Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone comes to life as never before in this collectible deluxe pop-up edition. This lavish visual retelling includes six of the key scenes from this beloved saga and each one is brought to life with exciting pop-ups, pull-tabs, and creative 3-D engineering. With new full-color illustrations, and page after page of interactive fun, fans of all ages can relive the magical adventures of Harry Potter!
A Harry Potter Pop-Up Book. This one is The Sorcerer's Stone and it's quite well done, although there aren't any words. The pages are quite sturdy but there is only one tab per page on which to pull in order to initiate movement. Still it's enjoyable to look through and relive the story. Coincidentally I'm rereading the entire series at present. And just finished The Scorerer's Stone and am near the end of book 2, Chamber of Secrets. Reading the books on #audio. #jimdale is terrific #itnevergetsold #harrypotter #harrypotterandthesorcerersstone #popupbook #intervisualbooks For more book reviews follow me on Instagram #emptynestreader and on Goodreads #bookstagram #bookstagrammer #bookstagramalabama #bookstagrammichigan #bookreview #bookreviewer #bookrecommendations #readingbringsjoy #whatimreading #booksilove #goodreadschallenge #igbooks #aprilbooks #bookfetish #5starread #ebooks #audiobooks #emptynestreaderaudiobooks🎧
My classroom library received this as a gift recently. We read Year 1 at the beginning of the school year and when this appeared (magically!) on our classroom doorstep, we were thrilled. The kids really enjoyed looking through the book and reminiscing about Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone. This is an excellent pop-up book, with lots of fun movements and tabs. My class really enjoyed this pop-up (as did I).
It is NOT the same as the book. It is the pop up book and doesn't even have any words. As nifty as a book it is, it is not the same as other editions which tell the story containing hundreds of pages.
The artwork is okay; it is in the style of the Mary GrandPre's pastels, but not the same artist, and not as charming. The moving parts were kind of neat, and it was pleasantly surprising that the library edition I borrowed still worked.
Very well put-together, particularly McGonagall shifting into her cat form on the first page and the way the boat rolls over the waves on the lake page.