mendōu zhī dào · hùn xuè wáng shì zěn me huí shìzhì wèi guān jiàn rén de wéi yǐn gèng duō hàoqí rén shìshù 'àn xià biǎo jīng jiān suí shǒu shè jīn luó 'ēn mǐn tóng shí zāo sān jiǎowèn ér 'ào de huò rán hái xián zhèn róng gòu huá yòu hóng mófángde lǎo bǎn jìn láiàn shì zhēn zhī zuì hòu bān shàng yín shí hái néng qǐng dào shuí -- zhū · dān mài 'ěr · kǎi 'ēn jǐn luó lín hái zuò wéi qīn rěn xīn jué 'ér xiǎng kàn de yào qiúwéi yóufàng yán pái chú zhuàn xiě de hái dāng zhùjué de běn · 》”。
  
   cóng luǒ liàn de tái dào shǎn diàn fēn shǒu de jiě liàn zhí quē tóu tiáo cái de dān 'ěr · léi jiāng liù jiā jiàn miàn ( shí liàng fěn zuì dài zài jiàn de rén shì 'ài · sēn cái duì suī rán de yǎn nián líng chéng fǎn )。 shíhùn xuè wáng zuì de liǎng xuán niàn guò zhè shì liè xiǎo shuō wán jié zhī hòu de diàn yǐngshū de xiāo liàng shuà xīn shì jiè huì duì diàn yǐng piào fáng chǎn shēng zěn yàng de yǐng xiǎngèrshàng lìng rén shī suǒ wàng de wèi · dǎo yǎn zhǎng sháogēn · lún “《 shì shí》” de qián chē zhī jiànzuò hǎo xīn zhǔn bèi yíng jiē gèng zāo gāo de · 》? lìng rén fèi jiě de shìwèishénme huá yào fēn chéng shàng xià de wáng shèng jiāo gěi
  《 · hùn xuè wáng 》 [ diàn yǐng ]- pāi shè huā
  
   jiāng 2008 nián 11 yuè 21 dēng yǐng yuàn de · hùn xuè wáng fēn pāi shè huā jǐn jiāng kàn dào diàn yǐng pāi shè de chǎng jǐnghái jiāng cǎi fǎng zhùjué dān 'ěr · léi ài · sēn · lín
  
   zài · hùn xuè wáng zhōng jiāng zài huò kāi shǐ de liù nián xué shēng huójìn guǎn jīng kāi shǐ liǎo de chóu jìhuàdàn shì kàng de zhì zài jiàn qiáng mǐn zhōng xiàn liǎo běn lǎo de yào shūzhè běn shū yuán běn shǔ hùn xuè wáng ”, xiàn zhè běn shū jǐn néng zēng jiā de zhī shíhái néng bāng zhù zhǔn bèi de zhàn zhēng
  
   shǒu xiān bāng zhù dèng duō xiàn xún zhǎo de dàn shì zhè rán zào chéng liǎo bēi xìng de jié gèng ràng xiāng xìn yīnggāi jiān hēi 'àn zhàn zhēng de shǐ mìng
  《 · hùn xuè wáng 》 [ diàn yǐng ]- diàn yǐng xiāng guān
  
   zuì xīn · hùn xuè wáng jiāng quán qiú gōng yìngcéng jīng shì yǎn tiān láng xīng de jiā · ào màn shàng fèng huáng shèzhōng zhuàng liè shēngdàn xiàn shí shēng huó zhōng gēn dān 'ěr · léi réng rán bǎo chí jǐn lián luò chū biān xiáhēi shìshǒu yìng shí bào dān 'ěr jīng cháng zhì diàn gēn liáo tiān,“ shuō diàn yǐng jié piān · shèngjiāng huì fēn wéi 'èrshàng bàn fēn zài 2010 nián shàng yìngxiāng xìn gēn shì tài jīng cǎi fēng yòu guānquè chì zhǐ shì qián zuò guài 'ér tīng fēi cháng yǐn。”
  
