Showing posts with label 100/100. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 100/100. Show all posts

Watchers Summary

Dean Koontz, American, Animals, Fiction, Genetic Engineering, Ghost, Hard Science, Horror, Literature, Science Fiction, Suspense, Thriller

Watchers

Published: February 1987
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: American, Animals, Fiction, Genetic Engineering, Ghost, Hard Science, Horror, Literature, Science Fiction, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Travis Cornell, a former Delta Force operative, is exploring a canyon near his house when he comes across two genetically produced animals that have escaped from a top-secret government facility. 

Travis is befriended by one, a Golden Retriever with heightened intellect, while the other, an entity known as the Outsider, appears to be attempting to murder the dog. 

Travis brings the puppy home after avoiding the Outsider. When he discovers the dog's extraordinary intelligence, he calls him Einstein.

Later, he and Einstein discover and rescue Nora Devon in a park from a violent guy named Arthur Streck

They create a trio when they come together. Travis, Nora, and Einstein are soon on the run not only from the Outsider but also from federal agents determined to find the laboratory escapees and Vince Nasco, a ruthless professional assassin hired by the Soviets to kill several human targets carrying the knowledge of how to stop the Outsider, in order to further the Outsider's destruction. 

He wants the dog to trade for a large quantity of money on his own, without the knowledge of the Soviets or anyone.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Best Book, Dog Lovers, Edge Of Your Seat, Ever Read, Highly Recommend, Koontz At His Best, Koontz Books, Must Read, Page Turner, Stephen King, Travis And Nora


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It Summary

Stephen King, American, Coming Of Age, Drama, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Shape Shifter, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller, Werewolf

It

Published: 15, September 1986
Author: Stephen King
Genre: American, Coming Of Age, Drama, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Shape Shifter, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller, Werewolf

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

The story is separated into two halves, each about 27 years apart. The first is from 1957 to 1958, while the second is from 1984 to 1985.

1957–1958
During a rainfall in Derry, Maine, a six-year-old child called Georgie Denbrough floats a paper boat across the streets until it is washed down a storm drain. 

Georgie comes upon a clown in the sewer who introduces himself as Pennywise the Dancing Clown

Pennywise tempts Georgie to reach into the drain and recover his boat, where the clown cuts off his arm and abandons him to die.

On the last day of school the following June, an overweight eleven-year-old kid called Ben Hanscom is bullied by a bully named Henry Bowers and his group, causing him to flee into the marshy wasteland known as the Barrens. 

Ben meets an asthmatic weirdo named Eddie Kaspbrak and Georgie's elder brother, "Stuttering Bill" Denbrough

The three lads subsequently become friends with fellow misfits Richie Tozier, Stanley "Stan" Uris, and Beverly Marsh, and call themselves "The Losers Club." 

As the summer progresses, the Losers face Pennywise in several terrible forms: a mummy on a frozen canal for Ben, a fountain of blood (that only children can see) from Beverly's sink, a rotting leper for Eddie, drowned corpses for Stan, and a horrible ghost of Georgie for Bill

Meanwhile, Bowers, who is becoming increasingly deranged and vicious, decides to focus his attention on his African-American neighbor Mike Hanlon and his father. 

Bowers murders Mike's dog and follows the scared child into the Barrens, where he helps the Losers in driving Bowers' group away in a rock fight, a humiliated Bowers swearing vengeance. 

After disclosing his personal brush with Pennywise in the shape of a flesh-eating bird, Mike joins the Losers Club

The Losers learn through Mike's history scrapbook that "It" is an ancient creature with a grip on the community. 

Following several encounters, the Losers build a homemade smoke hole that Richie and Mike use to imagine Its beginnings as an ancient extraterrestrial monster that arrived on Earth, commencing a cycle of feeding on youngsters for a year followed by a 27-year slumber.

Soon after, Eddie is taken to the hospital by Bowers and many of his friends, and Beverly watches one of the bullies, Patrick Hocksetter, being kidnapped by It in the guise of a swarm of flying leeches. 

The Losers uncover a letter from It in Patrick's blood, warning them that if they meddle, It would murder them. 

