<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0">
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<title>Rowling</title>
<link>http://www.bookstove.com/tags/Rowling</link>
<description>New posts about Rowling</description>
<item>
<title>Top Three Fantasy Series</title>
<link>http://www.bookstove.com/Fantasy/Top-Three-Fantasy-Series.284075</link>
<description>
<![CDATA[<p>So here they are:</p>
<p>1.The first one I thought of is Harry Potter. I mean who hasn't heard of it? It's about this teenage kid who defeats the greatest Dark Wizard of all time in his first year, stops a memory and kills a giant snake(Basilisk) in his second year, rescues his god father from a fate worse than dead in his third, wins a tournament against school wizards of age (adult wizards) winning a lot of money and baffles and stalls the completely resurrected Voldemort and escapes from him in his fourth. The next year he helps a secret group thwart Voldemort and watches Dumbledore, the only one that Voldemort feared, duel him. He learns about Voldemort's past and watches a dark wizard kill dumbledore and then Harry injures a few of the dark wizards. Finally in his final year, he goes out on the run and destroys what makes Voldemort immortal before killing him.</p>
<p>2. The second one I thought of is the Inheritance Cycle. Some people have heard of it but not that many people have read it. It's about a boy who watches a dragon hatching becoming it's rider. In the first book, Eragon, Dragon Hunters, the Ra'zac, find news of a strange stone, the dragon's egg. They hunt the boy, Eragon, to his farmhouse but he left and the Ra'zac kill his uncle and destroy the building. He ends up with a storyteller, learning magic words, growing a bond with his dragon rescuing an elf, joining the resistance movement and killing a shade. The next book, Eldest, he goes to the elves learns magic while his cousin, Roran, escapes from the Ra'zac. Eventually Eragon is summoned back and must fight for the resistance movement. He is shocked that one of his friends who was thought dead is the new dragon rider for Galabatorix. He fights and loses but his friend gives him mercy and only takes his sword. In the third book, Brisingr, Eragon and Roran go to the Ra'zac's hideout to rescue Roran's love. They come back and Eragon is summoned to the dwarves to help elect a new leader. Then Eragon goes to the elves and finishes his learning and gets a new sword. He returns so that he can help the resistance movement capture another city.</p>
<p>3. The third one is Redwall. I cannot give a overall description because the author writes the book in a random order and they go past to future and such. I can also not give a description because each book is like a series itself. For this you have to read it yourself in published order.</p>
<p>1.Redwall</p>
<p>2.Mossflower</p>
<p>3.Mattimeo</p>
<p>4.Mariel of Redwall</p>
<p>5.Salamandastron</p>
<p>6.Martin the Warrior</p>
<p>7.The Bellmaker</p>
<p>8.The Outcast of Redwall</p>
<p>9.The Pearls of Lutra</p>
<p>10.The Long Patrol</p>
<p>11.Marlfox</p>
<p>12.The Legend of Luke</p>
<p>13.Lord Brocktree</p>
<p>14.Taggerung</p>
<p>15.Triss</p>
<p>16.Loamhedge</p>
<p>17.Rakkety Tam</p>
<p>18.High Rhulain</p>
<p>19.Eulalia!</p>
<p>20.Doomwyte(Coming in October 16, 2008)</p>
<p>I hope this helped you. Please comment</p><a href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bookstove.com%2FFantasy%2FTop-Three-Fantasy-Series.284075"><img src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bookstove.com%2FFantasy%2FTop-Three-Fantasy-Series.284075" border="0"/></a>]]></description>
<pubDate>Sat, 04 Oct 2008 07:06:31 PST</pubDate></item>
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<title>Harry Potter's Magical Protection</title>
<link>http://www.bookstove.com/Fantasy/Harry-Potters-Magical-Protection.139065</link>
<description>
<![CDATA[<p>At the age of one, Harry Potter survived the killing curse, a curse which we later learn is unblockable, and vanquished Voldemort in the process. How he survived was unknown for ten years, but at the end of his first year at Hogwarts, he was told by Dumbledore that what saved him was his mother, Lily, sacrificing her life to save his.</p>
 
<p>But how much do we actually know about this protection? We are told a little explicitly in the series:</p>
 