   suí zhe yīng guó diàn yǐng zhì guógōng shǒu zhàonán zhùjué xīn jiǎo zào xíng tóng shí bàoguāng。“ dān 'ěr · léi 、“ mǐnài · sēn luó 'ēn · lín wài biǎo bàn gèng jiàn chéng shú zhōng zhāng zhe bàng shén qíng 'āi shāng de zhàoyòu xīn wǎng yǒu shēng chēng gēn bàng shì shǔ xiào cháng dèng duō deyóu cāi xiào cháng huì běn dān 'ěr jiē shòu guócǎi fǎng shí shuō liù de hēi 'àn cǎi huì jiào wǎng gèng qiángyòu xiē huà miàn fǎng shì duì 1996 nián shàng yìng decāi huǒ chēde fēng kuáng bàidǎo yǎn wèi · tòu chāo jiān jiǎo xìn yǎng zhěshí huì xiàng jìn ,“ yǐngpiān kāi shǐlún dūn chù zhù yào biāo zhì jiāng huì shòu dào gōng zāo dào huǐ miè xìng huài。”
  
   xìng hǎo xīn piàn tóng shí jiā zhòng liǎo 'ài qíng fēndǎo yǎn wèi · bào liào zhǐ duì luó 'ēn de mèi mèi jīn yòu hǎo gǎnèr rén jīhū qīn wěn zhī shí què chū xiàn huài liǎo hǎo shìlìng fāng miàn mǐn gēn luó 'ēn de liàn qíng zhú jiàn míng lǎng huà,“ zuò wéi xué xiào zuì cōng míng de shēng mǐn jiāng huì biǎo xiàn chū píng hǎn jiàn de làng màn qíng 。”
  
  《 · hùn xuè wáng shǒu bàoguāng de xiān xíng bǎn gào hǎi bàoshì huá gōng shí jiān xiàng xīn làng gōng dezài gào piàn liàng zhào bàoguāng zhī hòu guān fāng hǎi bào xiàn shēn yǐngpiān 2009 nián 7 yuè shàng yìng jīng bàn niányīnggāi shì zhěng xuān chuán quán miàn dòng de biāo zhìzài bàoguāng de gào hǎi bào zhōnglǐn liè de yīn 'àn fēng miàn 'ér láizǎo xiān xiōng huái shī mèng xǐng de měng dǒng shàonián jīng jué chén 'ér chǔyú hēi 'àn fēng zhōng de · xià shàng jīng yǐn yuē mào chū liǎo cháliǎn jiá shàng chū xiàn liǎo tiáo lìng wénér zài yǎn jìng zhōng chū yǎn de dèng duō tóu sàn liǎng rén míng xiǎn miàn lín zhe yīcháng 'è zhànshí jiān zài · liǎn shàng xià liǎo hén jiāng tuī jìnchéng rén shè huìde jìn shēn yuānzhú jiàn xué yòu suǒ chéng de · miàn lín zhe zhī zhū xiá yàng de nán shì zūn xúnnéng yuè rèn yuè de jiào huì jiàng yāo jiě jiù zhòng shēng”, hái shì zài chóngchóng yòu huò zhī zhōng
  
   zuì xīn gōng de qíng xiǎn shìzài zhè chǎng zhàn dǒu zhōng dèng duō shēn shòu zhòng shānghái bèi nèi yòng zhàng huà wéi huī jìndàn zuì hòu · hái shì zài huǒ bàn men de bāng zhù xià shā liǎo nèi ér nèi zài lín qián tòu liǎo jiù shì hùn xuè wáng de jiū jìng dèng duō néng néng huí dào xué xiàohuí dào · de shēn biānzhè qiē jiāng zài diàn yǐng shàng yìng hòu zhú jiàn jiě kāi
  
   81 jiè 'ào bān jiǎng diǎn jiāng jiē xiǎo wǎng nián tóngào huì zài lín jìn wěi shēng shí fàng duàn duǎn piàn lái zhǎn wàng 2009 nián de mén xīn piàn,《 · hùn xuè wáng jiù zài zhōng
  《 · hùn xuè wáng 》 [ diàn yǐng ]- rén míng chēng hán
  
