The Best Seller Novels

Harry Potter

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Harry Potter Collections

A set of stamps commissioned by Royal Mail, featuring the British children's covers of the seven books

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 and the Half-Blood Prince
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
Author J. K. Rowling
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre Fantasy, thriller, bildungsroman, Young-adult fiction
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing (UK)
Scholastic Publishing (USA)
Published 26 June 1997 – 21 July 2007
Media type Print (hardcover and paperback)
Audiobook

Harry Potter is a series of seven fantasy novels written by British author J. K. Rowling. The books chronicle the adventures of the eponymous adolescent wizard Harry Potter, together with Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger, his friends from the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. The central story arc concerns Harry's struggle against the evil wizard Lord Voldemort, who killed Harry's parents in his quest to conquer the wizarding world and subjugate non-magical (Muggle) people to his rule. Several successful derivative films, video games and other themed merchandise have been based upon the series.

Since the 1997 release of the first novel Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, which was retitled Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone in the United States, the books have gained immense popularity, critical acclaim and commercial success worldwide.[1] As of June 2008, the book series has sold more than 400 million copies and has been translated into 67 languages,[2][3] and the last four books have consecutively set records as the fastest-selling books in history.

English-language versions of the books are published by Bloomsbury in the United Kingdom, Scholastic Press in the United States, Allen & Unwin in Australia, and Raincoast Books in Canada. Thus far, the first five books have been made into a series of motion pictures by Warner Bros. The sixth, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, is scheduled for release on 17 July 2009. The series also originated much tie-in merchandise, making the Harry Potter brand worth £7 billion (US$15 billion).

The Best Refference Book

In China's ShadowChina’s new power could harm most American citizens and destroy the American dream, says Reed Hundt, former Chairman of the FCC and author of the new book, IN CHINA'S SHADOW coming this fall from Yale University Press (October 16, 2006; hardcover). His crisp and highly provocative look at the challenge ahead offers a compelling perspective on how to make the best of China’s global competition: Hundt identifies explicit and expansive promotion of entrepreneurship as our best competitive edge.

“China's access to a large and inexpensive labor force will empower thousands, even hundreds of thousands, of firms to compete with American firms. Highly trained Chinese employees will compete with highly trained Americans and in doing so may saw off the top end of America's income ladder,” says Hundt. “But by the time the upper class has suffered serious impact from Chinese rivalry, the opportunity for an effective national response might have passed. There’s not a moment to lose in preparing both American firms and workers for the new wave of competition.”

Hundt suggests that meeting the Chinese challenge does not require adopting the current legislative program of the left or right or imposing a government plan on business. We do not need a coordinated national strategy for particular industries. Instead, he says, in order for America to maintain its lead in job and wealth creation, the country must expand and renew the culture of entrepreneurship that has been at the heart of American economic success for centuries. Unless substantial entrepreneurship upsets the status quo in energy, health care and other sectors, as it did in communications and computing in the 90’s, average Americans will see their standard of living lowered. If decline is America’s future, then America could lose its commitment to the values of liberty and equality that are at the core of its national character.

Hundt sounds the battle cry for these specific changes:

  • The architecture of law – statute, regulation and cases – needs to be changed to encourage start-ups and entry into new areas by existing firms.
  • The architecture of technology needs to be changed to encourage open and collaborative research and development.
  • The architecture of leadership needs to be altered to encourage leaders from outside existing centers of power. Chief executives of start-ups and social networks of workers and consumers need to have expanded influence on America’s policies.

Hundt reviews the lessons of the Golden 1990s, when law, technology, and leadership produced a robust culture of entrepreneurship, and analyzes how entrepreneurship is being undermined today. He offers a creative list of new ways for entrepreneurs and their employees to be supported by law and technology. Hundt also offers a close look at the spirit of entrepreneurship which infused that internet explosion. His exclusive interviews with AOL’s Steve Case and Netscape’s Marc Andreessen, as well as famed venture capitalists, offer new material about how those entrepreneurs seized the opportunities presented by law and technology to change the world. Their efforts, along with the thousands of other new firms created every year in the United States, demonstrate America’s potential for a bright future of creating new products, companies, and jobs. And, according to Hundt, this is the tradition America must return to in order to forge ahead in the face of China.
– Barbara Cave Henricks, Goldberg McDuffie Communications


Copyright 2006 Reed Hundt



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