<ul>
<li> It caused Voldemort's curse to rebound,  killing Voldemort instead of Harry</li>
 
<li> Quirrel, possessed by Voldemort couldn't touch Harry, and in fact touching Harry killed him</li>
 
<li> Voldemort couldn't possess Harry without risking his own destruction</li>
 
</ul>
<p><br />However if we read between the lines, we find quite a number of cases where Harry was protected from harmful spells hidden throughout the series.</p>
 
<p>You might ask how  Harry could be affected by (insert appropriate harmful spell here)? The answer, in my opinion, is that Harry's protection is from spells that, when finished, leave injuries or damage that can or can't be reversed using magic but never heal on their own.</p>
 
<h3>Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone</h3>
 
<p>Obviously, the place to start is the curse that didn't kill Harry. The Avada Kedavra curse, as we learn in Goblet of Fire, is unblockable, leaves no marks on the victim, and causes no damage except killing the target. And yet, when Harry's protection came into play, the spell was blocked, left a mark on baby Harry's forehead, and blew up the part of the house he used it in.</p>
 
<p>However, this protection is more than just a one time event, or even just protection from one particular curse. My theory, based on the evidence produced here, is that it protects Harry from other spell damage, or in one case, damage done by a spell being lifted. It does this through active protection such as we already were informed of, and by passive protection, working in similar ways to Felix Felicis to make events conspire for Harry's continued survival.</p>
 
<p>One example of passive protection is found at the end of the book when Harry is trying to protect the stone from Quirrel, and as Dumbledore says later "The effort nearly killed you, Harry".  It seems to me that Dumbledore arrived just in time because of the protection of Lily Potter's sacrifice.</p>
 
<p>In fact you might even go so far as saying (and I certainly do) that the protection was responsible for Firenze, the one centaur who didn't consider it beneath his dignity to give Harry a ride to safety on his back, being near the dead unicorn rather than wherever the rest of the herd was. It's also responsible for the fact that when Hermione went to stop Snape, thinking he was jinxing Harry's broom, she accidentally knocked Quirrel over.</p>
 
<h3>Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets</h3>
 
<p>While being taken from his house to be sent to Azkaban, Hagrid said that if anyone wanted answers, they should follow the spiders. Harry and Ron take that advice and find the spiders swarming into the Forbidden Forest. In the forest they come across a Ford Anglia they knew from earlier, and got snatched from behind by an Acromantula (see Fantastic Beasts) which carried them a long way, to a large colony headed by Aragog, Hagrid's old pet. Just before they get eaten they are saved by the Ford Anglia. Now we need to understand how the car got there:</p>
 
<ul>
<li> Dobby tried to prevent Harry from getting onto the Hogwarts Express</li>
 
<li> Ron was with Harry</li>
 
<li> Ron suggested taking the car</li>
 
<li> The car crashed into the Whomping Willow</li>
 
<li> And ran off into the forest</li>
 
<li> Only then could it happen to drive into the colony</li>
 
</ul>
<p>Seems to me that at least some of these are affected by Harry's protection to ensure that he would survive.</p>
 
<p>Later in the Chamber of Secrets, Gilderoy Lockhart tries to use a Memory Charm on Harry and Ron and, (compare with the Avada Kedavra) it rebounded on the wizard who cast it, and caused the tunnel to collapse. (It also destroyed Ron's wand but that might be the damage to the wand)</p>
 
<h3>Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban</h3>
 
<p>A mere five hours after Harry's feeble attempts at a Patronus Charm failed against &amp;ldquo;at least a hundred&amp;rdquo; dementors, he managed to arrive just in time to drive them off with a true patronus. The only previous time he managed a corporeal patronus was against Malfoy, Crabbe and Goyle, not even against a single &amp;ldquo;dementor&amp;rdquo; played by a boggart. In addition, it's a spell which is so advanced even Hermione had trouble learning it two years later in DA meetings. It also required a chain of prerequisite events:</p>
 
<ul>
<li> Hermione took all the possible lessons</li>
 
<li> For that purpose she was allowed a Time Turner</li>
 
<li> Dumbledore believes Sirius Black</li>
 
<li> He also suggests going back three hours</li>
 
<li> Hermione, in insisting on Harry staying out of sight, neglects to keep an eye on him when he goes to see his father</li>
 
