This is the seventh and final book in the original Harry Potter series of novels. It, of course, has the final confrontation between Harry and Voldemort. The story picks up shortly after the events of the Half-Blood Prince novel, with Harry just about to turn 17 and come of age in the wizarding world. He has a longer, more protracted "goodbye" with the Dursleys than we saw in the movie, and from there the book and the movies mostly track each other pretty well. As almost everyone knows, this book was split into two movies so as to cut as little of the story as possible. That said, there are still things that are removed in the movies (in large part because some characters had larger roles in the books than they did in the prior movies, so their role in the movies got reduced a bit), and there are things that happened differently in the movie than in the book, including the showdown between Harry and Voldemort.
Overall, I would say that I like the book more than the movie, just because some of the details that were included in the book made things make a bit more sense than they did in the movies. I also think Snape's big moment was a bit better in the book than it ended up being in the movie (although that was good too). I did like the movie version of the final battle more than the book's version of it, however. I think the movie made that more dramatic than the book did. As you can imagine, this is the darkest book in the series given that most of the people reading it would have aged with the characters in the book (at least when it was originally released), so there are a lot of characters that are injured or killed, and the language is a bit more adult than in the earlier books, especially the first two. It ties up the story well and sets up the backstory for Fantastic Beasts and the story of a young Dumbledore. It is definitely worth the read, although, for those who have young kids, I would not read this one to them until they are older. Stick to the first two novels and then read the other books to them as they get older and can handle the darker content. As has been the case for all of the novels, they are written well enough that adults can easily enjoy them, whether you read the books as a kid and are now an adult, or were an adult when the books were originally published and became a fan through the movies.
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