  1. ā · 'ěr · 'ěr · lāi 'ēn · dèng duō( AlbusPercivalWulfricBrianDumbledore): ā shì dīng wén zhōng bái de yīn wéi dèng shì hēi tóu duì de bái shīdèng duō gēn luó lín shuō shì fēng wēng wēng jiàode
  2. · nèi ( SeverusSnape): zài dīng wén zhōng shì yán de nèi de xìng mán xiāng dedàn shí shàng, Snape zhǐ shì yīng guó de xiǎo cūn zhuāng de míng nèi zài yīng wén zhōng shé zhè zhǐ chā nán guài nèi shì lāi lín de yuàn cháng
  3. · mài ( MinervaMcgonagall): tōng cháng de fān shì niè luó shén huà zhōng de zhì huì shén jiù xiāng dāng shén huà zhōng de shén diǎn
  4. mǐn · lán jié( HermioneGranger): cóng yīn shàng jiù pàn duàn shì cóng 'ào lín shān shàng zhù míng de zhòng shén shǐ zhě 'ěr de míng zhōng huà chū lái dedāng jīn zhé xué lǐng liú xíng dejiě shì xuéyuán lái tuō tāi 'ěr zhī míng . nán guài mǐn zài xiǎo shuō zhōng mǐn zhì huì zhù chēng duō nán jiě de jīng shǒu yíng rèn 'ér jiě
  5. lāi · píng( RemusLupin): píng lái dīng wén gēn LUP, láng de -LUPINE shìxiàng láng yàng de rén”, ér LUPUS shì " chái láng zuò ". shuō guó nuò màn de mín yòu shí jiù láng rén jiào zuò“ LUPIN”! lāi jiù gèng yòu liǎo , zhè shì luó chuán shuō zhōng bèi láng wèi yǎng guò de shuāng shēng zhī de míng 'ài de xiǎo láng zǎi !
  6. xiǎo tiān láng xīng · lāi ( SiriusBlack): SIRIUS dāng rán jiù shì tiān láng xīngér lāi shìhēi ”。 biàn shēn zhè zhī hòu jiù shì zhǐ hēi de gǒu
  7. xiǎo 'ǎi xīng · ( PeterPettigrew): zhè míng tài tōng liǎo méi shí me shū xiǎo 'ǎi xīng shìcháng de hěn xiǎode zhè míng hái chāi kāi chéng wéi PETIGREW, chàbù duō shì biàn chéng liǎo chǒng ”!
  8. ā · fèi 'ěr ( ArgusFilch) : fèi 'ěr shì yīng wén dòng tōude ér 'ā shì shén huà zhōng bǎi zhǐ yǎn jīng de guàifèi 'ěr xiān shēng jīng cháng tōu tōu de guān chá xué shēng de xíng wéi
  9. · hǎi ( Hagrid): luó lín de shuō , HAGRID shì yīng zhōng de dān , shìhěn zāo gāo de wǎnhuòshuì hǎo jué de wǎn shàng”。 hǎi cháng yīn wéi jiǔ shuì hǎo jué
  10. ā tuō · ( AlastorMoody): ALASTOR shì shén huà zhōng zhǎng guǎn chóu de guǐ , ér zài zài yīng wén zhōng shì qíng duō biàn de
  11. bīn jiào shòu( ProfessorBinns): BINNS yīn hěn jiē jìn BEEN, zài yīng wén zhōng shì dòng BE de guò fēn xíng shìzhè wèi jiào shòu jīng shì guǐ hún díquè shì guò shì liǎo !
  12. tānɡ · 'ěr( TomMarvoloRiddle): RIDDLE shì yīng wén de kàn dào zhè míng jiù zhī dào luó lín yào wán wén yóu liǎo
  13. ( LordVoldemort): VOLDEMORT shì lái yuán VOLEDEMORT, wáng de fēi xiánghuòfēi wáng”。 nán guài lǎo tóng zhì zhěng tiān xiǎng zhe cháng shēng lǎoér zhè shì yóu TomMarvoloRiddle biàn guò lái dezhǐ shì de shùn huàn liǎo xià de guò tānɡ . 'ěr zhí huān de míng tānɡ rèn wéi tài tōngsuǒ diào huàn liǎo yóu TomMarvoloRiddle( tānɡ . 'ěrbiàn wéi LordVoldemort, xiǎn shì de zhòng tóng
