Harry Potter by Joanne Rowling series

Imagine a school in a chateau loaded with moving staircases, a game played on flying brooms, a shrewd wizard purpose on mastery, a normal kid who's the saint of an entire world he doesn't have even an inkling. This is the story that wakes up in the grand Harry Potter series by J. K. Rowling.


The Dark Lord, Voldemort, attempted to murder Harry when he was only an infant—yet he fizzled, slaughtering Harry's guardians yet abandoning him with a lightning-jolt scar. After Voldemort's vanishing, Harry is sent to live with his dreadful auntie and uncle, far from any insight of enchantment. Be that as it may, at eleven years old, he is welcome to go to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, and an otherworldly world opens before him.


Each of the seven books in the arrangement describes one year in Harry's undertakings at Hogwarts and his fight against Lord Voldemort. Harry makes two magnificent closest companions named Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger. He thinks about themes like Transfiguration and Potions under insightful superintendent Albus Dumbledore and the vindictive Severus Snape. He gets to be master at a diversion called Quidditch; experiences fantastic animals like phoenixes and mythical beasts; and finds a whole Wizarding universe concealed simply outside of anyone's ability to see, as inclined to the darker parts of human experience as our own, however lit up by an eccentric unique enchantment.


Also, gradually, Harry disentangles the puzzles of his unique meeting with Voldemort: why the Dark Lord attempted to execute him, how he lived… and what he must do to survive another experience.


The principal Harry Potter book, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, was distributed in the United Kingdom in 1997; after 10 years, the last novel, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, broke all records to wind up the quickest offering book ever. The seven books have been deciphered into sixty-eight dialects, offering more than four hundred million duplicates in more than two hundred counties.