Best Harry Potter Set to Buy (2026): MinaLima vs Jim Kay vs Standard Box Set

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If you want only one Harry Potter set, buy this one.

If you want the simplest answer that creates the fewest regrets, buy a standard complete 1-7 box set.
Scholastic Harry Potter hardcover box set with collectible trunk case
Scholastic hardcover Harry Potter box set
with case

Not because it is the prettiest. Not because it is the most “special.”

For most families, it’s the format most likely to get fully read, because it’s complete, portable, and low-fuss.

That matters more than people admit.

Most parents and gift buyers are not really asking, “Which edition is the most beautiful?”

They are asking, “Which edition is the most likely to become a lived-in part of the house instead of a shelf object?”

A standard set is better at that job because it is complete right now, it is easier to handle, and it does not turn reading into a careful, slow, museum-like experience.

Now let me say this clearly before the collectors come after me.

The MinaLima interactive editions and the Jim Kay illustrated editions are fantastic. They just do a different job.

If you buy them for the wrong job, you will feel disappointed, even if the book is objectively gorgeous.

So let’s sort out the jobs first, then the choice gets easy.

Quick pick: choose your lane in 15 seconds
If you only read one part, read this. I’m trying to save you from “wrong job, wrong edition” regret.

  • Most families: Buy the standard complete 1–7 box set, because it is the best “finish the whole story” option.
  • Most magical version of Harry Potter (for Books 1–4 as of early 2026): get the MinaLima Interactive Editions (books 1-3) and Mountford (book 4) - but treat them as special-handling books.
  • Best illustrated read-aloud experience without constant “pause and play”: Buy Jim Kay for books 1-5 (with the illustrated series continuing with artist Levi Pinfold later).

Now, here’s the twist.

That does not mean the illustrated editions are not my picks - far from it.

There are two amazing illustrated “premium lanes” of Harry Potter to choose from.

When people say “illustrated Harry Potter,” they often mean different things, and that confusion causes half the buyer regret.

And let's get this clear from the outset. Neither the MinaLima nor the Jim Kay illustrated edition are “worse.”

MinaLima illustrated interior spread from Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone
MinaLima illustrated interior spread from 
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone
They shine when you buy them for the right reason.

Before I tell you the choice I made when we obtained our own Harry Potter collections, let's just take a moment to consider what our options are today in 2026.

Essentially: we have a choice between the interactive illustrated editions, the illustrated editions, and the non-illustrated standard editions.

Phew... that was a mouthful. 

But wait. Things are never as simple complicated as they seem to be.

It's 2026, so what do we have right now and what will we have soon?

1) MinaLima interactive & illustrated editions: who they’re for?

To be precise, here I mean the MinaLima Interactive Illustrated (Harry Potter books 1–3) + Karl James Mountford Interactive Illustrated (Harry Potter book 4 and onwards).

These are the deluxe, design-forward editions with full-color illustration density and paper-engineered interactive elements.  

However, an important point here is that MinaLima has released only three interactive illustrated Harry Potter books:
Harry Potter illustrated hardcovers featuring MinaLima and Jim Kay editions



Yet, that will be it from MinaLima.

The MinaLima design studio announced in August 2024 that they were not commissioned to continue with the fourth book, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire.

So, was that it for the interactive illustrated editions of Harry Potter?

Should we say our goodbyes? And just keep these three on our shelf?

Well, the good news is that Scholastic announced in August 2024 that it would continue to publish illustrated, interactive editions of the Harry Potter books.

Effectively, the publisher passed the interactive illustrated baton — from MinaLima — to Karl James Mountford as the designer and artist for the interactive and illustrated Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (Book 4) published in late 2025.

The new edition features 608 pages with full-color illustrations and eight interactive, paper-engineered, pop-up elements, including the Triwizard maze and the Dark Mark.

The interactive paper-engineered elements were designed by Jess Tice-Gilbert.

2) Jim Kay illustrated editions: who they’re for


To be very precise here I am talking about the Jim Kay Illustrated Editions (Harry Potter books 1–5) and a continuation of the illustrated editions with the Levi Pinfold Illustrated Editions (Harry Potter books 6 and 7).

These are oversized illustrated hardbacks that feel closer to a traditional “illustrated classic.”
 
