Mehr erfahren
Dem Autor folgen
OK
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (Harry Potter 6) [Adult edition] Gebundene Ausgabe – 16. Juli 2005
-
Lesealter10 - 12 Jahre
-
Seitenzahl der Print-Ausgabe608 Seiten
-
SpracheEnglisch
-
Abmessungen14.6 x 5.1 x 21.5 cm
-
HerausgeberBloomsbury Publishing
-
Erscheinungstermin16. Juli 2005
-
ISBN-10074758110X
-
ISBN-13978-0747581109
Wird oft zusammen gekauft
Kunden, die diesen Artikel gekauft haben, kauften auch
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: J.K. Rowling (Harry Potter 7)Gebundene Ausgabe
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix: J.K. Rowling (Harry Potter 5, Band 5)Gebundene Ausgabe
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire: J.K. Rowling (Harry Potter 4)Gebundene Ausgabe
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (Harry Potter 3)Gebundene Ausgabe
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (Harry Potter 2 Adult Edition)Gebundene Ausgabe
Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone: J.K. Rowling (Harry Potter 1)Gebundene Ausgabe
Sie haben keinen Kindle? Hier kaufen oder eine gratis Kindle Lese-App herunterladen.
Produktinformation
- Herausgeber : Bloomsbury Publishing; 1., Aufl. Edition (16. Juli 2005)
- Sprache : Englisch
- Gebundene Ausgabe : 608 Seiten
- ISBN-10 : 074758110X
- ISBN-13 : 978-0747581109
- Lesealter : 10 - 12 Jahre
- Abmessungen : 14.6 x 5.1 x 21.5 cm
-
Amazon Bestseller-Rang:
Nr. 1,527,973 in Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Bücher)
- Nr. 19,044 in Mythen & Legenden für junge Erwachsene
- Nr. 24,611 in Fantasy für Kinder
- Nr. 79,624 in Fantasy-Romane
- Kundenrezensionen:
Produktbeschreibungen
Amazon.de
Rowling opens with a chapter she had wanted to use for the first book, of The Philosophers Stone -- Lord Voldemort has been creating chaos in the Wizard and Muggle communities alike, the war is in full swing and the Wizarding community now lives in fear. The press have been questioning the events at the Ministry which led to the admission of Voldemorts return, and of course Harrys name is mentioned a number of times. Harrys got his problems, but his anxiety is nothing compared to Hermiones when the OWL results are delivered. Theres a new Defence Against The Dark Arts teacher, an assortment of new characters and creatures, and startling revelations about past characters and events.
Gone is the rage-filled Harry of The Order of the Phoenix -- hes not being kept in the dark any more, his unjustified Quidditch ban has been lifted and he has matured considerably in his short time out of school. Half-Blood Prince follows Harry into the world of late-teens, and his realisation that nobody is infallible has made his growth that much easier. Accepting his destiny, Harry continues to behave as teenagers do, enjoying his time with his friends, developing his relationships outside of his usual circle, and learning more about how he must, eventually, do what he is destined to do.
J.K. Rowling delivers another fantastic tale which will have the readers gasping for more, capturing the characters perfectly and continuing a tale which readers will enjoy over and over again. --Ziggy Morbi
From the Back Cover of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince:
It is in the middle of the summer, but there is an unseasonal mist pressing against the windowpanes. Harry Potter is waiting nervously in his bedroom at the Dursley's House in Pivet Drive for a visit from Professor Dumbledore himself. One of the last times he saw the Headmaster was in a fierce one-to-one duel with Lord Voldemort, and Harry can't quite believe that Professor Dumbledore will actually appear at the Dursleys' of all places. Why is the Professor coming to visit him now? What is it that cannot wait until Harry returns to Hogwarts in a few weeks' time? Harry's sixth year at Hogwarts has already got off to an unusual start, as the worlds of Muggle and magic start to intertwine ...
A Few Words from J.K. Rowling
I am an extraordinarily lucky person, doing what I love best in the world. Im sure that I will always be a writer. It was wonderful enough just to be published. The greatest reward is the enthusiasm of the readers." --J.K. Rowling.
Find out more about Harry's creator in our exclusive interview with J.K. Rowling.
