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Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
 
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Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (Hardcover)

by J.K. Rowling (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1,066 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 43.00
Price: CDN$ 27.09 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 39. Details
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Frequently Bought Together

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix + Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (Book 4) + Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
Total List Price: CDN$ 81.90
Price For All Three: CDN$ 55.48

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Product Description

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As his fifth year at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry approaches, 15-year-old Harry Potter is in full-blown adolescence, complete with regular outbursts of rage, a nearly debilitating crush, and the blooming of a powerful sense of rebellion. It's been yet another infuriating and boring summer with the despicable Dursleys, this time with minimal contact from our hero's non-Muggle friends from school. Harry is feeling especially edgy at the lack of news from the magic world, wondering when the freshly revived evil Lord Voldemort will strike. Returning to Hogwarts will be a relief...or will it?

The fifth book in J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter series follows the darkest year yet for our young wizard, who finds himself knocked down a peg or three after the events of last year. Somehow, over the summer, gossip (usually traced back to the magic world's newspaper, the Daily Prophet) has turned Harry's tragic and heroic encounter with Voldemort at the Triwizard Tournament into an excuse to ridicule and discount the teen. Even Professor Dumbledore, headmaster of the school, has come under scrutiny by the Ministry of Magic, which refuses to officially acknowledge the terrifying truth: that Voldemort is back. Enter a particularly loathsome new character: the toad-like and simpering ("hem, hem") Dolores Umbridge, senior undersecretary to the Minister of Magic, who takes over the vacant position of Defense Against Dark Arts teacher--and in no time manages to become the High Inquisitor of Hogwarts, as well. Life isn't getting any easier for Harry Potter. With an overwhelming course load as the fifth years prepare for their Ordinary Wizarding Levels examinations (O.W.L.s), devastating changes in the Gryffindor Quidditch team lineup, vivid dreams about long hallways and closed doors, and increasing pain in his lightning-shaped scar, Harry's resilience is sorely tested.

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, more than any of the four previous novels in the series, is a coming-of-age story. Harry faces the thorny transition into adulthood, when adult heroes are revealed to be fallible, and matters that seemed black and white suddenly come out in shades of gray. Gone is the wide-eyed innocent, the whiz kid of Philosopher's Stone. Here we have an adolescent who's sometimes sullen, often confused (especially about girls), and always self-questioning. Confronting death again, as well as a startling prophecy, Harry ends his year at Hogwarts exhausted and pensive. Readers, on the other hand, will be energized as they enter yet again the long waiting period for the next title in the marvelous, magical series. (Ages 9 and older) --Emilie Coulter



Books in Canada

The problem with Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, the fifth volume in Rowling's boy wizard series, is that it is simply too long. Rowling teases her readers for over 600 pages, setting the stage, as it were, for a fabulous final 150 pages that rocket beautifully to an as-always satisfying conclusion/cliffhanger, but to have to make one's way through all the detritus that she asks readers to wade through before the story really gets moving is just not on. Surely at this point in the sequence, Rowling could skip the tedious verbiage that comes with recounting Harry's summers with his odious relatives, the Dursleys, and some, not all, of the day-to-day details of life at Hogwarts. When Rowling concentrates on the story, she truly has the ability to transport her readers into a magical imaginative world but it's becoming obvious that what J.K. Rowling is desperately in need of is a good editor and she's clearly being let down by the major houses that publish her.
What's happening to Harry? After another nasty series of Dursley attacks, he's attacked by those soul-sucking ghouls that readers were introduced to in The Prisoner of Azkaban, the deadly dementors. Whisked away by magical means, he finds himself in a hidden house in central London, the crumbling home of his godfather, Sirius Black. There Harry is reunited with Ron and Hermione as well as some old and familiar faces—the Weasley clan (though sans Percy who has left the fold and taken up digs with the ucky Minister of Magic, Cornelius Fudge), Mad-Eye Moody and our old friend Lupin. Put on trial for using magic to defeat the Dementors, Dumbledore, as per usual, rescues Harry and it's off to Hogwarts.
Of course, the storyline is propelled forwards by the on-going return of You-Know-Who, aka He Who Must Not Be Named, aka the Dark Lord, Voldemart and his fiendish Death Eaters, and Dumbledore has been busy gathering together the Order of the Phoenix in order to monitor his nasty progress. What throws things off is that Fudge, fearing that Dumbledore wants his job, is so insecure that he won't take seriously the news that Voldemart is back and, worse luck for Harry, he particularly wants to make sure that nothing funny goes on at Hogwarts. Fudge makes his presence felt in the toad-like personage of Dolores Jane Umbridge, Defense Against the Dark Arts instructor who quickly becomes High Inquisitor at Hogwarts, and before the end of the book, its Headmistress too.
There are the requisite Quidditch matches (boring) and the various encounters with the colourful array of Hogwart facility members including Harry's buddy Snape—nasty as always—and there are the continuing antics of those mugs, the Weasley brothers, to get through yet again. Rowling likes the sound of her own authorial voice too much and should learn to cut to the chase. Readers have to sift through yet more boy-girl teen stuff as Harry might or might not be interested in Cho Chang—Rowling seems to have forgotten that Harry isn't the only teen in her trio but Ron and Hermione get much shorter shrift here.
What is interesting is Harry's connection with the Dark Lord. Rowling, for the most part, gives us some interesting plot twists here though it really is incredibly tedious for readers to be told about every flare-up of Harry's lightening bolt scar. His ability to see through Voldemart's eyes and his fascination/repulsion aspect of this ability is well-thought out and nicely described. It's interesting as is Harry's new insights into the relationship between his father and Snape. But Rowling seems unsure of how she wants us to feel about Harry—either that or she's trying to undermine our connection to the boy wizard because her focus on solipsistic striking out in anger whenever things aren't going his way seems hugely exaggerated in this book. Rowling, like Harry, seems unable to decide whether he should be a leader or an outcast, and his flare-ups don't really help us understand what is happening to Harry. Not really.
One thing about this book that does seem to indicate a move forward is Rowling's ability to control the book's humour element—there are still those bits of bathroom humour that we are treated to in each of the books—but here there is some very fine satire, especially in the portrait of the ever-hysterical Umbridge and her pink reign of terror. Rowling is to be specially commended on letting readers see that fine line between comedy and tragedy in the black humour elements of Order of the Phoenix. But readers will get the point that she's toad-like, JK, if you tell them once or twice.
That's the problem with the Order of the Phoenix—no one is editing JK. We don't need to be told that Umbridge is toad-like over and over and over again. We have a sense of Hogwarts and the routine there—do we really have to have the password repeated again and again to get up into the Gryffindor Common Room? We know this stuff. This is a series that takes place in more or less the same place in each and every book.
I won't tell you who dies, what happens to Harry and his nemesis Voldemart or whether or not the magical world has been split in two by the end of Order of the Phoenix. I don't believe in spoiling things for readers. But this is a book that will take perseverance. It's long, often unwieldy and certainly doesn't have the fine nuances that were part of Rowling's gimmick in the first three books. This is a better book than Goblet certainly—there isn't quite as much Quidditch, thanks be—but it's no Azkaban. I think it's the hype that is keeping readers interested in Harry Potter—not J.K. Rowling. It's good marketing and the movies that have caught young readers' attention. And that's okay if it will get them to read a 766-page book. But they do deserve better crafted fiction than Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. I'm just not sure that J.K. Rowling is capable of giving it to them.
Jeffrey Canton (Books in Canada)

