Impregnated Ginny 3 times in 19 years.
2007-07-21 10:22:12
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answer #1
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answered by Modern Major General 7
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Haha three little ginger Harry Potters runnin about. How fun.
2007-07-21 11:34:54
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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He, so I am led to believe, lives. He goes to University and I have been told from a source that JK has signed another four book deal for those years. Keep it under your hat though.
2007-07-21 10:16:12
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answer #3
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answered by Maroon H 2
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Knock yourself out.
Deathly Hallows
Plot
The final book begins with Voldemort and his Death Eaters at the home of Lucius Malfoy. They are beginning to plan out how to kill Harry Potter before he can be hidden again. After borrowing Lucius's wand, Voldemort kills his captive, Professor Charity Burbage, teacher of Muggle Studies at Hogwarts, for teaching the subject and suggesting that the end of pureblooded wizards was a good thing. More………..
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Potter_and_the_Deathly_Hallows
List of the Dead. (In no particular order)
Muggle studies teacher Burbage killed be Voldemort.
Snape killed by Voldemort.
Harry gets killed by Voldemort on pg.704 but comes back to life on pg.724
Voldemort killed by Harry.
Wormtail killed by his own silver hand.
Dobby killed by Bellatrix LeStrange.
Crabbe by his own 'cursed fire' spell.
Bellatrix Lestrange killed by Mrs. Weasley.
Hedwig killed by a Death Eater.
Mad-eye killed by a Death Eater.
Minister of magic Scrimgeour killed by Voldemort and Death Eaters.
Tonk's father killed by Death Eaters.
Lupin and Tonks, (killed at the final battle).
Fred killed by a Death Eater at the final battle at Hogwarts.
Colin Crevey by Death Eaters at the final battle.
A Large number of Hogwart students names not mentioned.
2007-07-21 10:18:01
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes, lots of people have, and the dozens of questions already here will give you all the answers you need...
(Except for go to wal-mart and buy it off the shelf for way less that retail price, why did you bother queueing?)
2007-07-21 10:12:48
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answer #5
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answered by didyourmumnottellyoustaringsrude 3
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Burbage dies on pg. 12
Hedwig dies on pg. 56
Mad-Eye dies on pg. 78
Scrimgeour dies on pg. 159
Wormtail dies on pg. 471
Dobby dies on pg. 476
Snape dies on pg. 658
Fred Weasley dies on pg. 637
Harry gets killed by Voldemort on pg. 704 but comes back to life on pg. 724
Tonks, Lupin, and Colin Creevy have their deaths confirmed on pg. 743
21 minutes ago
19 years after the events in the book:
Ron has married Hermione, their two children are named Rose and Hugo
Harry has married Ginny, their three children are named Lily, James, and Albus severus.
Draco Malfoy has a son named Scorpius
The epilogue shows all of the children boarding the train for Hogwarts together.
The final lines of the book are: “The scar had not pained Harry for 18 years. All was well.”
Plot Spoilers
2007-07-21 10:11:43
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answer #6
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answered by Greg L 3
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Oh poor you. I had to queue for ages last night, but I had pre-ordered my copy. It is brilliant, a fantastic ending to the series, everything is explained. I don't want to put any detail in because I don't want to spoil it for you.
2007-07-21 10:09:34
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answer #7
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answered by Daisy the cow 5
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It may not be the longest book in the series, but "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows" definitely packs the most punch. The drama starts on the first page and continues practically throughout the entire story.
With Book 7, Rowling brings her phenomenally successful series about the young wizard to a close. And what a close it is.
There were some complaints that Book 6 — "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince" — didn't have a lot of action until the end, that its role seemed to be filling in important bits of back story and setting the stage for the final installment.
There will be no such complaints here. The pace picks up from the start, with readers thrown into a world that's much darker than any of the previous Potter books. Harry and friends Ron and Hermione are on a quest some weeks after the death of Headmaster Albus Dumbledore, and it's time to put aside familiar faces and places and get on their way.
Lord Voldemort, Harry's nemesis, seems to be everywhere, his tentacles of power reaching into every corner. It's a dangerous world they must travel, and no place or happy occasion is safe. Their journey takes them to some unexpected locations and makes them interact with a whole host of characters, including some who were merely references in other books and some who are painfully familiar faces.
Old antagonists from previous books show up — one of whom enters into a positive relationship with Harry, and another who continues to wallow in all the traits that inspired Harry's hatred.
Harry, Ron and Hermione are on the search for horcruxes, vessels that Voldemort created to hold pieces of his soul, which make it impossible to kill him as long as they exist. The search has them moving over various parts of the United Kingdom as they try to fit all the pieces together. Many secrets are finally revealed, all leading up to the ultimate confrontation between Harry and the wizard who tried to kill him so long ago.
Rowling captured many hearts with her first book, and her last is guaranteed to keep them. She is amazingly gifted, demonstrated not only by the incredibly detailed world she has created, but by the depth of feeling and complexity she writes into her characters.
It's all here: humor, courage, redemption, sadness, terror, human frailty — sometimes all in the same character. There are sections that will make readers laugh out loud, as well as scenes of such sadness that tears are inevitable.
From a boy of 11, Harry has become a young man, determined to take on quite a burden. He suffers because of his commitment, and he's not the only one. Rowling said characters would die, and she meant it. Pain and death are constant companions, and sometimes who is taken is a shocker. The deaths aren't always drawn-out, violent scenes; sometimes, you discover that someone has died at the same time Harry does.
Characters you thought you knew surprise you. Some grow in unexpected (and not always pleasant) ways, while others have more complicated pasts than you could ever imagine. No one's life is simple — with a couple of Death Eater exceptions, many of the characters prove that you can't make assumptions about people's motivations.
Rowling rewards her faithful readers; there are numerous allusions to people, places, spells and objects that were mentioned in earlier books. It's a pleasure to see how she closes the loop she opened so many years ago with the story of a young boy who one day discovered he was a wizard.
And, of course, she answers many questions: Why did Snape kill Dumbledore? Is Snape Harry's enemy? Where are the horcruxes? What are the deathly hallows?
It's been a long, long road to get to this point (the first book was published in the United States almost a decade ago), and Rowling does herself proud. She completes her entertaining, compulsively readable series with a book that is both heartbreaking and hopeful, one that left this reader sad to say goodbye to Harry but thoroughly satisfied at how it all went.
From "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" to "Deathly Hallows," Rowling has completed an astonishing cycle of books that can only be described as a true literary classic.
2007-07-21 10:07:58
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answer #8
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answered by Shan 2
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My neighbour just finished reading it. I don't think Harry dies, but I'm not sure. . . . .
2007-07-21 10:20:17
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answer #9
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answered by myfairladyisasleep 2
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read the dam book yourself
2007-07-21 10:13:20
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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