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Harry Potter: A History of Magic
- An Audio Documentary
- Narrated by: Natalie Dormer
- Series: Wizarding World, Wizarding World
- Length: 11 hrs and 39 mins
- Unabridged Audiobook
- Categories: Children's Audiobooks, Fairy Tales, Folk Tales & Myths
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Listen to clips from this book
Summary
The history of magic is as long as time and as wide as the world. In every culture, in every age, in every place and, probably, in every heart, there is magic.
Harry Potter: A History of Magic reveals some of the hidden stories behind real-world magic and explores some of J.K. Rowling's magical inventions alongside their folkloric, cultural and historical forebears.
Narrator Natalie Dormer and a host of experts will take you on an audio journey like no other; from ancient China, to a 14th-century apothecary's shop, on to the Salem witch trials and beyond. They delve into a rich body of writings about magic and explore intriguing artefacts to bring to life deep-rooted ideas of mysticism from around the world.
Along the way, you can listen for handy tips on how to capture a basilisk, make yourself invisible or create your very own philosopher's stone. You'll hear about the dozens of drafts and drawings that went into J.K. Rowling's writing process and enjoy exclusive interviews with Jim Dale, Stephen Fry and illustrator Jim Kay, who all share their experiences of working on these incredible stories.
The extraordinary and thought-provoking tales in this audiobook are perfect for anyone who wants to know a little more about magic and the wizarding world.
Music composed by Patrick Neil Doyle
Sound effects licensed from ProSound Effects
A message from Natalie Dormer
Natalie Dormer invites you to take an audio journey through the history of real-life magic.More from the same
What listeners say about Harry Potter: A History of Magic
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Sarah
- 04-10-18
Better as a documentary - read review to the end
I pre-ordered this instantly without really checking to see what the book was about, purely because Natalie Dormer is one of my favourite actresses who did an amazing job narrating the Game of Thrones History and Lore animated shorts. At first it felt like I was listening to a podcast, Natalie being our wonderful host with guest interview excerpts ranging from academics and historians to Potter illustrator Jim Kay and narrators Jim Dale and Stephen Fry.
Initially it was interesting listening to the behind the scenes tidbits about how the world of Harry Potter came into being, but as time went on the discussion shifted to the real life history of magic, based around the British Library exhibit of the same name, it felt a little frustrating. The chapters are rather quaintly divided into Hogwarts subjects like herbology, divination, potions, magical creatures, dark arts etc... but unless there is some kind of online PDF accompaniment to go with this audiobook to display the art and artefacts that are being discussed at length, something that you're able to refer back to even after completing the audiobook, then this book is probably better enjoyed in the traditional book format or - better yet - as a visual documentary. There's a lot lost in the audio-only experience and unless you're idly listening to the book and able to stop and Google search the illustrations and images that are being described - then the whole experience feels very lacking.
Another massive frustration was the fluctuating quality of audio when it flits between the narrator and guests who clearly did not record their interviews in the best settings with the best audio equipment. Having to shoot the volume up and strain to hear someone then suddenly fumble to turn the volume back down is the. most. annoying. thing. The whole point of an audiobook for me is to listen to something hands-free! The directors and producers of this audiobook clearly made enough of an effort to include musical interludes and effects in and between chapters, a basic thing like VOLUME should have been addressed long before that to make the listening experience comfortable.
Overall, so far at least, I'm enjoying Natalie's narration and hopefully she will do more audiobooks after this. The historical tidbits are interesting and probably a good launch pad to delve into the stories and subject matter that interest you. But it really would have been better as a documentary.
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EDIT: I've just done my research and found that this actually WAS a documentary, it aired on the BBC on the 28th October 2017 and focused on the Harry Potter: A History of Magic Exhibition which ran from 20/10/2017 to 28/02/18. It's on Youtube to view. Of course the documentary was only an hour long, so they've fleshed it out using the same interviews and used the audio samples from Jim Dale and Stephen Fry, then engaged the services of Natalie Dormer in to stitch it all together. Knowing this, and the fact that a lot of people will have purchased the hard copy of the book after listening to all the descriptions of images we can't actually see... this audiobook sniffs suspiciously like a cash grab. And from the people who gave us The Cursed Child and seemingly endless tiresome cinematic adaptions of Fantastic Beasts, I'm not even surprised.
60 people found this helpful
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- Amazon Customer
- 04-10-18
Need illustrations to make it interesting
First audio book I have needed pictures to enjoy... Have had to order the paper book to see what narrators & experts are talking about. I love audio books & have a really good imagination, but not fun to listen to when the whole point is what the subject matter (characters, places, creatures, artifacts) looks like. Shame, as narration & content are good. Maybe should have come with a link to the pictures from the book???
35 people found this helpful
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- Neil McCann
- 28-02-19
Not what it says on the Tin
Very simply I was looking for a book on magic. I got a commentary on Harry Potter which offered no exploration on magic itself but Lots on Harry P and it's commercial Entourage.