Ben fashions two silver slugs from a silver dollar in the hopes of wounding It, and the Losers enter an abandoned home where Eddie, Bill, and Richie had previously seen It to try to kill It

They wound It with silver when it is in the guise of a werewolf. It influences Bowers into slaying his abusive father and pursuing the Losers into the underground to kill them, where It kills two accompanying bullies, Victor "Vic" Criss and Reginald "Belch" Huggins, and Bowers becomes traumatized and stuck in the sewers.

Bill undertakes the "Ritual of Chüd" in the sewers in an effort to confront It in the Macroverse, the other dimension from which It comes, where he encounters the monster's counterpart Maturin, an ancient turtle who created the universe. 

Bill discovers that it can only be beaten via a fight of wills, and witnesses Its actual form, the "Deadlights," before defeating the monster with Maturin's assistance. 

The Losers are lost in the sewers after the battle, not knowing if they killed It or not until Beverly has sex with each of the lads to bring the gang back together. 

The losers then take a blood pledge to return to Derry if It reappears. Bowers is institutionalized after being implicated for the town's kid killings, having lost his mind by the time he washed out of the sewers into a neighboring river.


1984–1985
In July 1984, three teenagers savagely assault and hurl a young homosexual guy called Adrian Mellon from a bridge, where both a bully and Adrian's partner witness a clown appear. 

Adrian is discovered mangled, and the teens are apprehended and charged with his murder.

When a new spate of brutal child deaths occurs in Derry, an adult Mike Hanlon, now the town's librarian, contacts the six previous members of the Losers Club and reminds them of their childhood commitment to return if the crimes resume. 

Bill is now a wealthy horror writer living with his actress wife Audra; Beverly is a fashion designer married to an abusive guy called Tom Rogan; Eddie owns a limousine rental company and has married a hysterical codependent woman similar to his hypochondriac mother; Richie Tozier is a disc jockey; Stan Uris is a rich accountant, and Ben Hanscom is now slim and a successful but lonely architect. 

Prior to Mike's phone calls, the Losers had entirely forgotten about each other and the pain of their youth, burying the horror of their encounters with It

Except for Stan, who commits suicide in fear of encountering It again, all of the Losers agree to return to Derry.

The Losers gather for lunch, and Mike tells them that It wakes once every 27 years for 12–16 months at a time, feasting on youngsters before falling back asleep. 

The gang decides to put an end to It once and for all. Following Mike's advice, each participant explores different places of Derry in order to help retrieve their memories. 

Eddie, Richie, Beverly, and Ben are confronted with manifestations of It while investigating (Richie as a Paul Bunyan statue, Eddie as Belch Huggins and childhood acquaintances in leper and zombified forms, Ben as Dracula in the Derry Library, and Beverly as Hansel and Gretel's witch in her childhood house.). 

Bill locates "Silver," his boyhood bicycle, and delivers it to Mike's. Meanwhile, Audra, concerned about Bill, rushes to Derry; Tom comes, planning to murder Beverly; and Henry Bowers escapes from the mental institution with the assistance of It.

Henry approaches Mike in the library, but Mike manages to flee alive. It orders Henry to murder the other Losers, but Henry is killed when he attacks Eddie

It then appears to Tom and tells him to abduct Audra, transporting her to It's lair, where Audra becomes catatonic and Tom dies from shock. 

When Bill, Ben, Beverly, Richie, and Eddie find that Mike is approaching death, they understand they are about to face It again. 

They go into the sewers and utilize their collective might to "transfer energy" to a hospitalized Mike, who fights off an It-controlled nurse. 

When they get to Its lair, they discover that It has transformed into a massive spider. Through the Ritual of Chüd, Bill and Richie enter It's consciousness, but they become lost in It

Eddie injures It by putting his asthma medicine down Its throat, but It bites Eddie's arm off, killing him. 

It flees to care about its injuries, but Bill, Richie, and Ben pursue and discover that It has deposited eggs. 

Ben remains behind to destroy the eggs, as Bill and Richie make their way to their ultimate encounter with It

Bill fights his way inside Its body, locates and destroys Its heart. The party gathers to depart It's lair, and despite their best efforts to carry Audra and Eddie's corpses with them, they are forced to leave Eddie behind. 

They see that the wounds from their blood covenant have faded, signaling that their torment is finally done.

Simultaneously, the worst storm in Maine's history rolls over Derry, causing the downtown area to collapse. 