Harry Potter Jim Kay illustrated hardcover editions published by Bloomsbury
Jim Kay illustrated Bloomsbury
Harry Potter hardcovers

Bloomsbury engaged Jim Kay to illustrate the first five books before he stepped down, and the publisher later announced Levi Pinfold for the final two illustrated editions.

Levi is not a newcomer to the Harry Potter world as he already contributed illustrations to the much-loved Harry Potter Hogwarts House Editions (which I’ll explain next, because people mix them up with “illustrated editions” all the time) and The Harry Potter Wizarding Almanac.


The reasons for his departure included the demanding nature of the work and his personal concern about his wellbeing due to the stress and workload.

The first Levi Pinfold illustrated Harry Potter book — Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince — is currently due for publication in October 2026.
Levi Pinfold illustration from Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
Levi Pinfold artwork from 
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince

Bloomsbury has also shared a sneak peek of Harry Potter peering into the swirling mists of Professor Dumbledore’s Pensieve. 

As we don't have the Pinfold illustrated books around yet, this image serves as an early preview of Levi’s spine-tingling artwork.

And, it does look entrancing! 

A quick detour: Hogwarts House Editions and book sets (easy to mix up)


If you’ve been shopping around, you’ve probably seen “House Editions” (recognizable by their single color motif) and thought: Oh! Are these the Jim Kay illustrated books?

Nope. The Hogwarts House Editions are their own lane. Think of them as house-themed collector/readers. 

So, they are the same full novels, but wrapped in house pride, plus extra house-flavored bonus pages.
Harry Potter Gryffindor House Edition hardcover books by J.K. Rowling
Harry Potter Gryffindor 
House Edition hardcovers (Bloomsbury)

These are the editions where you pick Gryffindor / Slytherin / Ravenclaw / Hufflepuff and the book shows up dressed for the occasion.

These book sets look amazing and they are simply perfect gifts if your kids starts identifying with one of the Hogwarts houses. 

These books, I presume, can significantly reinforce the sense of belonging to the one of the Houses of the Hogwarts reading universe. 

I know it's tough to imagine if you haven't seen them before, but here is what I am talking about:

1. The Gryffindor House edition - in a  red and black design
2. The Slytherin House edition - in a green and black motif 
3. The Ravenclaw House edition - in a blue and black presentation
4. The Hufflepuff House edition - with its distinctive yellow and black design

Fast “don’t-buy-the-wrong-thing” checklist

Edition What it really is What you’re paying for
House Editions The standard novels dressed in house identity Covers, design details, and house bonus pages
Jim Kay (Illustrated Editions) Big illustrated hardbacks with immersive art throughout Major illustration program (feels like an illustrated classic)
MinaLima / Interactive & Illustrated Full-color design + interactive paper engineering Pop-ups / inserts / handling experience
Standard Box Set Plain & practical “reading tool” versions Convenience, portability, and finish-the-series momentum

Practical caution: some House Edition bonus pages can wander into later-series facts. If this is for a first-time reader and you want to avoid accidental spoilers, treat House Editions as a “later” set or a collector set.

Where do House Editions fit in my recommendation?

If your kid loves the idea of “being” a Hogwarts house, House Editions can be a very fun identity-gift. But if your real goal is “these books will be read, carried, and finished,” the standard 1 to 7 box set still wins on pure daily-life usefulness.

3) Standard 1–7 box set (mainstream, not illustrated): who it's for?

Standard is such a boring word.

Imagine referring to the Harry Potter books as we know them as… standard.

More like Gold Standard, puhleeeease!
Scholastic paperback Harry Potter box set showing all seven book spines
Our own Scholastic paperback Harry Potter box set
spine view shows how well read they are!

However, even if you go for standard Harry Potter - you can often see a Special Edition of the standard Harry Potter books raising its head. Read on for more. 

Yes, so basically this is the normal reading edition: full text, practical handling, and you can choose your preferred format. Also, these standard editions also feature lavish jacket artwork and chapter opening illustrations to set the mood for readers.  

If you are a paperback fan, you are in luck - there is choice.

Do you want the standard Harry Potter Paperback 1-7 slipcase or the Brian Selznick designed Harry Potter Paperback 1-7 special edition slipcase

That will be your call, although I have to say I am partial towards Brian Selznick! All his own (non-Harry Potter) books are simply fabulous (remember The Invention of Hugo Cabret or Wonderstruck?) - we have many of them in our home library. And if you already have some, this will be a nice addition to your Selznick collection. 