<li> Therefore he jumps into sight when he casts the Patronus and sees himself</li>
 
<li> And therefore knows he could do it</li>
 
</ul>
<p>In addition, although not as impressive, when Harry and Hermione are attacked by the Whomping Willow, they both get hit on the head and yet neither sustained injuries that would prevent them going back in time (Harry couldn't go back alone, Hermione couldn't cast the Patronus).</p>
 
<h3>Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire</h3>
 
<p>Malfoy is provoking Harry outside the potions dungeon, and the two attack each other. You might ask, "What's the big deal? They attack each other all the time." Yes they do, but there is a difference: They cast their spells at the same time and the spells meet in mid-air.</p>
 
<p>Wikipedia describes the spell Malfoy used, Densaugio, as being a combination of the Latin dens and augmentare the first meaning tooth and the second increase. However, I've never seen Malfoy using a spell on Harry that causes as little damage as Hermione sustained from it. My theory (assisted by my father who is a linguist) is that instead of dens we should put denso , to thicken (as to augment you would need to use the form dent for tooth), and get a high power localized version of engorgio.  Malfoy and Harry were aiming for each other's faces. Or in other words, Malfoy was trying to split Harry's scar wide open, leaving him with a gash on his forehead.</p>
 
<p>Two spells hitting each other seems to be an uncommon event, as we almost never see it even in major pitched battles. However, it happens a second time in the same book: In the graveyard, Harry is dueling with Voldemort, they each cast their spells, and the whole Priori Incantatem sequence results. It also uses the fact that the wand cores came from the same source.</p>
 
<p>There is one more interesting point in Goblet of Fire. When Harry cracks the clue of the egg, he thinks &amp;ldquo;He wasn't a very good swimmer; he'd never had much practice. Dudley had had lessons in their youth, but Aunt Petunia and Uncle Vernon, no doubt hoping that Harry would drown one day, hadn't bothered to give him any.&amp;rdquo; Yet, when the effect of the gillyweed wears off, Harry manages to swim to the surface weighted down by Ron and Gabrielle, and swim to shore after (as extra emphasis?) asking Ron to help with Gabrielle because &amp;ldquo;I don't think she can swim very well.&amp;rdquo; From which, along with other data from the chapter, I concluded that they were relatively far from the shore.</p>
 
<h3>Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix</h3>
 
<p>When Harry and Hermione led Umbridge into the forbidden forest, Hermione accidentally told the Centaurs that she was hoping they'd drive Umbridge off. The Centaurs took umbrage at Hermione's attempt, and decided to give Harry and Hermoine the same treatment as Umbridge. Suddenly Grawp, who had been tied up stoutly by Hagrid due to his immense strength, managed to get free. Does that seem likely to have happened by chance? I think it <strong>was</strong> chance, although chance had some help from Lily Potter.</p>
 
<p>That help from Lilly showed its colors again in the battle at the Department of Mysteries.  Here, after much of the battle has taken place, the prophecy breaks.  This is extremely important.  If Voldemort had heard the prophecy he might have realized that "He will mark him as his equal" meant that he gave Harry an equal part of his soul.  This realization might have given him an opportunity to turn the tide, and kill Harry without destroying his horcrux.</p>
 
<h3>Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince</h3>
 
<p>In Half Blood Prince, while Harry only gets into two major scrapes, his friends manage to get into a few of their own.  It is important that his friends be protected, as he still needs them to fulfill his destiny.  It is this need that allows his protection to keep his friends alive as well.</p>
 
<p>In the first Potions lesson, Harry and Ron have to borrow old textbooks. Professor Slughorn promises that whoever manages the best potion will win a bottle of Felix Felicis (Luck potion). Malfoy, who we later learn is trying to fix the vanishing cabinet to introduce Death Eaters [/u]into Hogwarts, is good at potions. Harry, himself says he got lucky by getting the Half Blood Prince's old textbook with hand written instructions.  By following these written instructions he wins the Felix Felicis.  The result of his triumph keeps the luck potion out of Draco's hands, and therefore insures that Dumbledore is alive long enough to teach him about the horcruxes.</p>
 
