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Wanderings with Werewolves

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Wanderings with Werewolves is one of the books written by Gilderoy Lockhart . It is a required textbook for the second year; as such, it cannot be gifted. It can be purchased at Flourish and Blotts for five Galleons .

From the Story [ ]

" Wanderings with Werewolves by Gilderoy Lockhart is one of the books Lockhart assigns to students in his Defence Against the Dark Arts classes."

Description [ ]

"Learn about Gilderoy Lockhart’s experiences of werewolves, and his favourite birthday gift."

See also [ ]

  • Wanderings with Werewolves on the Harry Potter Wiki
  • Harry Potter
  • Books by Gilderoy Lockhart
  • Articles related to werewolves

Wanderings with Werewolves

Appearances [ ].

  • Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (First appearance)
  • Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (film) (Disc 2) (Mentioned only) (Danish version only)
  • Harry Potter
  • 1 Tom Riddle
  • 2 Triwizard Tournament
  • 3 Regulus Black

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Wanderings with werewolves, contributor.

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Wanderings with Werewolves

Wanderings with Werewolves is a book written by Gilderoy Lockhart . It likely includes the story of the Wagga Wagga werewolf . Lockhart is a fraud who stole the story off an Armenian warlock before erasing their memory. [1]

In chapter 12, Lockhart writes that he hopes the wizarding and Muggle worlds will eventually live in harmony together. [2]

When he taught Defence Against the Dark Arts , he asked every student to bring a copy of the book to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry . Harry Potter was given the book for free when Lockhart saw him at a book signing but he gave the book to Ginevra Weasley . [3]

Notes and sources [ ]

  • ↑ Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets , Chapter 10
  • ↑ Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets , Chapter 6
  • ↑ Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets , Chapter 4

wanderings with werewolves

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Wanderings With Werewolves

Lockhart's published work wandering with werewolves wrote by Corin

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wanderings with werewolves

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Wan wanderings with werewolves, about the author..

Based on a book from JK Rowling's book Harry Potter but it hasn't been made.She has some of the rights to this book but Corin Mcdonnell is the proud writer and came up with the things that happen in this story.

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What “Wandering with Werewolves” Could Reveal: A Literary Expedition

Submitted by: WaggaWaggaWerewolf

What "Wandering with Werewolves" Could Reveal: A Literary Expedition By WaggaWaggaWerewolf

Today's libraries organise and provide to patrons not only books, but also magazines, newspapers, videos, DVDs, access to the Internet, and various online databases. Your local librarian may advise about Internet use, dabble with USBs, iPods, blogs, wikis, and much else, as well as training clients in how to find information through the library catalogue or online databases. Harry, Ron, and Hermione were frequent users of Hogwarts library, not only to complete the homework they had to do, but also to research their problems. Would the trio have agreed that Muggle librarians, as a rule, would be much easier to consult than the ferocious and unhelpful Madame Pince? Or had they unwittingly discovered something important about information retrieval, without Madame Pince's help, that real-life students could find useful?

Throughout their adventures, especially in searching out and destroying Voldemort's Horcruxes, the trio does follow many of the steps a librarian could have advised them to take in solving their problems, completing their tasks successfully, and using the resources available to them in Hogwarts library and elsewhere, thus showing their competence at the sort of research demanded of real life students. The problem must first be defined, and then the research can begin. The steps of research are: (1) gathering information, (2) checking the reliability of sources, (3) sifting through the facts to find out which ones shed light on the problem, (4) planning what strategy to use, (5) ensuring the researcher has the full story, (6) determining what is the best information, and (7) applying that information to solving the problem at hand.

Why, Then, Is Hogwarts' Library Important?

Wizards or not, ordinary people do follow such steps, whether finding a suitable plumber, researching information for a university research paper, or uncovering who Nicholas Flamel is. And even though they might be wizards, Hogwarts students still need access to a great array of extra information, in addition to their normal textbooks, merely to understand their lessons and complete assignments. As well, Ron, Hermione, and Harry perpetually use whatever resources are available in the Hogwarts library for numerous extra-curricular interests, such as to identify the Chamber of Secrets and the monster within it, to research ways to save Buckbeak, to succeed at the Triwizard Tournament tasks, or, finally, to find out who R.A.B is and what Horcruxes are and how they can be destroyed.