The Selznick designed Harry Potter Paperback 1-7 slipcase was published in celebration of the 20th anniversary of the publication of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone.  
Bloomsbury hardcover Harry Potter box set showing all seven book spines
Our own Bloomsbury hardcover Harry Potter box set
we always removed the book jackets while reading!

On the other hand, if you are a fan of hardcovers, well - you also have to make a pick. You can get the the standard Harry Potter Hardcover 1-7 slipcase  or one of the previously mentioned Harry Potter Hardback House Editions

If you have ever read one “special edition” and then watched your child sprint ahead into the next book… you already understand why the standard set remains the default winner for many families.

Paperback or standard hardcover, depending on which one you choose. It is not trying to be a deluxe art object. It is trying to be read.

And that “trying to be read” quality turns out to be a very underrated feature.

US vs UK (Philosopher vs Sorcerer): does it matter?

And here I will digress a bit to tell you the story about Harry Potter in our home and what's the difference between a philosopher and a sorcerer.

BTW, you may notice me dropping the names of the Harry Potter publishers Scholastic and Bloomsbury and you may ask yourself, which one is it Read Aloud Dad?

Don't we all know it is Scholastic?

Well, actually, Bloomsbury is the original publisher of the Harry Potter series in the UK, while Scholastic holds the US publication rights.

Who cares one might think.

Well, actually they produce distinct editions featuring different covers, spelling, and, in some cases, altered text tailored for their respective audiences.

For the UK Bloomsbury uses British spelling and terminology (see the name of the first book: Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, “jumpers”).

For the US market, Scholastic uses Americanized spelling and terms (see the name of the first book: Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, “sweaters”, etc).
Bloomsbury paperback Harry Potter box set on bookshelf
Another glance at our Harry Potter bookshelf
 Bloomsbury hardcover Harry Potter box set

To see the full list of changes, just consult this compilation of UK/US edition changes that were made in each book.

Interesting tidbit: JK Rowling apparently regrets yielding to pressure to change the title of her first book for the US market.

Rowling said the change was suggested by Arthur Levine of Scholastic Books as the word “philosopher” was deemed to be a bit of a buzzkill for American children (according to the suits at Scholastic).

There are some real losses in the adaptations of Harry Potter books to adapt them to non-UK audiences.

One of the best examples is that in US editions of Harry Potter, the British term “Sellotape” (and the magical pun “Spellotape”) is replaced with “Scotch tape” or “tape”.

The Spellotape works because Sellotape is a UK brand name for clear adhesive tape. Spellotape is another of those magic tricks JK Rowling prepared for her little readers, too bad it wasn't included in all editions.

Ron Weasley uses Spellotape to repair his wand in Chamber of Secrets.

However, essentially, it does not matter which edition you use. Even when reading a different edition, questions pop up and that means it is a learning moment for your kids.

What do we have at home?

First of all, let me tell you that the Harry Potter book set is a super-hero assistant for every family. A literacy aid, a babysitter and a travel guide in one.

The Harry Potter book set is one of the strongest allies you will have in your literacy journey with your children.

Do not waver. Do not hesitate. Get a full book set, because once they start reading it... there is no stopping.

One book may be finished at midnight (even later from my experience!), the second will be started at a minute past midnight.

The third book will be completed just before lunch, the fourth one will be started right after gobbling down lunch…

Harry Potter books are like a conveyor belt. So make use of it.

The 7-book Scholastic Harry Potter paperback box set contains approximately 4,167 pages in total.

Can you imagine the power that it wields? 
Harry Potter Marauder’s Map showing Hogwarts castle
Our copy of the 
The Marauder’s Map of Hogwarts (folded)

But back to our family, let me tell you the unique situation we had at home.

As I have twins… I knew that one day we would have to deal with the issue of concurrency.

Concurrency, you ask?

Yes, it's the fact of two or more events or circumstances happening or existing at the same time.

Simply put, I knew that one day my baby boy and baby girl would want to read the Harry Potter books at the same time, so what did I decide?

They would both grab Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone and they would start fighting. Or one of them would start reading and the other one would start complaining.

Well, I have to add, this was in the days before the illustrated editions were even available.

Even before my kids were able to read chapter books I took the plunge.