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Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
84% buy the item featured on this page:
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix 4.6 out of 5 stars (1,066)
CDN$ 27.09
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (Book 4)
5% buy
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (Book 4) 4.8 out of 5 stars (4,259)
CDN$ 13.83
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
4% buy
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban 4.8 out of 5 stars (2,011)
CDN$ 14.56
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
4% buy
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets 4.8 out of 5 stars (2,037)
CDN$ 14.56

 

Customer Reviews

1,066 Reviews
5 star:
 (806)
4 star:
 (155)
3 star:
 (60)
2 star:
 (29)
1 star:
 (16)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (1,066 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
5.0 out of 5 stars Can I Join the Order?, May 1 2009
By Jamieson Villeneuve "Author at Large" (Ottawa Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
"Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix" finds Harry about to enter his fifth year at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Gone is the quiet boy in glasses; Harry has grown up. At fifteen, he is officially a young man. He has passed away another boring summer at Number Four Privet Drive waiting anxiously for some news, any news, from the wizarding world.

After Voldemort came back to life at the end of last term, after Cedric had died at Voldemort's hand, Harry was sure the world, Muggle and Wizard alike, would be turned upside down - but Harry has heard nothing, not even a mention of the fact that the Dark Lord has risen. Letters from Ron and Hermione are vague and uninformative. Frustrated, Harry is unaware of how quickly things are about to change.

After his cousin Dudley, is attacked by Dementors (evil soul-sucking monsters who guard the Wizard prison of Azkaban), Harry's life is turned upside down. He is whisked away to the Wizard world, to the lair of the Order of the Phoenix, a select group of witches and wizards who protected the world from Voldemort the last time he was in power.

Now that Voldemort is alive again, the Order has come together again to protect the world from dark evil. But Harry is still frustrated. Those around him like the Hogwarts headmaster Albus Dumbledore or his godfather Sirius Black and Ron's parents Mr. and Ms. Weasley are being more cryptic than usual and Harry knows that there are things that he is not being told. Voldemort is alive in the Wizard world and dark times are upon them.

Hogwarts is also under siege. A new teacher, Dolores Umbridge, has taken over the position of Defense Against the Dark Arts at Hogwarts. She is also a ministry official sent to keep an eye on how Dumbledore is running the school. When Dolores takes over the position of Headmaster, Hogwarts falls into dark hands indeed.

Harry, Ron and Hermione know that this year will be one of their hardest. For, if they fail to stop Voldemort from attaining a prophecy that he seeks, they know that the end is near for Witches and Wizards everywhere....

This book is beyond amazing. By now, everyone knows who Harry Potter is. The Harry Potter books have become publishing phenomena; children who have never read a book are reading Harry Potter, adults are reading Harry Potter books on the bus. Harry Potter has become one of the most read book series of all time and has brought people back to reading. That is pure magic.