Begin at the Beginning
![]() Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone | ![]() Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets | ![]() Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban | ![]() Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire | ![]() Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix |
Harry Potter Volume 6 for Audiobook Fans
![]() Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, Audio-CDs | ![]() Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, adult edition, Audio-CDs |
Pressestimmen
Über den Autor und weitere Mitwirkende
Weitere Artikel entdecken
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them: Illustrated EditionGebundene Ausgabe
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them: The Original ScreenplayGebundene Ausgabe
Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone: Illustrated Edition (Harry Potter Illustrated Edtn)Gebundene Ausgabe
Harry Potter 3 et le prisonnier d' AzkabanJoanne K. RowlingTaschenbuch
Harry Potter 5 et l'Ordre du PhenixJoanne K. RowlingTaschenbuch
Hogwarts Library (Harry Potter)Gebundene Ausgabe
Kundenrezensionen
Spitzenbewertungen aus Deutschland
Derzeit tritt ein Problem beim Filtern der Rezensionen auf. Bitte versuchen Sie es später noch einmal.
Über den Inhalt des Buches muss glaube ich nichts mehr gesagt werden. Entweder man mag Harry Potter oder eben nicht.
Bei diesem Hörbuch handelt es sich um die US Amerikanische Version gelesen von dem britischen Schauspieler Jim Dale. Dieser arbeitet aber seit Jahren in den USA; er liest mit britischen Akzenten in einem dennoch sehr neutralen, klaren Englisch. Er verleiht allen Charakteren durch alle 7 Teile hindurch individuell zuordenbare Stimmen. Das zieht er beinahe ohne Fehler wie gesagt durch alle 7 Teile durch. Einzig Sirus Blacks Urgroßvater, Phineas Nigellus, hat diesmal eine andere Stimme als in den anderen Teilen.
Klassiker, habe alle HP auf Englisch gelesen.
Aber...sind wir mal ehrlich: Wer die vorherigen Teile bis hier her gelesen hat, der wird sich auch den Half-blood Prince nicht entgehen lassen.
Ein hoch auf das original...auf deutsch macht es nämlich merklich weniger Spaß zu lesen!
Die Geschichte des Halbblutprinzen war spannend und ich hätte nie gedacht, dass xy der HBP ist!
ENGLISCHE AUDIOBOOK,
gelesen von
STEPHEN FRY.
Mein Fazit: Großartig! Fry verstellt seine Stimme nur wenig (im Vergleich zu etwa Rufus Beck), versteht es aber trotzdem, jeder Figur eine ganz eigene Sprache zu geben..Hagrid rumpelt tief vor sich hin (trotzdem besser zu verstehen als der geschrieben Originaltext-den man sich oft laut vorlesen muß, um herauszufinden, was Hagrid meint), Dumbledore schnurrt samtig, Snape spricht scharf artikuliert.
Die Kapitel sind in meist etwa 30 relativ kurze Tracks unterteilt, die ein schnelles Wiederfinden der zuletzt gehörten Stelle leicht ermöglichen.
Auch das Äußere stimmt: Papp-box mit zwei Einzelboxen, 17 CDs in jeweils einzelner fester Plastik-"fassung".
Insgesamt also ein tolles Audiobook und sehr empfehlenswert für alle, die ihr Englisch nicht nur beim Lesen, sondern auch in der Aussprache verbessern wollen.
Spitzenrezensionen aus anderen Ländern
Rezension aus Indien vom 6. Oktober 2018
There is the familiar formula to the book of the beginning with the Dursley's, fun at The Burrow, confrontation with Draco Malfoy, and the usual magical lessons and interactions and romance with Harry's school peers. Here there is a new teacher, Horace Slughorn, who takes the roll of Potions Master, whilst Snape gets his long coveted post of Defence Against the Dark Arts. Snape's loyalties remain ever enigmatic and shifting, and the word 'Horcrux' enters the English language.
All in all at about 543 pages this is a considerable improvement over the even lengthier Goblet of Fire and the glacial Order of the Phoenix. There is more interest and action, the story grows darker and sets up a final conclusion for Episode 7. I thought this was one of the best in the series, and a return to form.
I could hurl a hundred superlatives at this book, most of which you've probably heard before, but they’d all be deserved.
So, Harry Potter's sixth year at Hogwarts school of witchcraft and wizardry, and what a year.
I like to think of this one as a history book: not one of those big boring books that goes on and on about a long forgotten civilisation, a King or a Queen, but a book about Harry's past, his connection with Voldemort, and one that delves deep into the Dark Lord’s past, by way of memories in the pensieve in Dumbledore's office; memories that the headmaster has spent many years collecting.