So, I got us a Bloomsbury hardcover set as our main set at home, well it just looked perfect to me.

And then I splurged out on a Scholastic paperback set as a fallback solution that would allow parallel reading by two kids.

Remember: if you have two kids, reading Harry Potter is like travelling to Japan or Peru together. They learn the customs, the lingo, the mannerisms. Nothing reinforces an experience as much as sharing it with someone.
Unfolded Harry Potter Marauder’s Map of Hogwarts
Our own fully unfolded 
Marauder’s Map of Hogwarts

I knew that the only better thing than one Potterhead reader was two Potterhead readers.

So, our family has both sets. And I am happy to report that they were both read in parallel and enjoyed multiple times as you can see by the photographs (the spines of the paperbacks show it most clearly).

We later, as all Potterheads do, expanded our contact surface with the Potter world.

We even got our hands on a real life Marauders Map!

And then we also got the four follow-up books, but more on them later.

The one question that decides everything


Are you buying a reading tool or a keepsake object?

That’s not a snobby question. It’s the practical one.

A reading tool needs to survive backpacks, couch reading, bedtime slumps, and fast page-turning.
A keepsake object needs to feel special, look special, and stay special.

If you buy a keepsake object for a kid who reads like a tornado, you will spend the next year silently trying to protect the book from the child. That is not fun.

And my kids know it. I bought a pop-out book about Alice in Wonderland and kept trying to protect it when they were too young. It is exhausting for everyone.

If you buy a reading tool for a collector expecting a showpiece, the gift will feel flat.

I’ve made the same kind of edition decision in other classics. For example, when I hunted for the best illustrated Peter Pan, my real goal was not “most decorative cover.” It was “best reading experience for a family read-aloud.”

Although I did choose the MinaLima Peter Pan in that case, it was a different story when it came to me picking the best illustrated edition of The Secret Garden. In that case the MinaLima version lost out.

Read-aloud families vs independent readers


Some parents may just say “my kid is 8” as if that answers everything. It doesn’t.

The better question is: are these books going to be read aloud or read independently?

For read-aloud families, illustrations can help in two ways. They can keep attention anchored, and they can create natural pauses for discussion.

But if the book creates too many pauses, it can also wreck the bedtime rhythm.

You know the difference between “one more chapter” and “we are still unfolding the same page.”
Harry Potter Hogwarts House Editions complete set on bookshelf
Another look at the complete Harry Potter
Hogwarts House Editions, all four houses

This is where MinaLima and Jim Kay feel very different in the hand.

With MinaLima, the interactive elements invite hands-on exploration. In reader discussions, people consistently describe them as beautiful and fun, but also the kind of book that makes you stop, flip back, and handle the paper features carefully.

With Jim Kay, the illustrations tend to behave like a companion to the text rather than a separate activity. 
It still slows you down compared to a plain reading edition, but it usually does not turn the book into a “toy-like” experience.

The trade-off is size and weight, which matters more than people think.

For independent readers, the physical book matters even more. A kid who wants to read in bed alone has a different relationship with a book 1 to book 7 paperback or hardcover set than with an oversized illustrated hardback.

One fits naturally into daily life. The other often becomes a “table book,” even if the child loves it.

That is why the standard set keeps winning for so many families. It supports the reading habit effortlessly, anytime and anywhere.

And when it comes to reading 4,000+ pages of Harry Potter, you will find out that anytime and anywhere matter more than you think.

Anytime and anywhere mean literally that. Morning and night, meal time and commute journey, summer beach and doctor's office, school recess and winter holiday…

You will not be able to predict where and when… because it’s going to be everywhere and all the time. These books do not let the reader out of their tentacles!

Illustration density and what it does to the story


This is the part where people argue online, but the truth is simpler.

MinaLima is not just “more pictures.” It is a full design world. The pages often feel like curated artifacts from inside the story.
That is why collectors love it, and it’s also why some parents describe it as a slower read.

Jim Kay illustrations aim for atmosphere and interpretation. When people praise the Jim Kay editions, they often describe them as immersive and emotional, like the art is showing you how the story feels.
When people criticize them, it is rarely the art. It is the sheer bulk and the practical reading ergonomics.

The standard set, of course, is pure text. That is not a downgrade. For many kids, it is exactly what allows them to fall into the story and keep going.