Mike comes to the conclusion that Derry has died. When the Losers return home, they eventually forget about It, Derry, and each other. 

Mike's recollection of the events of that summer, as well as any records he had previously written down, begins to vanish, much to his relief, and he contemplates starting a new life somewhere. 

Ben and Beverly depart as a couple, while Richie returns to California. Bill is the last to go from Derry. 

Before leaving, he takes Audra, who is still catatonic, on a ride on Silver, which wakes her from her coma, and they kiss.


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Misery Summary

Stephen King, American, Classic, Drama, Fiction, Horror, Literary, Literature, Media Tie-In, Psychological, Serial Killer, Suspense, Thriller

Misery

Published: 8, June 1987
Author: Stephen King
Genre: American, Classic, Drama, Fiction, Horror, Literary, Literature, Media Tie-In, Psychological, Serial Killer, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Paul Sheldon, an author of the best-selling Misery Chastain series of Victorian-era romance novels, has completed the series' last book, Misery's Child, in which Misery is murdered off. 

Paul gets drunk and drives his '74 Camaro to Los Angeles instead of flying back to New York City after finishing the manuscript for his new crime book, Fast Cars, which he believes will get significant literary praise and jumpstart his post-Misery career. 

In the small, isolated community of Sidewinder, Colorado, he is stranded in a snowstorm and wrecks his automobile.

When he wakes up, he discovers that he has been saved by Annie Wilkes, a local former nurse who is a die-hard Misery fan. 

Despite his shattered legs, she keeps Paul in her guest bedroom and nurses him herself with her clandestine supply of codeine-based medications. Paul becomes hooked to Novril, a drug Annie withholds from him in order to threaten and manipulate him. 

She starts reading Misery's Child, which was just released and coerces permission to read the Fast Cars manuscript, but she doesn't like the deeper subject matter or language. 

Annie's mental instability is quickly identified by Paul, who notes that she is prone to catatonic spells and has abrupt, unpredictable fury outbursts. 

When she discovers about Misery's death, she abandons Paul in her home for more than two days, denying him food, drink, and painkillers. During this period, Paul checks his legs to determine the extent of the damage and discovers that they were crushed and disfigured in the accident.

When Annie returns, she pushes a frail Paul to burn the Fast Cars book in exchange for painkillers. 

Annie sets up an office for Paul, complete with an antiquated Royal typewriter with a non-functional N-key, writing paper, and a wheelchair, in order to create a new Misery novel that would resurrect the character. 

Paul writes a new novel, Misery's Return while biding his time and comparing himself to Scheherazade

He enables Annie to read the work in progress and fill in the missing N's. The text contains fragments from Misery's Return, a horrifying scenario in which it is discovered that Misery was buried alive while unconscious, as Paul writes.

Paul uses his wheelchair to exit his room multiple times, hunting for more medications and touring the property. He finds a scrapbook full of newspaper clippings revealing Annie to be a serial killer; her victims include a neighboring family, her own father, and many elderly or critically injured patients and 11 infants while she worked as a head nurse, the last of whom resulted in her standing trial but acquittal in Denver. 

Annie announces that she has noticed Paul leaving his room and punishes him by chopping off his foot with an axe and cauterizing his ankle with a blowtorch, thus "hobbling" him. 

Months pass, and Annie slices off Paul's thumb with an electric knife when he complains that additional typewriter keys, including the "t" and "e," have broken and refuses to tell Annie how the story ends until he has written it.

Annie kills a state policeman by driving him over with her riding lawnmower when he comes to Annie's residence looking for Paul. The remains are hidden by Annie, but the trooper's disappearance catches the attention of police enforcement and the media. 

Annie moves Paul to the basement and makes it clear that she will not allow him to reside there. 

After finishing Misery's Return, Paul sets fire to a dummy copy of the text, which Annie tries to salvage. Paul tosses the typewriter at Annie and begins a furious struggle with her, exiting the room and locking the door with Annie still inside. 

When the police arrive in pursuit of the slain soldier, Paul hides and warns them. Annie is discovered dead in the barn, probably having escaped through a window on her way to murder Paul with a chainsaw.

Misery's Return is intended to be published when Paul returns to New York, and it becomes a worldwide bestseller owing to curiosity in the conditions in which it was written. 

The notion that Paul publish a factual account of his own experiences is met with resistance. 