With four books already under her belt, J. K. Rowling offers us the highly anticipated fifth book in the Harry Potter canon, "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix". Even though fans had to wait for almost three years for "Order of the Phoenix", the book is so amazing that it is well worth the wait.

It's a big, big book. It's well over six hundred pages. My plot description doesn't even come close to covering what happens in this book. I've already read the book twice and will have to read it again a third time to make sure I've gotten everything. Rowling is so adept at weaving a story, that the detail is astounding.

This book is incredible. Simply put, it is magic at it's purest form. The story flies along far too quickly, the characters are alive and vivid and the plot is wonderful. I can't say enough good things about "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix".

I love everything that J. K. Rowling has written and am eagerly awaiting book six. Book five was particularly wonderful because it represents a turning point in Harry's life. It's an incredible achievement and Rowling proves she just gets better and better.

I will read anything she writes, as she never fails to tantalize us with magic and stories that are made from the stuff that dreams are made of. She is a born storyteller and I'm going to keep hope that she keeps telling stories for a long time to come.
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5.0 out of 5 stars She Must Keep Going!, Jun 18 2007
By Brad Camroux (Calgary, AB Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is by far and away the best book in the series so far! It is certainly the most mature and disturbing book Rowling has written (going in the sequence of the series). The punishments handed down by Professor Umbridge leave the reader cringing, wondering how someone could be so evil. But, of course, Harry and the gang triumph in the end. And on top of that, we are given much more information than the previous books offered. I doubt I could comfortably say the book was too long. I found it engaging, intense, and difficult to put down. Rowling has outdone herself in this one, and there is still so much more to come! She has *got* to keep going!
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3.0 out of 5 stars as compared to the others, Jun 4 2007
By Babyblue Kelly "Paperback Princess" (Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
So here we are at book # 5 in the Harry Potter series, if you want to know where I'm coming from the other ones I would grade them as follow:
Philosophers Stone 4/5
Chamber of Secrets 3/5
Prisoner of Azkaban 5/5
Goblet of Fire 5/5

now the reason this book gets just a 3/5 from me isn't because I didn't like it. I just find that in a series like this you have to compare the other books and quite frankly I thought Rowling has done better.

Good things about the book:
-we learn a lot about the Death Eaters (Voldemorts followers) and those who oppose them The Order of the Phoenix.
-we get to learn more about Harry's parents generation, including Neville Longbottoms family
-we finally are taken inside the ministry of magic
-finally people will get that Voldemort is back

Bad things:
-the begining leading up to the arrival to Hogwarts was a little too lengthy and could have been made shorter
-wasn't a big fan of the parts involving Hagrid's 1/2 brother (sorry)
-overall I felt the book didn't need to be as long as it was to convey what it did.
All this being said I still think all the Harry Potter books are great reads, and I am currently 1/2 way through Half Blood Prince, which I can say I am enjoying a lot.


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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Unbelievably fantastic and completely absorbing
To call this book fantastic is a gross understatement. Without doubt, it is the most absorbing novel I've ever read - even on multiple readings. Read more
Published on Jul 14 2006 by Daniel Jolley

5.0 out of 5 stars Unbelievably fantastic and completely absorbing
Having just reread the entire Harry Potter series in preparation for Book Six, it seems like the time is now right for me to finally review Harry Potter and the Order of the... Read more
Published on Jul 13 2006 by Daniel Jolley

1.0 out of 5 stars Garbage
This is one of the worst books I have ever read. The first 400 pages was about homework and a house Sirius lives in. I cannot describe how boring this book is. Read more
Published on April 14 2006 by RICK

2.0 out of 5 stars We waited two years for this?!
I didn't get this book until after a month after it had been released and I was hoping that it would have been worth the wait. I was very wrong. Read more
Published on Mar 19 2006 by Helena Rasmussen

2.0 out of 5 stars Worst of the series
Slow-paced; at times boring. There's some good action at the end, though.
Published on Sep 6 2005

2.0 out of 5 stars Worst of the Series By Far
OotP was definitely a dissapointment compared to the rest of this wonderful series. Although it began to piece together some of the many questions the previous books introduced,... Read more
Published on Jul 24 2005 by Carmyn

5.0 out of 5 stars WONDERFUL!
This book is so great and I can not wait for the next one to come out. I was a little disapointed when one of my favorite characters died, but I have a few hopes he might come... Read more
Published on May 26 2005

5.0 out of 5 stars J.R. Just gets better and better with every book!
You are kidding yourself if you think that this book is not a 5 of 5 (or you just work for you-know-who).
Published on May 10 2005

5.0 out of 5 stars WOW. JK is like an awesome writer!
I can't wait to read the sixth book! I want to know who the half blood prince is! I pre-ordered a book to come in July some time, and I'm looking forward to reading it! Read more
Published on April 30 2005 by Jackie

5.0 out of 5 stars second best
gof was better but by far the most advanced writing she has done yet,
Published on Jan 24 2005 by Brad Archambault

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