Because school textbooks are not sufficient for complete research, Hermione and her two friends are compelled to hunt the library for answers. Well might J.K. Rowling apologise for Madame Pince when attending last year's Harry, Carrie, and Garp event in New York. She said:

I thought you were going to attack me for Madam Pince and I would like to apologize for you and any other librarians (crowd laughs) present here today and my get-out clause is always if they'd had a pleasant, helpful librarian, half my plots would be gone. 'Cause the answer invariably is in a book but Hermione has to go and find it. If they'd had a good librarian, that would have been that problem solved. So, sorry. 1

And the answer, as Jo mentioned, is invariably in a book. Often enough, throughout the books, the trio's main problems are simply to keep abreast of their quite extensive homework and to pass their OWLs. But repeatedly, like real-life librarians and researchers, Harry, Ron, and Hermione need to consult Hogwarts library ’ and other sources ’ to find out information about other matters. In following their story, students can learn much about what steps to undertake while researching.

Defining the Problem

Albus Dumbledore defines Harry's main problem throughout the series of seven books. Harry unexpectedly survives Voldemort's murder of his parents, and consequently his aunt and uncle are most reluctantly obliged to house him for his own protection. When he eventually arrives at Hogwarts, Harry finds that he is famous for defeating this Dark wizard. However, he also finds that such fame is a double-edged sword, which neither protects him against animosity nor guarantees him fair rewards for hard work, especially as the Dark Lord plots his regeneration to coincide with the ending of the Triwizard Tournament. Voldemort survived the rebounded Killing Curse, thanks to the seven Horcruxes he made, trophies made evil by encasing bits of his soul, ripped from himself by murders he committed. Harry's destiny, as the child mentioned in a prophecy, is to defeat this Dark wizard, if he can.

Step One: Gathering Information

Harry's adventures start at Number Four Privet Drive in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone when his first Hogwarts letter prompts the horrified Dursleys to allow him a room to himself, previously Dudley's playroom. There, he finds, "other shelves were full of books. They were the only things in the room that looked as though they had never been touched." 2

What a difference to the trio's thorough use of books, whether library books like Notable Magical Names of Our Time 3 or textbooks like Arsenius Jigger's Magical Drafts and Potions , 4 which Severus Snape expects Harry to have digested before his first Potions lesson at Hogwarts! Surely Dudley's own unread books are a valuable resource which, if consulted, would be a useful contribution to anyone's future school success?

When Hagrid sweeps Harry away to acquire his school items, he also retrieves a package from a Gringott's vault. Barely hours later, as Harry learns from a newspaper article, someone breaks into Gringotts to steal that package. Much of the story of the Philosopher's Stone concerns what the Stone is, why it has been transferred to Hogwarts, what its association with Nicholas Flamel, a historic figure, is, and how Flamel is connected to Dumbledore, Hogwarts' headmaster.

But seek as they might, the trio cannot readily find information identifying Nicholas Flamel or what he is famous for in the library collection, even in the Restricted Section, which contains books that scream if touched. Yet during a midnight visit to the library Harry comes across the Mirror of Erised, where the Philosopher's Stone is later hidden. The necessary information is eventually found on the back of a chocolate frog card featuring Dumbledore, which allows Hermione to trace Nicholas Flamel in a heavy tome she has borrowed from the library "for a bit of light reading." 5 But those midnight adventures with the Mirror of Erised also give Harry valuable insights into how to stop Quirrell's attempts to get the Philosopher's Stone.

After all, surviving the maze to stop the Philosopher's Stone being stolen involves other resources besides library items. Hagrid inadvertently reveals what would quiet Fluffy, the three-headed dog who guards the Hogwarts corridor which leads to the Philosopher's Stone. In addition, Hermione's studious habits, Harry's talents as a Quidditch seeker, and Ron's chess abilities help them to traverse the maze only to find that Voldemort, on the back of Quirrell's head, was the culprit trying to steal the Philosopher's Stone.

Step Two: Checking the Reliability of Sources

Information comes in all sorts of ways. Eyewitness accounts of events are often good primary sources, like Aragog's vouching for Hagrid's innocence, or what information Moaning Myrtle can reveal about the Heir of Slytherin. Additionally, without the logs, diaries, and autobiographies of famous explorers, much of world history would remain unknown. Gilderoy Lockhart's autobiographical bestiaries, like Wanderings with Werewolves , should have been just as informative as these interviews, or as helpful as his volume of household hints that Molly Weasley still refers to three years later. 6

But diaries and autobiographies can be deceptive, not for what they contain, but for what they omit. Like ancient kings who left accounts of their victories, while glossing over defeats, writers like Gilderoy Lockhart only advertise what they want the world to see and believe, while hiding the truth, which, in this case, is claiming credit for other people's achievements and memories, passing them off as his own in his books. Nor is he the only one to use memory charms, to claim credit or to deflect blame, in Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets . Tellingly, the diary Lucius Malfoy puts amongst Ginny's school books in Flourish and Blotts is the first of Tom Riddle's Horcruxes for Harry to deal with, and the one which proves the existence of others.