4 people found this helpful
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- ashley
- 07-10-18
Not what i expected at all
This is not what i expected at all. Shame they didnt just write a copy of the actual book from the series. Like a comprehensive and complete stories from the history and lore of the harry potter world
8 people found this helpful
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- Amazon Customer
- 11-10-18
very enjoyable
I really enjoyed this book, very interesting. the experts were great and at times very amusing.
Judging from previous reviews people haven't been reading the summary properly, I don't know about anyone else but having only one credit per month makes me very picky about what I listen to so I always read the summary, listen to the clip and watch any promotional videos. This was exactly as advertised for me, an exploration into the real life stories and history of magic that have inspired Harry Potter.
11 people found this helpful
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- Mr. G. Mitchell
- 05-10-18
little bit misleading title
First off, maybe I misunderstood what this was going to be about from the description and interpreted it the way I wanted to. It's not a story set in the Harry Potter world, it is not a story filling in more details about Magic used in Harry Potter.
It's a book that starts off about the history of the books of Harry Potter which is set in a magical world, then talks about magic through the age of the real world with quotes from the books stuck in for some random reason.
If you want that, then this is the book for you, I agree with other reviews that it needs images as parts of narrative is describing a picture that's on a page in front of the reader.
Honestly it's almost like they've stuck the word "Harry Potter" on the title, added in some text about the books to pad out a book which seems to be interviews with people about magic that would be 6hours without the HP stuff.
34 people found this helpful
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- Matt
- 30-11-18
Fabulous journey through centuries of magic
A totally absorbing book, rich with stories about all kinds of magical objects. Especially enjoyed the section unpicking the Ripley scrolls, and the various chats with recent Harry Potter illustrators about where they draw inspiration.
2 people found this helpful
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- Veberley
- 14-10-18
Addictive and facinating!!!
I absolutely love this book, not only about Harry Potter but adding real historic events, people and even historical Kings etc. I am obsessed with history especially Tudor history, I Loved the hints of tudor history in here AND the cherry on the top this audio book is narrated by Natalie Dormer who played an amazing Anne Boleyn in The Tudors series!!! LOVE LOVE LOVE this book!!!! HIGHLY recommended!!!!!!
10 people found this helpful
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- Sean Dempsey
- 04-10-18
A History of Harry Potter (publishing)
Should’ve been titled the above. Had high hopes for this, but it’s Incredibly dull the first few hours. If you want a behind the scenes look at the publishing of Harry Potter, this is the book for you
19 people found this helpful
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- Janka Carlisle
- 09-11-18
Very interesting
Quite in-depth non-fictional book. I would recommend but a book to dip into or you may get overloaded..
1 person found this helpful
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- Kingsley
- 08-10-18
Springboard to a history of our Muggle world
Is this for a fan of Harry Potter? Maybe. Is it for a fan of Harry Potter who is also interested in the stranger side of world history? Definitely.
The book is not exactly about HP, but uses the books as a spring board to talk about other things – mostly our real world history.
It is a bit of Making of HP, filled with interviews from those involved in the book such as artists who drew the pictures and covers, and those that recorded the audiobooks, but that isn’t really the focus of the book. These are placed in between the main focus of the book: history.
The book is really a history of ‘magic’ in our muggle world. So not talking about the ‘in universe’ magic, but looking at real life events. It uses HP to guide the discussion of our history, and also uses real world histories to give insight into how JKR wrote the books and incorporated real items, Latin roots, and history into her books. One example is 14th century apothecaries (potions masters) and what they used to create ‘magic’. They talk to experts on the apothecaries and discuss some of the ingredients they used, and what for. Unicorns horn and narwhal horn are discussed, for example. Some of the potions are shown to be completely useless, while others are discussed as actually having some good medical effects.
The book uses each of the classes students take at Hogwarts as a launching board to discuss the history and beliefs associated with this teachings.
A few other things (not an exhaustive list) discussed and expanded on:
• Witch trials (the history of them, and discussions on how our view and tropes of witches developed – cauldrons, brooms etc.)
• Magical creatures (real life unicorns and a real history of ‘unicorn’ hunting – although not quite what we image unicorns to be. Why are familiars always Owls, toads and cats?)
• Charms and words like ‘abracadabra’, looking at where the words developed
• Herbology (similar to magical creatures, but looking at strange things people have used plants for)
• Other classes taken at Hogwarts – divination, astronomy, defense against the dark arts etc.
• The real Nicholas Flemmel, Philosopher's stone
There is a lot of ‘museum directors’ interviewed in this, filling out the histories, and discussions with people from British Libraries.
There isn’t a whole lot of ‘new’ information here, but it is a collected and nicely packaged history, with lots of interviews and excerpts from the HP audiobooks. There is discussions of drawings or storyboards – either stuff JKR did while putting her story together or of official images in the were in the books, which would work much better for an ebook or physical version. An inclusion of a PDF with the discussed images would have been really nice, as without them you can be a little lost.
