Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
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Use of misdirection in Harry Potter?
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Although the Halfblood Prince might have been the most shocking.
It seems like Rowling's characters are never who you think they are.

Originally, I suspected he was a Death Eater because Winky said he was a "bad man", but given how he treated the Weasley twins and the goblins, he revealed himself to be a different kind of scum than I thought he was. That was a nice twist.



As for more plot twists like that in the 5, 6, and 7th one:
(view spoiler)


Upon first reading it as a child though, I remember freaking out over "Tom Marvelo Riddle" rearranging into "I am Lord Voldemort."
That seemed like the most clever thing my 13 year old mind had ever seen in my life, lol.
The extent to Snape's love for Lily was probably the biggest shocker of the series for me though, particularly reading Deathly Hallows for the first time. I was stunned.

Upon first reading it as a child though, I remember freaking out over "Tom Marvelo Riddle" rearranging into "I am Lord Voldemort."
That ..."
Haha I thought the same thing when I first read the series!! I thought the Tom Marvolo Riddle anagram was the most genius thing.
I was also really amazed when Harry realized that the diadem was the "crown" on the wig he saw in the Room of Requirement in Half-Blood Prince. I just thought it was so amazing that something so casually mentioned in one book was so important in another.

I totally agree. Maybe it´s not the best twist, but when I read it, at 8/9 years old, it blew my mind!
The whole book was funny and terrifying at the same time.
Ginny "kidnapping herself", being unwillingly behind every petrification, Tom revealing his true identity, and then Fawkes!!
It was just too perfect for my little unexperienced mind.

I always liked the books because they don't take themselves too seriously, but still have a sense of gravity. Other YA book seem to do only one or the other.

It's when something that you believed form the beginning gets turned on its head at the end.
I think J. K. Rowling understood that and did it deliberately.

And yeah the casual mentions like Maria says. The "heavy locket" in Order of the Phoenix before we all were introduced to horcruxes in Half-Blood or the mention of "Peverell" by Marvolo Gaunt before we got introduced to the deathly hallows.
what never ceases to amaze me is the complexity of all the characters in the books. Nobody is all black or white (except maybe for Voldemort himself).
Snape killing Dumbledore was probably the biggest shock throughout all the books, but there are plenty to chose from!
Snape killing Dumbledore was probably the biggest shock throughout all the books, but there are plenty to chose from!
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It was Quirrell, not Snape.
It was Riddle, not Hagrid.
It was Pettigrew, not Sirius.
It was an imposter, not Mad Eye.
What do you think are some of the cleverest plot twists and why?
Did you notice any patterns?