Harry has inherited his god-father's house and the vile elf, Kreacher, who he puts to good use following Draco Malfoy. Harry knows that Draco is up to something, he overheard him threatening the owner of Borgin and Burkes in Knockturn alley, he just doesn't know what.
There are potions to master, (somewhat helped by an old potions book he finds in the spares cupboard, annotated and proclaiming to be the property of the half-blood prince; there's Snape to avoid, quidditch to play and an uncorrupted memory to extract from their new potions master, Professor Horace Slughorn; who taught Tom Riddle before he became Lord Voldemort.
There are girls, there's snogging and there's Ginny Weasley, who Harry is starting to see in a different light.
To top it all, there are Horcruxes to find, hidden objects that contain parts of Voldemort's soul, and this is where these books are so clever. It is here, in book six, that we discover that Tom Riddle's diary - which Harry destroyed in The Chamber of Secrets, (book two) - was in fact a Horcrux. Dumbledore has already destroyed another, Voldemort's grandfather's ring, and with Horace Slughorn relinquishing his untainted memory, they now know that they have four more to find, excluding the part of soul that resides in Voldemort himself.
So, over five hundred pages in and the adventure begins, but Draco has succeeded in his task, Death Eaters have entered the school, the dark mark hangs heavy above the astronomy tower, Dumbledore is disarmed, Harry immobilised, Snape . . .
I know that most of you already know the ending to this book, you've probably seen the film, but I put it to you, that unless you have read this book, you do not know the ending.
The battle between the Death Eaters and The Order, Snape and Malfoy's escape, the burning of Hagrid's hut, and the most moving part of all, Dumbledore's phoenix and its lament, echoing hauntingly through the corridors and classrooms of Hogwarts.
If a book could have more than five stars out of five, this would be the one. Simply put, this book if stunning.
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, here I come.
Rezension aus dem Vereinigten Königreich vom 9. Februar 2017
I could hurl a hundred superlatives at this book, most of which you've probably heard before, but they’d all be deserved.
So, Harry Potter's sixth year at Hogwarts school of witchcraft and wizardry, and what a year.
I like to think of this one as a history book: not one of those big boring books that goes on and on about a long forgotten civilisation, a King or a Queen, but a book about Harry's past, his connection with Voldemort, and one that delves deep into the Dark Lord’s past, by way of memories in the pensieve in Dumbledore's office; memories that the headmaster has spent many years collecting.
Harry has inherited his god-father's house and the vile elf, Kreacher, who he puts to good use following Draco Malfoy. Harry knows that Draco is up to something, he overheard him threatening the owner of Borgin and Burkes in Knockturn alley, he just doesn't know what.
There are potions to master, (somewhat helped by an old potions book he finds in the spares cupboard, annotated and proclaiming to be the property of the half-blood prince; there's Snape to avoid, quidditch to play and an uncorrupted memory to extract from their new potions master, Professor Horace Slughorn; who taught Tom Riddle before he became Lord Voldemort.
There are girls, there's snogging and there's Ginny Weasley, who Harry is starting to see in a different light.
To top it all, there are Horcruxes to find, hidden objects that contain parts of Voldemort's soul, and this is where these books are so clever. It is here, in book six, that we discover that Tom Riddle's diary - which Harry destroyed in The Chamber of Secrets, (book two) - was in fact a Horcrux. Dumbledore has already destroyed another, Voldemort's grandfather's ring, and with Horace Slughorn relinquishing his untainted memory, they now know that they have four more to find, excluding the part of soul that resides in Voldemort himself.
So, over five hundred pages in and the adventure begins, but Draco has succeeded in his task, Death Eaters have entered the school, the dark mark hangs heavy above the astronomy tower, Dumbledore is disarmed, Harry immobilised, Snape . . .
I know that most of you already know the ending to this book, you've probably seen the film, but I put it to you, that unless you have read this book, you do not know the ending.
The battle between the Death Eaters and The Order, Snape and Malfoy's escape, the burning of Hagrid's hut, and the most moving part of all, Dumbledore's phoenix and its lament, echoing hauntingly through the corridors and classrooms of Hogwarts.
If a book could have more than five stars out of five, this would be the one. Simply put, this book if stunning.
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, here I come.








