I have heard all seven books with both Stephen Fry and Jim Dale.
I think Jim Dale is the better of the two because with Stephen Fry you sometimes dont hear a difference between the people talking so it s a bit confusing.
There's a reason Jim Dale won the GWR for most different voices with over 500 different voices.
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.
Yes, the Harry Potter books are on Reading Counts.
Your best bet is the library
Harry Potter digital audio books are available from many places, with Amazon being the most popular. On average each of the audio books cost about $10.
no.
Jim Dale was the narrator for the U.S. version of Harry Potter audio books. Stephen Fry was the narrator for the U.K. version.
You can buy them and read them or you can borrow them from a library. They should even be in your school library. If you don't like reading you could also buy the audio-books. At this time there are no legal e-books.
No, he has not played a part in the films, however he does narrate the Harry Potter audio books and video games.
Reading books online, violates copyright laws. As of March 2012, you can buy the Harry Potter books in e-book format.
Great, I must say. It's totally worth reading.
Yes library's have the Harry Potter books.
The Harry Potter books are based in England.