<p>The Prince's Potions book was not only a help to Harry, but also helped to save Ron's life.  As a direct result of Harry using a bezoar during class, there was one available in Slughorn's office when he needed it to save Ron from the poisoned mead.</p>
 
<p>In Voldemort's hidden locket cave, Harry is unable to save himself from the Inferi and is moments away from being dragged into the water when a miracle happens.  Dumbledore, who is "Pale as any of the surrounding Inferi", amazingly finds the strength to cast a protective ring of fire around himself and Harry. For anyone who had any doubts about Dumbledore's strength at the time he cast the protective ring, he is even described as "Taller than any of them".  We see other allusions to his weakened state when Harry doesn't believe that Dumbledore can climb into the boat by himself, and when Dumbledore can hardly stand without support.</p>
 
<p>During the final battle, Harry narrowly missed getting hit by many spells.  They were ricocheting around the castle, yet he isn't hit by a single one. It also seems unlikely that the whole battle took place in under two hours, and the Felix Felicis should have run out for Ron, Hermione and Ginny. (Harry told Ron and Hermione to split the remaining nine hours with Ginny, and they had already used an hour each watching the Room of Requirement.) However they later said that the Felix worked perfectly, causing all the spells to fly harmlessly passt them.</p>
 
<p>It's also quite fortunate, that when Harry was hiding the Potions book he marked it with a bust wearing a wig and a tiara. In Deathly Hallows we find out that the tiara is the diadem of Ravenclaw. Voldemort had turned it into a horcrux. Harry then knows where to look for it out of all the clutter of a thousand year's worth of students hiding their contraband.</p>
 
<p>He also gets a clue about the Hallows when in the memory, Marvolo claims that his ring has the Peverel coat of arms on it. In Deathly Hallows we find that the Peverels are the original owners of the Hallows.</p>
 
<h3>Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows</h3>
 
<p>My premise here in the final book of the series is that while Harry's protection broke, it only happened once he reached the Burrow. It still kept him safe after that, but only passively, and only the bare minimum protection necessary to allow him fulfill his destiny.</p>
 
<p>In the series we find spells hitting each other in mid-air four times. The first two are in Goblet of Fire, the third and fourth in Deathly Hallows. No two such occasions have the same result, and only in one is there any explanation for the difference. During the chase leaving the Dursley'sthe spells canceled each other out, since one of the hitting Hagrid would have gotten Harry killed.</p>
 
<p>Probably the most curious of events during the chase was the strange action of Harry's wand. I happen to disagree with Dumbledore, since golden flames don't seem like Voldemort's magic. I think that it was Harry's still active protection acting for the last time to allow him to reach the wards set up by the Order of the Phoenix.</p>
 
<p>The lingering passive protection helped Harry and his friends to escape at the last second three times in Deathly Hallows. When Harry and Hermione fall into the trap at Godric's Hollow, they manage to survive, and more importantly, they find out some information which was later useful in the Hallow quest.  The second time is when instead of falling into the trap the Death Eaters set using Xenophilius Lovegood, Harry feels a sudden urge to snoop. Ignoring Hermione's objections, he checks Luna's room. What he finds there, shows him that Luna hadn't been there for months, allowing them to escape from the trap with the knowledge of the Deathly Hallows quest. The third last minute escape is from Malfoy manor. Aberforth looks in on Harry and in response to Harry's plea for help sends Dobby. Dobby manages to get them all out just before Voldemort arrives on the scene.</p>
 
<p>Ron, through the deluminator, heard Harry and Hermione mention his name. Using the extra feature, he managed to find Harry just before the locket horcrux choked Harry to death. That earned him the right to destroy the locket.</p>
 
<p>While it might sound contradictory, I also believe that his mother's protection got them captured by the Snatchers.  Harry had been calling Voldemort "You Know Who" for quite some time, but then suddenly slips up.  The result of their capture was Bellatrix seeing the sword of Gryffindor and panicking.  Harry was able to correctly interpret this response, and therefore find the next horcrux.</p>
 