He can walk with a prosthetic, but he still has flashbacks about Annie, painkiller withdrawal, drunkenness, and writer's block. 

Paul weeps both for his destroyed life and for the delight of being able to write again when he gets spontaneous inspiration to create a new novel.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Andrew Scheinman, Annie Wilkes, Car Accident, Edge Of Your Seat, Ever Read, Fast Cars, Frances Sternhagen, Highly Recommend, James Caan, Jeffrey Stott, Kathy Bates, King At His Best, King Book, Misery Chastain, Number One Fan, Paul Sheldon, Richard Farnsworth, Rob Reiner, Steve Nicolaides


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Carrie Summary

Stephen King, Classic, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Occult, Psychological, Supernatural, Thriller

Carrie

Published: 5, April 1974
Author: Stephen King
Genre: Classic, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Occult, Psychological, Supernatural, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Carietta "Carrie" White is a 16-year-old girl in the Maine community of Chamberlain in 1979 who is mocked for her drab look and odd religious beliefs fostered by her tyrannical mother, Margaret

Carrie gets her first period one day while showering in the ladies' locker room after physical education class. 

Carrie is afraid since she has no concept of menstruation because her mother, who despises everything intimate, has never told her about it. 

While Carrie fears she is dying, her classmates ridicule her and hurl tampons and sanitary napkins at her, headed by an affluent, popular girl called Chris Hargensen

Rita Desjardin, the gym instructor, assists Carrie in cleaning up and attempts to explain. 

Carrie practices her odd ability to control items from a distance on the walk home. She only remembers utilizing this talent once, when she was three years old, and caused stones to fall from the sky near her house. 

When Carrie returns home, Margaret accuses her of wrongdoing and confines her in a closet so she may pray.

The next day, Desjardin chastises the girls who tormented Carrie and assigns them a week of detention; Chris refuses to leave and is punished by suspension and exclusion from the prom. 

Chris vows to get vengeance on Carrie after a failed attempt to regain her rights through her impactful father. 

Sue Snell, another popular girl who teased Carrie in the locker room, is embarrassed by her actions and persuades her boyfriend, Tommy Ross, to invite Carrie to the prom instead. 

Carrie is skeptical but accepts and begins preparing a prom outfit for herself. Meanwhile, Chris convinces her boyfriend Billy Nolan and his crew of boys to acquire two buckets of pig blood in preparation for rigging the prom queen contest in Carrie's favor.

Carrie's prom goes well at first: Tommy's classmates are welcoming, and Tommy discovers that he is drawn to Carrie as a friend. 

Chris's plot to rig the election works and Carrie and Tommy are crowned prom queen and king. However, right before the coronation, Chris comes in from the outside and pours pig blood over Carrie and Tommy's heads. 

Tommy gets knocked out by one of the buckets and dies as a result of severe blood loss. The audience laughs as they see Carrie bathed in blood. Carrie storms out of the building, embarrassed.

Carrie recalls her telekinesis and resolves to get vengeance on her tormentors. Using her abilities, she totally closes the gym, triggers the sprinkler system, electrocuting several of her classmates unwittingly, and starts a fire that finally ignites the school's fuel tanks, resulting in a catastrophic explosion that destroys the building. 

Electric shock, fire, or smoke kills anyone present at the prom. Carrie, in a fit of wrath, thwarts any approaching firefighting attempt by opening the hydrants near the school, then smashes gas stations and breaks power lines on her way home. 

Her telekinetic talents are unleashed on the town, demolishing multiple buildings and killing hundreds of people. As she does so, she sends out a telepathic message, informing everyone in town that the devastation was caused by her, even if they don't know who she is.

Carrie goes back home to confront Margaret, who believes Carrie has been possessed by Satan and must be slain. 

Margaret informs her that her pregnancy was perhaps the product of marital rape. Carrie murders her by mentally stopping her heart after she stabs her in the shoulder with a kitchen knife. 

Carrie, mortally wounded, travels to the roadhouse where she was conceived. She notices Chris and Billy departing after learning about the devastation from one of Billy's schoolmates. 

After Billy tries to run Carrie over, she mentally takes control of his car and drives it into a wall, killing both Billy and Chris.

Sue, who has been following Carrie's "broadcast," discovers her lying in the parking lot, bleeding from the knife wound. 

