"Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows"
J. K. Rowling
I think this is the strangest book of the whole series. It started great, had a very long bit when they were on the run that broke the pace, and then took a swan dive into a nonstop, mindblowing and satisfying final act. It utterly accomplishes its goal of completing the cycle and finally, finally giving up the secrets that had been hidden since Philosopher's/Sorcerer's Stone. Rowling is at her very best here, with wonderful dialogue, both lovable and hateful characters, excellent descriptions, and an almost unparalleled sense of how to propel story forward.
Maybe it's because I'm writing so close to the finish, but I'm not sure what to write to wrap this one up. I'm still processing a lot of this one. Deathly Hallows had a lot going on throughout its duration. My favorite thing about it was the complete lack of Quidditch. Besides that, I think my favorite thing about it is that everything is wrapped up, there are no more loose ends, the conclusion is final--and yet I still have questions. Not about the mechanics of the universe, any more--I still think there are practical holes in the whole business, but I'm able now to let it go--but about the little details. I am itching to read through them all again and try to pick up on details that I missed, or that seemed to mean one thing and now mean another, now that I know how it all works out.
Snape's memories threw nearly everything I thought I knew about the whole series into a tailspin. I can't really analyze this right now, but what a revelation, an eyepopping realization.
The finale, the showdown, was extremely effective, I thought. It could have been too tangled, too forced--but all the different parts that fell together made sense, somehow, and Voldemort's downfall was inevitable. Harry has come a long way, and I think a key to understanding his journey is how his response to each of them changes. In the previous books, he met tragedy with anger, increasing hatred. In this one, he is able to meet them with maturity, with the increased boldness of selfless sacrifice, and also, I think, by allowing them to pierce him as he could not have two or three years ago.
I do have to mention that Rowling's naming of characters is very often terrible. Which is a worse name, Albus Severus or Scorpius Malfoy? It's hard to say.
Thanks to everyone for following along as I went on this journey. I think I can now say I'm one of you--a first-year, maybe, but a member nonetheless. I just read that the Epilogue takes places this very year: 2017. Maybe it was fate that I finally finished the series just a few months before Harry and Ginny's kids start their own adventure.