<h3>Conclusion</h3>
 
<p>Of course, we should not forget that Harry sacrificed himself at the end of the book. His sacrifice protected all those for whom he was willing to die. But this brings up two questions. According to Dumbledore, what allowed Lily to protect Harry, was the fact that she wasn't going to die otherwise. So how did his willingness to die protect them?  And what does this have to do with his protection?</p>
 
<p>The answers are related. Harry, being sentenced to death, actually didn't have the ability to protect someone. It just wouldn't be any more affective than what James tried. However there is one difference. In this case they were willing to lay down their lives for Harry. He chose, out of love, not to accept that sacrifice. He  agreed to die sooner rather than allow Voldemort to kill his friends. By doing that, he re-awakened Lily's protection, and defined his well-being as including the well-being of his friends. Therefore his protection kept them safe from Voldemort.</p><a href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bookstove.com%2FFantasy%2FHarry-Potters-Magical-Protection.139065"><img src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bookstove.com%2FFantasy%2FHarry-Potters-Magical-Protection.139065" border="0"/></a>]]></description>
<pubDate>Sun, 15 Jun 2008 06:02:59 PST</pubDate></item>
<item>
<title>Harry Potter: The Great Creation</title>
<link>http://www.bookstove.com/Book-Talk/Harry-Potter-The-Great-Creation.135318</link>
<description>
<![CDATA[<p>Harry potter is a character portrayed in the novels that have been written by J.K. Rowling. Harry Potter is a book as well as the main character in the book. I really like these books because they are real mystery/thrillers.</p>
 
<p>Harry potter along with his friends Hermione Granger and Ron Weasley go on a quest to defeat the dark wizard Voldemort who is the most dangerous wizard alive. This wizard had also killed Harry's parents long before Harry went to Hogwarts which is the school of witchcraft and wizardry.</p>
 
<p>After accomplishing many things and going through dangerous activities they do accomplish the task given. They collect the horcruxes which are objects with the fragments of Voldemort's soul.</p>
 
<p>Harry Potter along with his trusted friends go through many hardships and they also take help from the great headmaster, Dumbledore. Dumbledore is portrayed as the most powerful wizard alive until obviously he dies after getting killed by Severus Snape.</p>
 
<p>I really like this book and I also like the movies which are action packed. Great plot was made and the story was told really well. J.K. Rowling has made one of the greatest and the most action packed books in the world. This book would be given an 11/10. <a target="_blank"></a></p><a href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bookstove.com%2FBook-Talk%2FHarry-Potter-The-Great-Creation.135318"><img src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bookstove.com%2FBook-Talk%2FHarry-Potter-The-Great-Creation.135318" border="0"/></a>]]></description>
<pubDate>Sun, 08 Jun 2008 01:30:50 PST</pubDate></item>
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<title>Harry Potter and the Wizard World</title>
<link>http://www.bookstove.com/Fantasy/Harry-Potter-and-the-Wizard-World.39262</link>
<description>
<![CDATA[<p>

 I am a Harry Potter, a.k.a., JK?s star, fan!  Now that I have that out of the way, I need
 to share some perspectives of the movies and the books and some puzzles of my own.
 </p><p>
 I have read books that query Rowling?s ideas and characters and actions and consequences.
 I will throw this mini tome into that ring.
  </p><p>
 HP fans know about Mr. Potter and his relatives, friends, and involuntary enemies.
  </p><p>
 We know that from day one, Mr. Potter has had to battle bullies and skeptics and
 ?The forces of evil?!?  I say evil cause nowhere that I am reading do I find out,
 other than verbal proclamations from Him himself and others that he is the best, what ?He whose name must not be mentioned?..we have an ego thing about who is the best wizard.  I have a feeling that if it were not in a book, that Mr. Potter would GLADLY say ?Mr. V, I do not
 give one whit about being a great anything!  That response would not satisfy the
 ego starved Mr. V. </p><p>
 
 Putting that hypothesis aside, my problem is one that rains on the parade REGARDLESS the fact that I have read all the books, seen the movies and I LIKE THEM ALL! [I like many things
 I do not understand. </p><p>
 