They had a brief telepathic discussion. Carrie had assumed that Sue and Tommy had set her up for the prank, but she now sees that Sue is innocent and has never harbored any ill will against her. She forgives Sue and then passes away, mourning her mother.

A state of emergency is announced, and the survivors begin arrangements to move. Despite the government's commitment of funds for restoring worker neighborhoods, Chamberlain predicts desolation. 

Desjardin and the school's principal blame themselves for what transpired and resign from teaching. 

Sue writes and publishes a book based on her experiences. A "White Committee" investigation on paranormal talents indicates that there are and will be others like Carrie

An Appalachian lady eagerly writes to her sister about her young daughter's telekinetic skills and recalls their grandmother, who possessed comparable abilities.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

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Firestarter Summary

Stephen King, American, Classic, Fiction, Genetic Engineering, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Psychic, Science Fiction, Superhero, Suspense, Supernatural, Thriller

Firestarter

Published: 29, September 1980
Author: Stephen King
Genre: American, Classic, Fiction, Genetic Engineering, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Psychic, Science Fiction, Superhero, Suspense, Supernatural, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Andy and Charlene "Charlie" McGee are a father and daughter duo on the run from The Shop, a government organization. 

Andy had taken part in a Shop experiment using "Lot 6," a substance with psychoactive effects akin to LSD, during his college years. 

The substance provided his future wife, Victoria Tomlinson, limited telekinetic talents and granted him telepathic mind control, which he calls "the push." They both got telepathic talents at the same time. 

Andy and Vicky's abilities were biologically restricted; in Andy's case, excessive use of the push causes debilitating migraine headaches and minute brain hemorrhages, but their daughter Charlie gained terrifyingly great pyrokinetic ability.

The story opens in the middle of the action, with Charlie and Andy fleeing from Shop agents in New York City, the latest in a series of failed attempts by The Shop to apprehend Andy and Charlie after a botched raid on the McGee family in suburban Ohio. 

A failed plan to abduct Charlie leaves her mother dead after years of Shop monitoring; Andy goes home after seeing a psychic flash while having lunch with coworkers to find his wife slain and his daughter stolen. 

He then utilizes his push ability to hunt down Charlie and The Shop agents, eventually catching up with them at an Interstate rest stop. He uses the push to knock out two Shop agents, one of whom is blinded and the other unconscious. 

Charlie and Andy depart and begin a life of running and hiding under fictitious names. Before The Shop catches up with them in New York, they travel multiple times to escape being discovered.

The two escape through Albany, New York, and are briefly taken in by a farmer named Irv Manders near the fictional town of Hastings Glen, New York, using a combination of the push, Charlie's power, and hitchhiking; however, they are tracked down by Shop agents, who attempt to kill Andy and kidnap Charlie at the Manders farm. 

Charlie uses her power at Andy's command, incinerating the entire farm and fights off the agents, killing a couple of them. 

With nowhere else to turn, the two flee to Tashmore, Vermont, where they seek safety in a cabin that previously belonged to Andy's grandpa.

The Shop's director, Captain James "Cap" Hollister, dispatches a Shop assassin called John Rainbird to apprehend the fugitives after the Manders farm operation goes horribly wrong. 

Rainbird, a Cherokee and a Vietnam War veteran, is enthralled by Charlie's strength and becomes obsessed with her, seeking to befriend and kill her. The operation is successful this time, and The Shop takes both Andy and Charlie.

The two are separated and imprisoned in The Shop headquarters in Longmont, Virginia, a fictitious Washington, D.C. suburb. 

Andy becomes an overweight drug addict after his spirit is crushed, he appears to lose his strength, and The Shop finally declares him useless. 

Charlie, on the other hand, firmly refuses to collaborate with The Shop and does not show her skills in their favor. 

A power outage marks a turning moment for the two: Andy, sick with dread and self-pity, regains the drive - unconsciously pushing himself to escape his addiction - while Rainbird, posing as a normal janitor, meets Charlie and earns her trust.

Andy obtains critical information by pressuring his doctor while claiming to be feeble and addicted. 

Charlie begins to exhibit her power, which has grown to terrifying proportions, under Rainbird's direction. 