Natalie Dormer does the main narration, around the interviews, putting them in context of the larger picture. She does really great with this. Very enjoyable to listen to, well paced and clear while keeping your attention. The interviews are generally really good. Occasionally there is an interview where the audio quality is lower but generally it is high quality.
95 people found this helpful
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- Abuzz Designs
- 01-12-18
Why is there no PDF?
There are so many things described that are hard to picture, especially since they may be one of a kind pieces. Knowing it was a walk through the exhibit, I expected there to be a pdf to help those of us who may never make it to the museum to see it. Natalie Dormer was an excellent narrator, a few of the guest speakers were so soft spoken that at times they were hard to hear even while increasing the volume.
I enjoyed the book but was bummed that there weren't any pdfs to see some of the things that were described.
155 people found this helpful
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- A. Tennant
- 08-10-18
buy a paper copy
this book is not a very good audio experience- art work and visuals are constantly referenced, and while they are well described, the lack of their experience really makes a negative impact on enjoyment.
81 people found this helpful
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- fisherguy446
- 19-10-18
Brilliant
This book is really fantastic. Don’t be fooled by the title as this is a nonfiction book examining both the Harry Potter series and the origins of many of the mythological creatures and ideas presented. That being said this is well worth the 12 hour listen. If you have the physical copy of the book, you should know that this covers a vast amount of information that the books do not. There are tons of interviews with everyone involved with the project of creating the museum exhibits. There are also fascinating and revealing interviews with many of the people involved with making the books, including: both the American and the British audiobook Harry Potter narrators, the illustrator of the illustrated editions, the publishers in both America and Britain, and many others. In summary, I cannot emphasize enough how much I enjoyed this and would absolutely recommend it to anyone looking to gain more insight on the world of Harry Potter.
86 people found this helpful
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- Richard
- 05-12-18
horrible audio leveling.
the audio was way to unsteady hard to hear what the people were saying half the time.
34 people found this helpful
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- S. L. Christiansen
- 19-12-18
Horrible Production
One voice was loud and very clear. Another person was in a space with lots of echoes. There were 3 people that were recorded at a low volume and they were impossible for me to understand while I was driving. And on top of all that the primary narrator was constantly pausing when there was obviously neither a period nor a comma in the sentence being written. I was completely disappointed!!!!!
10 people found this helpful
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- SCM
- 27-11-18
Very disappointing
I've rarely been let down by a book as much as this one. It's not a Harry Potter Book (I didn't expect an HP fiction book, you'll see what I mean in my description), it's not even living within the Harry Potter world, it's an amalgam of academics and their studies trying, seemingly desperately to connect them to Harry Potter. They try their hardest to make connections and all too often they're taking a lot of effort into pounding a proverbial round peg into an academic square hole (pun intended). I consider myself a deep dive Harry Potter fan, who loves minutia, but this content is, I hate to say, mostly boring, even to me. To top off the indignation, whoever produced the audio portion did a terrible job in modulating the volumes. There are far too many times where an audible clear spoken voice gives way to an inaudible one so listening to this book in any environment other than a library is annoying in that large swaths of dialogue are missed due to drops in volume resulting in the need to "rewind" and raise the volume to hear what was missed, then of course stopping to lower it as the louder person starts to speak. Yes, some people speak less loudly and less clearly than others, but the volume portion can be compensated for by someone who cares to do so. I have listened to hundreds of audiobooks, and rarely do I consider asking for the Audible refund offer to be honored, I considered it for this one.
38 people found this helpful
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- Toni Ann Winninger
- 22-10-18
Variable presentation hard to hear some
The material is fascinating but the presenters are uneven, As the various speakers changed I found I frequently had to change the volume in order to hear them. There was very little moderation in the recording for the soft spoken and I had to replay parts in order to understand them which became very annoying. Almost stopped listening numerous times even though I wanted to hear the material.
8 people found this helpful
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- Tasha
- 04-10-18
An enjoyable making-of documentary of sorts
An enjoyable making-of documentary of sorts in the vein of the Lord of the Rings behind the scenes documentaries, but in audio form. Accompanying images of the historical objects often referenced would make for a more complete experience. This is not a in-universe Hogworts textbook. It includes insights from illustrators, voice actors, historians, etc into the making of the Harry Potter Universe as well as historical accounts of magic, science and medicine.
61 people found this helpful
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- N.L. Lewis
- 04-10-18
Unfortunately very boring, but great narration
If you can get past the first hours unbelievably boring rehash of the original books and how they were written, it gets better. If you are looking for a Harry Potter or Magical Creatures type story, you will be largely disappointed. This is the book version of the behind the scenes stuff on most movies that barely anyone watches.
The saving grace is the great narration from Ms. Dormer and the original narrators, the rest is unfortunate.
This seems like a sad money grab “behind the scenes” audiobook that is really just a boring historical description of a couple of museum events with historical artifacts, followed by a mixing of historical and magical anecdotes.
If you do like the director narration on movies, than this book will be great for you.
66 people found this helpful