If you want a good mental model: MinaLima tends to add “experience” as a layer on top of reading. Jim Kay tends to add “vision” as a layer on top of reading. The standard set is just reading.

Shelf presence and gift impact

Let’s talk about the emotional side, because people pretend it doesn’t matter, then buy with their eyes anyway. Yeah, Read Aloud Dad is guilty! :-)

MinaLima wins the instant “wow” moment for early books. It looks and feels like a premium gift object, and the interactivity gives the recipient something to do immediately.
This is why flip-through videos are so persuasive.

Just glance at this fantastic flip-through video of the MinaLima book 1


Meanwhile, Jim Kay wins the “classic deluxe” presence. It feels like the illustrated classics many of us grew up admiring, but applied to Harry Potter.

A standard 1–7 box set has a very special gift message to the child.

It says: I am giving you the whole story. That lands extremely well for many families, especially if the child is at the age where they want to binge-read.

But wait a moment. Please be aware of the impact of this present on your child.

Do not insist that they read all of them. Some may be overwhelmed and some may be even be afraid of tackling such a load of written material. They might keep their concerns to themselves. 

These are big books. A book set is a present, not homework.

So - rule number 1 is - no pressure! Not even hints or suggestions. 

Let it sit in your home for some weeks, months or years. The time will come.

Just treat is as the present it is. Your confidence that your kid will be able to tackle them will inspire your child.

When you feel your kid might be ready, you could even start a read aloud session for the first chapter of the first book.
Harry Potter A History of Magic Bloomsbury hardcover book
Another part of our Harry Potter collection
Harry Potter: A History of Magic is the official book
of the record-breaking British Library exhibition

Then continue… slowly letting the first book drag you in… together.

And J.K. Rowling's magic will do its trick.

If you’re buying for someone who already loves collections and boxed sets, I have a few posts where I lean into the same gift logic.

A boxed set is often not about “having books.” It’s about the feeling of completeness.


Another full book set worth having and which works as a terrific read aloud set is The Complete Wreck. Find out why I nearly said “No” to A Series of Unfortunate Events.

That same psychology that pushed me to get those sets is why the standard Potter box set is such a safe gift to a child.

The clear recommendation


Overall winner for most families: the standard 1–7 box set.

If your main goal is, “These books will get read,” the standard set is better because it is complete, practical, and habit-friendly.

It is the least likely to create a weird dynamic where the child wants the story but the adult is anxious about the book.

It is also the best option when the kid turns into a fast reader overnight, which happens more often than we expect.

Best for bedtime read-aloud families: the Jim Kay illustrated editions (continued by Levi Pinfold)

If your household is doing the read-aloud thing seriously, Jim Kay can be a great fit because it gives you rich visuals without constantly turning reading into a hands-on activity.

The warning is physical: these books are large. If your read-aloud sessions happen mostly in bed, you may prefer reading at a table or propping the book up.

If you’re still building the routine, I have a practical “get the read-aloud train moving” post (8 Ways to Start the Read Aloud Train) that fits naturally with this decision, because the edition is only half the story and the habit is the other half.

Best for collectors and display: MinaLima Books 1-3, followed by the Karl James Mountford version of Book 4+.

MinaLima is best when you want the recipient to open the book and feel like they just walked into a curated Harry Potter world. It is premium, it is playful, and it rewards slow browsing.


Finally, here is a short FAQ (that I compiled based on buyer worries):

Are MinaLima editions abridged?

They are sold as full-text editions with added illustrations and interactive elements.

Why do people say the illustrated hardbacks are “hard to read in bed”?

Because of size and weight. That’s not about the story, it’s about ergonomics. Flip-through videos make this obvious quickly.

Are interactive, illustrated books too delicate for kids?

They include interactive parts, which many readers treat more carefully than standard hardbacks. If the child is rough on books, it is wise to treat MinaLima as a “together book” at first.

If I can only buy one deluxe illustrated volume as a gift, which one?

If you want the most immediate “magic object” reaction, MinaLima Book 1 is a strong choice.
If you want classic illustrated-book deluxe without pop-ups, Jim Kay Book 1 is a strong choice.

What if the recipient is likely to binge-read the whole series?

Buy the standard book 1-7 set. That’s what it is for. You can't go wrong!

What if I care about matching spines and a unified shelf look?

Be cautious with both premium lines. There are transitions within the illustrated ecosystem (artist changes, different series lines). Collectors discuss this exact frustration.