Andy is able to meet and push Cap after his psychiatrist commits suicide, and uses him to arrange his and Charlie's escape from the facility, as well as to finally connect with Charlie

Rainbird, on the other hand, finds Andy's scheme and decides to exploit it.

Andy's plan works, and he and Charlie are reunited for the first time in six months in a barn, but Rainbird is already there, ready to kill them both. 

Cap, who is losing his wits as a result of being pushed, provides a necessary distraction. 

Andy coerces Rainbird into leaping from the barn's top level, fracturing his leg in the process. 

Rainbird then shoots Andy in the neck and fires another shot at Charlie, but she uses her power to melt the bullet in mid-flight, igniting Rainbird and Cap

Andy, who is mortally injured, tells Charlie to utilize her ability to flee and alert the people so that the government can never do anything like this again. 

After he dies, Charlie, distraught and enraged, sets fire to the barn; she then uses her pyrokinesis to kill the staff and blow up their escape vehicles. The military is summoned, but Charlie destroys their trucks and melts their bullets when they fire at her. Charlie blows up the structure, destroying the whole Shop complex and killing practically everyone.

The government conceals the incident and portrays it as a terrorist firebomb assault in the media. Under new leadership, the Shop swiftly recovers and launches a pursuit for Charlie, who has returned to the Manders property. 

After considerable thought, she devises a strategy and departs the Manders' just ahead of Shop operatives for New York City. 

She chooses Rolling Stone magazine as an independent, truthful news source free of government affiliations, and the novel closes when she comes to tell them her story.


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Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Summary

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Summary

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Summary

Published: 14, July 2007

Author: J.K. Rowling

Book 7 of 7: Harry Potter

Genres: 100/100, Action, Adventure, Children's, Comedy & Humor, Coming Of Age, Epic, Fantasy, Family Life, Fiction, Friendship, Literature, Media Tie-In School, Suspense, Magic, Teen, Witches, Wizards, Young Adult


Check out the review of this book here:



Summary

Voldemort seized control of the Ministry of Magic after Dumbledore's death. Meanwhile, Harry is about to turn seventeen and will no longer be protected by his deceased mother. Members of the Order of the Phoenix relocate the Dursleys and plan to fly Harry to the Burrow using decoys. When they leave, they are attacked by Death Eaters, and "Mad-Eye" Moody and Hedwig are dead, while George Weasley is injured. Voldemort arrives to assassinate Harry, but Harry's wand defends him on its own.

Harry, Ron, and Hermione are getting ready to track down Voldemort's final four Horcruxes. Each receives a Golden Snitch from Dumbledore, a Deluminator from Ron, and "The Tales of Beedle the Bard" from Hermione. They are also handed the Sword of Godric Gryffindor, which has the ability to erase Horcruxes, but the Ministry bans them from using it. The Ministry falls to Voldemort during Bill Weasley and Fleur Delacour's wedding, and Death Eaters attack the wedding banquet. The three flees to 12 Grimmauld Place, Sirius Black's ancestral house, which he has given to Harry.

Sirius's late brother, Regulus, took the Horcrux locket and concealed it in the home, they discover. Mundungus Fletcher later took it. House-elf Kreacher tracks down Fletcher, who claims Dolores Umbridge stole the locket. The trio infiltrates the Ministry and steals the locket from Umbridge, but their escape compromises Grimmauld Place. They take refuge in the woods, unable to destroy the locket and with no other leads. The sinister aspect of the locket upsets Ron, and he leaves the group.

Harry and Hermione discover Dumbledore's relationship with the wicked wizard Gellert Grindelwald. Nagini attacks them as they journey to Godric's Hollow, Harry's birthplace. They manage to flee, but Harry's wand is damaged. Patronus, a doe, leads Harry to a pond housing Gryffindor's sword one night. The locket around Harry's neck nearly kills him as he tries to reclaim it. Ron saves him and smashes the locket after being directed back by the Deluminator.

Hermione discovers a sign worn by Luna Lovegood's father, Xenophilius Lovegood, in Dumbledore's book. According to him, the sign depicts the fabled Deathly Hallows: the Elder Wand, an unbeatable wand; the Resurrection Stone, which can call the dead; and an impenetrable Invisibility Cloak. When Xenophilius begins to act suspiciously, the group realizes Luna has been kidnapped. In exchange for Luna's release, Xenophillius summons Death Eaters to capture them, but they escape. Voldemort, Harry deduces, is looking for the Elder Wand, which Dumbledore received after defeating Grindelwald. Harry deduces that his Invisibility Cloak is the third Hallow, and his Snitch holds the Resurrection Stone.