When Ginny picks up this seemingly unused second hand diary, she at first thinks she has "a friend [she] can carry round in [her] pocket' 7 to which she can confide her loneliness and troubles as a new student at Hogwarts, with teasing older brothers, one of whom is an intimidating school prefect. 8 But the diary is dangerous, containing a piece of Tom Riddle's soul, which talks back to Ginny, possessing her to open the Chamber of Secrets, to control the basilisk, and to drain the life out of her for its own ends.

If some books can be a problem, then others help to even the balance. Most Potente Potions , 9 borrowed from the Restricted Section of the library, gives the right information to brew the Polyjuice Potion which enables Harry and Ron to spy on Draco in the Slytherin common room, whilst researching the Chamber of Secrets. Then there is Hermione's scrap of paper, 10 torn from a library tome, which reveals what the basilisk is, how everyone has been petrified, and how it is getting about.

These are the crucial pieces of information which allow Harry to rescue Ginny from the Chamber of Secrets, slay the basilisk, and destroy the Diarycrux with the help of Gryffindor's sword, the Sorting Hat, and Fawkes. Furthermore, access to Polyjuice Potion is a useful aid in the four last books. Answering a question on it ensures that Harry passes his Potions OWLs, and without a supply of it, neither the Locketcrux nor the Cupcrux would have been retrieved.

But it must be emphasized that while valuable information can come from many different sources, it still pays to check the reliability of each source thoroughly, especially for author bias. Gilderoy Lockhart's six companion books to Wandering with Werewolves , 11 the probable source of the "Wagga Wagga Werewolf" 12 incident which Harry reenacted in class do not make the incident any more likely to have occurred, nor does the knowledge that Wagga Wagga is actually a real-life Australian city 13 prove that Gilderoy ever visited it, despite the nearby town called "Lockhart." 14

Step Three: Carefully Sifting Through the Facts

Who would link the allegedly Harry-hunting Sirius Black's escape from Azkaban, reported in the Daily Prophet , with a copy of a news item reporting the holiday in Egypt the lucky Weasleys had taken with the proceeds of a lottery win? Harry receives this newspaper cutting with his birthday gifts. Now, the Daily Prophet is the main source of news throughout the series, reporting the attempted theft of the Philosopher's Stone, the sightings of a stray Ford Anglia flying over Norfolk and Peebles, and the subsequent fine imposed on Arthur Weasley, recounted gleefully by Draco a year earlier. However, even reliable news accounts can suppress or ignore the truth. Fudge, the Minister of Magic, suppresses Harry's expected punishment for blowing up his Aunt Marge. Nor are government sources prepared to believe in the innocence of Buckbeak, on trial due to injuring Draco Malfoy in a Care of Magical Creatures class.

Defending Buckbeak's case entails the trio consulting many library books, such as The Handbook of Hippogriff Psychology and Fowl or Foul? A Study of Hippogriff Brutality , 15 to find legal precedents. Perhaps Fudge might be impressed by the efforts that Hermione, in particular, puts into the research for Buckbeak's release, despite her own heavy workload. Why else would Fudge, being aware that Hagrid would not be able to testify at Buckbeak's trial without help, assume that Harry had access to or knowledge of reports of such trials when he tells Harry the following year, "You are merely repeating the names of those who were acquitted of being Death Eaters thirteen years ago! You could have found those names in old reports of the trials." 16

After all, is there any other cogent reason other than Buckbeak's trial and helping Hagrid why Harry, Ron, and Hermione would want to research any law books, trials or anything similarly legal which might have been stored in Hogwarts' school library? Or is there any part of even Hermione's already overly full school curriculum which would have required the library to store such material for student use?

However, not all useful facts are in books. Shopkeepers like Florean Fortescue, who regaled Harry with ice-cream sundaes while helping with facts Harry could use in his History of Magic homework, the assistant at the Magical Menagerie' who advised Ron on Scabbers' welfare, or the very knowledgeable and understanding Remus Lupin, who referred to his lycanthropic condition as "a furry little problem' 17 all assist Harry. He needs help in solving not only the mysteries of who the Prisoner of Azkaban is and his relationship with Harry's betrayed parents, but also in dealing with the dementors and boggarts which had threatened to make Harry's year so miserable. Overheard conversations, like the argument Mr and Mrs Weasley had in the Leaky Cauldron, or Fudge's meeting with Hagrid and Professors McGonagall and Flitwick in the Three Broomsticks, reveal much about Harry's own connections with the mysterious Prisoner of Azkaban, whose escape is an added reason why Harry cannot visit Hogsmeade with his schoolmates and whose nickname is one of four which appear on the Marauder's Map, which Fred and George give Harry.