 I am by occupation, a real estate broker, business consultant, world traveler and hopefully,
 also obvious, a free-lance writer.  I like to pick some stuff apart that glows illogic. 
  </p><p>
 Mr. Potter is not having these situations exclusively at local pubs, in the dark deep woods
 or at home?though we Potter fans know that some of them in fact, do occur at these
 venues.
  </p><p>
 Mr. Potter is a young man and appropriately, a STUDENT.  He is not attending
 a school exclusively for young men, or for imminent actors or for Brits.  He is attending
 a school for wizards.   That in itself LEADS to a puzzlement. 
  </p><p>
 While Mr. Potter has few innate skills, [the few he does, granted, are rather spectacular]
 he is in a learning mode some of the time and in a ?Do it now or lose your ass? situation-
 one after the other.
  </p><p>
 OF course, we know that in battles of every type, the most educated do not always win.
 [A real battle in the sands of the middle east is testament to that!] However, it seems very odd to me that, while it may take some of the suspense out of the books and movies, that the faculty
 seem a bit pre-occupied and thus, unable to assist Mr. Potter in his quests to both discover himself AND solve his sequential predicaments.
  </p><p>
 We have a school of highly skilled wizards who are teachers and some returning students
 who have had a chance to explore their wizard abilities too.   </p><p>
 I UNFAIRLY expect the school of Wizardy at Hogwarts, to have a faculty that can do their
 own research and have done background checks on their own faculty.  This seems to have been lacking since one held V in his head and the other began chirping on Potter from day one. </p><p>
 
 While Rowling has creatures deluxe in her literature and cinema, it seems they are simply
 acknowledged by the faculty and not challenged.  To have the headmaster say in
 book [and movie] #1, something like ?There exists in these halls, something horrible that if you came upon it, would provide you a horrible death.?  Is that supposed to stop curious
 kids from exploring?  It is going to do the opposite; just as the faculty cautions and verbal
 limitations about the forest just beyond the school! </p><p>
 
 ?V?s? group make up the dark side; but, excuse me, To what end?  Do the members of Rowling?s Dark side hope to take over the school?  The world?  What?  The North End of England
 or Scotland? </p><p>
 
 Then, we have the head master?s point program.  Very cute up to a point.  Those how have the most points in their genre, win.  I agree.  But while Potter?s group hope to Win, and become the leading ?House? for the next semester, what is the faculty and senior students doing to discover why ?V? and his chums are doing nasty deeds?   Does ?V? want to take over the school?
 The world?  Seems in fact, that the world of non-wizards are known as Muggles and ?V?
 disdains them, so that ?Rule the world? is out AS FAR AS THE READERS KNOW IT.
 I agree in many battles, a victor will claim no interest in his actual target to mislead the
 other side and keep the target, thus, un-protected or only slightly protected.  But to
 keep from going too far afield, let?s presume ?V? does not want to take over the Muggle world.
 Is this then, ?Simply? a battle over who is the best wizard?  Can?t be that simple. </p>
<p>
 
 Good people will always back off if the ?Dark side? mainly likes to randomly kill and
 harass ?Just to show they are they guys with the biggest sticks? if by backing off, the
 bad guys will reduce their menace.  As philosophers have said for eons, ?Let?s see what they do before we charge in.?  I think ?V?s objectives are either non-existent beyond ego demands
 or they are purposely hidden from all but ?Non-V? fans
 
 
 Rowling has done a masterful job of keeping kids and many adults, in suspense as she
 weaves her own steps to her preferred conclusion.  She has not done such a masterful
 job, however, of using logic to get there. Meaning, teachers unable to see what the
 students must see to save their respective buns. </p>

<p> Should there not have been more than one battle of good teacher vs bad teacher or good teacher vs ?V? subscriber?] 
 
 Thus, the term, Science Fiction.   Maybe Hogwarts has an extension class for Muggles named ?Try to figure this out.?<a href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bookstove.com%2FFantasy%2FHarry-Potter-and-the-Wizard-World.39262"><img src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bookstove.com%2FFantasy%2FHarry-Potter-and-the-Wizard-World.39262" border="0"/></a>]]></description>
<pubDate>Thu, 03 May 2007 06:38:03 PST</pubDate></item>
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