The group is apprehended and transported to Malfoy Manor. Bellatrix tortures Hermione because she believes they stole Gryffindor's sword from her Gringotts vault. They escape to Bill and Fleur's cottage with the assistance of Dobby the house-elf, along with other inmates, including the goblin Griphook. Bellatrix murders Dobby during the escape. Voldemort steals the Elder Wand from Dumbledore's grave, according to Harry's vision.

The group decides to break into Bellatrix's vault in the hopes of finding another Horcrux. They break in, take Hufflepuff's cup, and flee with Griphook's assistance, but Griphook steals Gryffindor's sword in the process. Voldemort is alerted of the robbery, and he decides to examine his Horcruxes, revealing the remaining ones to Harry: Nagini and one buried at Hogwarts.

The three arrive at Hogwarts with the assistance of Dumbledore's brother Aberforth. Voldemort launches an attack on Hogwarts after learning of Harry's location. Teachers and kids band together to defend the school. Ron and Hermione use basilisk fangs from the Chamber of Secrets to smash Hufflepuff's cup. Harry realizes Ravenclaw's diadem is the Horcrux. Draco, Crabbe, and Goyle attack the three as they search for the diadem in the Room of Requirement. Crabbe assaults them with a cursed fire but is unable to control it, killing him and destroying the diadem. Meanwhile, many people are slain as a result of Voldemort's attack, including Remus Lupin, Nymphadora Tonks, and Fred Weasley.

Voldemort believes the Elder Wand is not working as it should. Voldemort murders Snape because he believes Snape, who murdered Dumbledore, is its rightful master. As Snape dies, Harry comes, and Snape passes him memories to examine in the Pensieve. They disclose that Snape adored Harry's mother and worked as a double agent for Voldemort. He had kept an eye on the three, summoning the doe Patronus. It is also revealed that Dumbledore was dying as a result of his mismanagement of the ring Horcrux and that he had arranged his "death" at Snape's hands.

Harry also discovers that, unbeknownst to Voldemort, he is an inadvertent Horcrux who must die at Voldemort's hands to become mortal. Harry surrenders, directing Neville Longbottom to assassinate Nagini. On the journey, he uses Snitch's Resurrection Stone to reconcile with his parents and other departed loved ones. When he encounters Voldemort, he drops the stone, and Voldemort casts the Killing Curse on him.

Dumbledore greets Harry as he awakens in a dreamy place like King's Cross. He says that Voldemort's first Killing Curse left a piece of his soul in Harry, resulting in their bond. The most recent Killing Curse removed the soul piece, allowing Harry to resurrect or "go on." Harry resurrects and pretends to die. Voldemort declares a ceasefire and demands their surrender at Hogwarts. Neville, on the other hand, takes Gryffindor's sword from the Sorting Hat and murders Nagini.

Molly Weasley murders Bellatrix, and Harry reveals himself to Voldemort. He reveals that Elder Wand's fealty is transferred by defeating, rather than murdering, its former master. The Elder Wand's master had been Draco, not Snape, who had disarmed Dumbledore before Snape murdered him. Harry now wields the Elder Wand after disarming Draco at Malfoy Manor. Voldemort casts the Killing Curse on Harry, but the spell returns and kills Voldemort. Harry repairs his original wand with the Elder Wand before returning it to Dumbledore's grave. He maintains his Invisibility Cloak and abandons the Resurrection Stone. The wizarding world has returned to normalcy.


Epilogue

The Major characters are seeing their children go to Hogwarts 19 years later. James Sirius, Albus Severus, and Lily Luna are Harry and Ginny's three children. Rose and Hugo are Ron and Hermione's two children. Teddy Lupin, Harry's godson, is seen kissing Bill and Fleur's daughter Victoire, as Draco and his wife are sending off their son Scorpius. Albus is about to start his first year at Hogwarts and is concerned that he will be sent to Slytherin. Harry reassures him, reminding his son of Snape's courage and how the Sorting Hat might explain his wishes. Harry remarks that "everything is good" because his scar hasn't ached in 19 years.


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