It is out now. You can buy it on Amazon.
The theme song at the beginning and end of the "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows" audiobook is "Hedwig's Theme." It is a distinctive and iconic melody composed by John Williams for the Harry Potter film series, and it is commonly associated with the franchise.
The Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows audiobook is approximately 21 hours and 36 minutes long.
July 21st, 2007
Dobby dies in Chapter 23, titled "Malfoy Manor," in the Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows audio book read by Stephen Fry.
It should already be. But you can also order the audio novel on Amazon on cd's or cassette tapes.
Probably nowhere, unless you're going to steal it, which I hope you are not considering, good as the book may be.
The Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows audiobook was not released in a downloadable form. The places that have it are hosting it illegally. When the Pottermore website opens in October of 2011, they may carry it. It is going to be the only web site licensed to carry the Harry Potter eBooks, so it may also carry the audible versions as well.
You can't. Neither the book or the movie is available for download. You can buy the book in book or audio book form (there are no legal e-books) and currently you can only view the first part of the film, which you can buy on DVD.
Harry Potter audio books are not very challenging to find. Any retail store that sells books will likely sell Harry Potter audio books. Barnes & Noble sells Harry Potter audio books.
Jim Dale is the narrator for the US versions while Stephen Fry narrates them for the UK.
'Bringing back the dead', albeit on a purely audio/visual level (no touch), is the general function of the stone, though there doesn't need to really be any specific kind of motivation to use it beyond the desire to interact with a particular person (or more). In Harry's case, the stone served the purpose of allowing Harry to see and interact with his dead loved ones in order to steel himself into confronting Voldemort.
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