Sunday, May 10, 2026

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows by J.K. Rowling - A Review

This book left a weight on me that lingered long after I finished, and not in a bad way. Just a heavy, honest kind of feeling. It did not offer the comfort or wonder of the earlier books, and I think that is exactly why it works. Reading it felt like saying goodbye.

This journey felt draining, slow, and uncertain, everything became bleak.  They were tired, scared, and unsure, and the story never let them escape that.  Watching Harry step into leadership was especially powerful, not because he was confident or eager, but because he understood there was no other option.

Certain losses happened so quickly that I barely had time to process them, and I found myself wishing the story had paused long enough to let the grief fully settle. The ending worked for me emotionally and thematically, even if part of it felt almost too clean compared to the slow, painful journey that led there.

This was not my favorite book in the series, but it was a meaningful and necessary ending.

No comments:

Post a Comment