  14. nóng · ( VernonDursley): nóng shì luó lín zuì tǎo yàn de míng zài luó lín de chū shēng héng héng yīng guó de wēn jùn jìn yòu jiào Durslay de chéng shì
  15. · ( DudleyDursley): DUDLEY shì cóng yīng guó DUD biàn huà 'ér lái shì hěn liáo de rén
  16. pèi · ( PetuniaDursley): PETUNIA shì qiān niú huā de ér de mèi mèi de de míng shì bǎi huā de qiān niú huā xiàng zhēng fèn zēng hènér bǎi xiàng zhēng chún jié
  17. · 'ěr ( DracoMalfoy): MALFOY shì yóu MALFOI biàn huà 'ér lái shì hǎo de xìn yǎngzhè jiā réndōu shì shí quán shì xìn yǎng hēi ér 。 DRACO shì dīng wén zhōng lóng shé de ér lóng zài fāng shì dàn lián zài de shì diǎn wèi cán bào de guān de míng
  18. xiū · 'ěr (LuciusMalfoy): LUCIUS LUCIFER hěn jiē jìn yàng xiū shì diǎn wèi hěn cán bào de guān míng
  19. suō · 'ěr (NarcissaMalfoy): NARCISSA lái yuán shén huà zhōng de rén jiù shì yòu liàn qíng jiéài shàng zài shuǐ zhōng de yǐng de nián qīng rén suō shì shuǐ xiān huā de dài biǎo liàn
  20. wēi ( hǎi de sān tóu gǒu, Fluffy):( fluffy) shìmáo róng róng de”。
  21. hǎi wēi (Hedwig): shì 12 huò zhě 13 shì guó shèng de míng wéi chéng shì zhōng de rén men chuán xiāo
  22. · lán fēn duō (GodricGryffindor): Gryffin shì shén huà zhōng de shī shēn jiù tóu yòu shòuzài zhōng dor yòujīn zhì chéng dede 。“ lán fēn duōzhǐ shī shēn jiù tóu yòu shòu。 God biǎo shìshàng ”, -ric shì biǎo shìguǎn xiálǐng zhī de jiē wěi 。 Godric zhǐ de shìshàng de zhù chù”。 lán fēn duō de xiàng zhēng shì lion( shī
  23. chá · lāi lín (SalazarSlytherin): SLYTHERIN shì lái yīng wén dān “ SLITHERING”, xiàng shé yàng xíng qián jìn de xié wén lāi lín de xiàng zhēng jiù shì snake( shé)。
  24. luó · wén láo (RowenaRavenclaw): RAVENCLAW, zhí jiù shì de jiǎozhuǎ wén láo xué yuàn de xiàng zhēng jiù shì hawk( yīng)。
  25. 'ěr jiā · (HelgaHufflepuff): HUFFLEPUFF, yuán yīng wén HUFF PUFF。 liǎng chuī yòu guān zhī yòu lián xué yuàn de xiàng zhēng shì Badger( huān )。
  26. guā (Muggle): MUGGLE shì cóng yīng MUG biàn huà 'ér lái , shì shǎ guā
  27. · wén (LunaLovegood): Luna, zài zhōng yòu yuè liàngyuè shén de zhè hěn róng ràng rén xiǎng dào de chún jié měi hái yòu shén 。 Lovegood, suī rán yòu diǎn qiānqiǎngdàn jiù shì 'àiměi hǎo de liǎng míng pīn zài xiǎng xiàngshì hěn tǎo rén huān de hái guò shí Luna zhè gēn yòufēng kuángde , Lunatic jiù shìfēng fēng diān diān de”, zhè hái de xìng
  28. 'ěr · láo 'ěr shì luó shén huà zhōng shòu tài yáng shén 'ā luó shì 'ér zuò yán de yán shī de chēng hào
  29. róng · 'ěr (FleurDelacour): FleurDelacour shì zhí shì gōng tíng de huā duǒyǐn shēn jiù shì zhǐ guì
  30. · : skeeter zhè xiē shǔ jiá chóng de dòng “ scamper bēn tiào”、“ scatter sàn kāi“ creep xíngyòu guān


  Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, released on 16 July 2005, is the sixth of seven novels from British author J. K. Rowling's popular Harry Potter series. Set during Harry Potter's sixth year at Hogwarts, the novel explores Lord Voldemort's past, and Harry's preparations for the final battle amidst emerging romantic relationships and the emotional confusions and conflict resolutions characteristic of mid-adolescence.
  
  The book sold three million copies in the first 16 hours after its release, a record at the time which was eventually broken by its sequel, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.
  
  Plot
  
  Harry Potter and his best friends, Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger, return to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry for their sixth year of magical education. It is announced that Severus Snape has become the new Defence Against the Dark Arts instructor, while Horace Slughorn has taken Snape's place as Potions teacher. Harry discovers that the previous owner of his Potions textbook, the "Half-Blood Prince", has annotated the book with refinements that allow Harry to excel in class and become a favorite of Slughorn's. Slughorn is also intrigued by the rumor that Harry is the "Chosen One" who will finally kill the evil Lord Voldemort, who has recently regained power and is set on conquering the wizarding world.
  
  Harry recognizes his attraction to Ginny Weasley, but fears that acting on it will harm his friendship with Ron, her overprotective older brother. Ron begins dating Lavender Brown, causing a rift between him and Hermione, who secretly harbors feelings for him. The rift heals only when Ron is nearly killed by poisoned mead intended for Hogwarts' headmaster, Albus Dumbledore. Harry suspects that his nemesis, Draco Malfoy, has become one of Voldemort's supporters and believes he was behind both the mead and a previous failed attack on Dumbledore's life. However, no one seems to believe him.
  
  During private meetings held throughout the year, Dumbledore uses his Pensieve to show Harry memories of Voldemort's past. A memory Harry manages to procure from Slughorn confirms Dumbledore's suspicion that Voldemort splintered his soul into seven fragments in order to achieve immortality. Six of these fragments are contained in magical objects called Horcruxes, which must be destroyed before Voldemort can be killed. Two Horcruxes have already been destroyed—Tom Riddle's diary, which Harry stabbed with a basilisk fang in his second year; and Voldemort's grandfather's ring, which Dumbledore destroyed the summer before Harry's sixth year. The remaining Horcruxes include Voldemort's pet snake Nagini and objects formerly owned by Hogwarts' founders—Salazar Slytherin's locket, Helga Hufflepuff's cup, and an unidentified object of either Godric Gryffindor's or Rowena Ravenclaw's.
  
  After Snape sees Harry cast a curse from the Half-Blood Prince's book and attempts to confiscate the book, Harry hides it in the Room of Requirement. Harry's Hogwarts House wins the school's Quidditch championship; euphoric, Harry spontaneously kisses Ginny, and with Ron's diffident approval they start dating.
  
  Dumbledore locates another Horcrux and asks Harry for help in destroying it. They travel to a cave and retrieve what they believe to be Salazar's locket, but Dumbledore is severely weakened after drinking the magical potion designed to protect the Horcrux. They return to Hogwarts and see Voldemort's symbol hovering over Hogwarts' Astronomy Tower. Dumbledore demands that Harry cover himself with his Invisibility Cloak. At the top of the tower, Dumbledore stuns the concealed Harry at the last moment before being confronted by Draco. Draco admits that he was behind the attacks on Dumbledore's life, as Voldemort had ordered Draco to kill him and would kill Draco if he failed. Dumbledore invites Draco to "come over to the right side," offering protection from the Death Eaters. Though Draco refuses, he cannot bring himself to kill Dumbledore, even after fellow Death Eaters arrive and pressure him to follow through. Snape arrives; compelled by an Unbreakable Vow he made to Draco's mother the summer before to protect Draco and fulfill his task if Draco cannot, he kills Dumbledore. With Dumbledore's death, Harry is released from the Stunning Spell; enraged, he pursues Snape, who fends off Harry's attacks and reveals that he is the Half-Blood Prince shortly before disapparating.
  