Finished books 1-7? What to read next


We finished books 1 to 7. Is there any more Harry Potter to read?

If you finished Harry Potter books 1-7, you finished the main, core story. There isn’t an “eighth novel” that simply continues right where Book 7 ends in the same format and voice.

We do have the following books that continue the Harry Potter world, but it is best if you know exactly what do they encompass. 

1. Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, parts one and two (be aware that this is play script, not a normal novel)

Essentially, this is the closest thing to “more story with Harry” in terms of timeline, because it’s set years later with the next generation at Hogwarts.
Harry Potter and the Cursed Child Special Rehearsal Edition cover
Harry Potter and the Cursed Child 


It is written as a stage play script, meaning you read dialogue and stage directions, not a standard narrative. If your reader loves novels, this can feel strange at first. If your reader enjoys theatre, it can feel fast and vivid.

The story centers on Albus Severus Potter (Harry’s son) and his friendship with Scorpius Malfoy (Draco’s son).

A lot of the emotional weight is about family expectations, father-son tension, and trying to live up to a famous name.

There is a big plot engine involving time-turning and revisiting or twisting events that Potter fans already know.

If you are reading as a family, it often works best when treated as a special event read.

You can even read parts aloud with different voices, because it’s built for performance.

If your child’s favorite part of Harry Potter was the steady “one chapter leads to the next” novel flow, this won’t feel the same.

If your child likes big swings, big reveals, and is curious about “what happens later,” it can be exciting.

2. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (the original “textbook” companion, an illustrated edition exists!) - this book is often sold together with Quidditch Through the Ages and The Tales of Beetle the Bard (see below) as part of the Hogwarts Library set. 
Our Hogwarts Library Fantastic Beasts illustrated edition by J.K. Rowling
Our own Hogwarts Library:
           Fantastic Beasts illustrated edition




So what is this book?

It is a “Hogwarts Library” style book that exists inside the Potter/Hogwarts world. 

Just ask your kid, he/she will know!

It reads like a field guide written by a wizarding expert (Newt Scamander), with short entries about magical creatures.

Each creature entry is basically “name, classification, what it does, and why it matters,” and it’s fun because you recognize many creatures from the series.

It is very easy to browse rather than read straight through. That makes it a good “post-series” book when a child wants Potter feelings without committing to another long storyline.

If your reader loves the creatures and the strange corners of the wizarding world, this is a satisfying “more Potter without more plot” choice.

3. Quidditch Through the Ages (wizard sports history, written like a real in-world book, also has illustrated edition!)

This is for the kid who finished the series and kept talking about Quidditch rules, teams, and matches.
Hogwarts Library Harry Potter books with Hermione Funko Pop figure and Marauder's Map in background
Partial view of our Harry Potter bookshelf
with with Hermione Granger Funko Pop
a set of the Hogwarts Library books
and a copy of the Marauder's Map! 

It reads like an in-world nonfiction book about Quidditch, almost like a sports history mixed with rulebook material.

Contains sections on how Quidditch developed, changes in rules over time, broom evolution, and the kind of odd historical trivia that makes the wizarding world feel real.

It’s more fun than it sounds because it has that “this is what Hogwarts students would actually read” vibe.

4. The Tales of Beedle the Bard (wizard fairy tales + commentary, also has a nice illustrated edition)

This is the book that feels the most like a “home artifact” from inside the wizarding world.

Essentially, it's a handful of short wizard fairy tales, with their own morals, odd twists, and old-story energy.

The big draw is that these aren’t just random stories. In the original series, one tale (“The Tale of the Three Brothers”) connects directly to a major concept in Book 7.

Many editions include commentary “as if” by a character in-world, which makes it feel like you’re reading something that belongs on a wizard family shelf.

This is a great choice if your reader likes the folklore feeling in fantasy, or if you want something you can read aloud in one sitting, one story at a time.

I can't believe I made it to here. This was a pretty big effort, but I hope this little guide will assist some of you in your quest to send your little readers and listeners to Hogwarts!

PS if you are wondering about that little Hermione Granger doll from our shelf, it's part of the Funko Pop collection of Harry Potter characters. They have different sets and individual figurines and they make perfect gifts to our young readers. 

Thanks for your company!

Happy reading,

Read Aloud Dad

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