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Harry Potter and
the Prisoner of Azkaban (Book 3) by J.
K. Rowling, Mary GrandPré
(Illustrator)
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- Paperback: 435 pages ; Dimensions (in
inches): 1.17 x 7.64 x 5.31
- Publisher: Scholastic Trade; ISBN:
0439136369; Digest edition (September 11, 2001)
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Amazon.com
For most children, summer vacation is something to look forward to. But
not for our 13-year-old hero, who's forced to spend his summers with an
aunt, uncle, and cousin who detest him.
The third book in J.K.
Rowling's Harry Potter series
catapults into action when the young wizard "accidentally"
causes the Dursleys' dreadful visitor Aunt Marge to inflate like a
monstrous balloon and drift up to the ceiling.
Fearing punishment from Aunt Petunia and Uncle
Vernon (and from officials at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry
who strictly forbid students to cast spells in the nonmagic world of
Muggles), Harry lunges out into the darkness with his heavy trunk and his
owl Hedwig.
As it turns out, Harry isn't punished at all for his errant
wizardry. Instead he is mysteriously rescued from his Muggle neighborhood
and whisked off in a triple-decker, violently purple bus to spend the
remaining weeks of summer in a friendly inn called the Leaky
Cauldron.
What Harry has to face as he begins his third year at Hogwarts
explains why the officials let him off easily. It seems that Sirius
Black--an escaped convict from the prison of Azkaban--is on the loose. Not
only that, but he's after Harry Potter. But why? And why do the Dementors,
the guards hired to protect him, chill Harry's very heart when others are
unaffected?
Once again, Rowling has created a mystery that will have children
and adults cheering, not to mention standing in line for her next book.
Fortunately, there are four more in the works. (Ages 9 and older)
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