  Harry recovers the locket from Dumbledore's body, only to discover that it is a fake left by someone with the initials R. A. B., who stole the real Horcrux and left a note declaring his opposition to Voldemort. The school year ends with Dumbledore's funeral; he and his wand are buried in a tomb beside the lake on Hogwarts' grounds. Harry ends his relationship with Ginny, fearing that Voldemort will target her if they continue to see each other. He, Ron, and Hermione vow not to return to school the following year, but to hunt for the remaining Horcruxes instead.
  Development
  Potter fans wait in lines outside a Borders for the midnight release of the book
  Prequels and sequel
  
  Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince is the sixth book in the Harry Potter series. The first book in the series, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, was first published by Bloomsbury in 1997 with an initial print-run of 500 copies in hardback, 300 of which were distributed to libraries. By the end of 1997 the UK edition won a National Book Award and a gold medal in the 9- to 11-year-olds category of the Nestlé Smarties Book Prize. The second book, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, was originally published in the UK on 2 July 1998 and in the US on 2 June 1999. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban was then published a year later in the UK on 8 July 1999 and in the US on 8 September 1999. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire was published on 8 July 2000 at the same time by Bloomsbury and Scholastic. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, the longest novel in the Harry Potter series, was released 21 June 2003. After the publishing of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, the seventh and final novel, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, was released 21 July 2007. The book sold 11 million copies within 24 hours of its release: 2.7 million copies in the UK and 8.3 million in the US.
  Pre-release controversy
  
  The record-breaking publication of Half-Blood Prince was accompanied by controversy. In May 2005 bookmakers in the UK suspended bets on which main character would die in the book amid fears of insider knowledge. A number of high value bets were made on the death of Albus Dumbledore, many coming from the town of Bungay where, it was believed, the books were being printed at the time. Betting was later reopened. Other controversies included the right to read Potter books inadvertently sold before the release date, environmental concerns over the source of the paper used in the printing of millions of books, and fan reactions to the plot developments and revelations of the novel.
  Right to read controversy
  
  In early July 2005, a Real Canadian Superstore in Coquitlam, British Columbia, Canada, accidentally sold fourteen copies of The Half-Blood Prince before the authorised release date. The Canadian publisher, Raincoast Books, obtained an injunction from the Supreme Court of British Columbia prohibiting the purchasers from reading the books before the official release date or from discussing the contents. Purchasers were offered a Harry Potter T-shirt and an autographed copy of the book if they returned their copies before 16 July.
  
  On 15 July, less than twelve hours before the book went on sale in the Eastern time zone, Raincoast warned The Globe and Mail newspaper that publishing a review from a Canada-based writer at midnight, as the paper had promised, would be seen as a violation of the trade secret injunction. The injunction sparked a number of news articles alleging that the injunction had restricted fundamental rights. Canadian law professor Michael Geist posted commentary on his blog; Richard Stallman called for a boycott, requesting that the publisher issue an apology. The Globe and Mail published a review from two UK-based writers in its 16 July edition and posted the Canadian writer's review on its website at 9:00 that morning. Commentary was also provided on the Raincoast website.
  Film
  
  The film based on the sixth book was originally scheduled to be released on 21 November 2008, but was changed to 15 July 2009. The screenplay was written by Steve Kloves, and David Yates directed the film. The film is 153 minutes long, making it the third longest Harry Potter film of the series.
  Translations
  
  Along with the rest of the books in the Harry Potter series, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince was translated into 67 languages. A translation into Scots Gaelic is planned to be released by Bloomsbury in July 2010.
  Textual changes
  
  As with Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, the United States version of the novel has slightly changed text from the British version. One particular section has been remarked upon, where the alteration makes the nature of Dumbledore's offer to Draco Malfoy before Snape kills Dumbledore in the Half-Blood Prince explicit. The reason for the editing of the following text has not been explained on the author's webpage, but the British edition is more ambiguous. The text can be found in chapter 27, "The Lightning-Struck Tower". The U.S. text was changed to match the UK version with the publication of the paperback edition. The parts added in the hardcover United States version have been highlighted in bold, below:
  
   "[...] He told me to do it or he'll kill me. I've got no choice."
   "He cannot kill you if you are already dead. Come over to the right side Draco, and we can hide you more completely than you can possibly imagine. What is more, I can send members of the Order to your mother tonight to hide her likewise. Nobody would be surprised that you had died in your attempt to kill me — forgive me, but Lord Voldemort probably expects it. Nor would the Death Eaters be surprised that we had captured and killed your mother — it is what they would do themselves, after all. Your father is safe at the moment in Azkaban [...]"
   —(U.S. Edition p. 591)(CND Edition p. 552)
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