This Marauder's Map introduces Harry to a new way of seeing his father's friends who wrote it and supplies a valuable aid to the rest of his school career, while Hermione's Time Turner, so useful for keeping abreast of a busy study routine, also permits Harry and Hermione to save two innocent lives. Even Harry's witnessing Professor Trelawney's second true prophecy suggests that more vital information about his destiny to defeat Voldemort could be forthcoming.

As in real life research, all these scraps of information, viewed separately, contain some truth but not the full picture. Only when pieced together and combined with the testimonies of the remaining Marauders, is Sirius Black's innocence revealed, along with the revelation that the traitor is the still-extant Peter Pettigrew, disguised as Scabbers. But even then, nobody knows for years that much of the antagonism between James Potter and Severus Snape had been due to their continuing rivalry and love of Lily Evans, and what a momentous role it played in the deaths of Harry's parents, and Snape's subsequent role at Hogwarts, right up to his own death. 18

Step Four: Planning Which Strategy is Necessary to Succeed

At first sight, seekers of information might assume that strategy belongs on the Quidditch pitch. On the other hand, researching techniques like defining a problem, gathering information, checking its reliability, and piecing together the clues have as much to do with sports as they do research. Just as well that "Moody" can help with a plan for the first Triwizard Task, because, try as they might, once the first task is defined as getting past dragons, Hermione and Harry can come up with no better strategy than summoning Harry's broom to collect his golden dragon's egg, despite the mountains of books which inhabit the Hogwarts library.

However, a well-placed and relevant book reference could have done wonders with the second task. Magical Mediterranean Water-Plants and Their Properties 19 has all the information Harry needs about gillyweed and is given to Neville by "Moody." Strangely, neither Hermione nor Ron knows anything about the bubble-head charm, which Cedric Diggory and Fleur Delacourt use to great effect in the second Triwizard task. Might not the bubble bath bubbles have given Harry a clue as to how he could survive underwater for an hour? What is happening that the trio cannot find information about this particular useful charm in the Hogwarts library? Have other champions already borrowed any relevant information, while Harry wastes time in being too proud to take Cedric's hint?

Fortunately, Harry is much better prepared for the final task. Hermione's research has unearthed many spells which, with much practice, will prove handy in that third task, though later Harry is to say it was the Expelliarmus spell he learned from the Chamber of Secrets dueling club, which saves his life 20 from Voldemort's attempt on it. At the end of the third task, reaching the Triwizard cup unexpectedly delivers both Harry and Cedric to the graveyard where Voldemort's rebirthing is to take place and where Cedric is killed. There, Harry finds out exactly why it is advisable to prepare his own strategy for success, letting nothing stand in his way. For Voldemort has already made elaborate plans for Harry's death, to take place near Midsummer.

Meanwhile, why does Harry's name get into the Goblet of Fire, anyway? It certainly isn't out of a liking for him, since "Moody" is a dangerous Death Eater, Barty Crouch, Jr., disguised with Polyjuice Potion. The immediate result is to estrange Harry from Ron, exposing him not only to school opprobrium, fanned by a Slytherin-led campaign to discredit him, but also to Rita Skeeter's style of reporting. This Daily Prophet reporter, who makes a living from clever use of innuendo, criticism and gossip, readily adopts a poisonous media campaign to discredit Harry's friends as well as himself, which by the third task has largely succeeded. Well might Hermione take out a subscription for the Daily Prophet , to "know what the enemy is saying' 21 or revisit the library's Animagus register to discover how Rita is listening in on people's conversations.

Like many students in their last years of school, Harry finds that he has been given no choice about competing against more mature, better prepared candidates in a tournament, where the competition will have a plan, even if he doesn't. Though the prize in the end might be a poisoned chalice, there will be no release, merely elimination if he fails to do the best he can. "Moody" was right to tell Harry to play to his strengths, and to organise his plans accordingly, not procrastinating to the last minute before deciding what to do, and making every effort to be prepared for the unexpected or what could go wrong.

For everything does go wrong during the Third Task, even for Voldemort. Although he disregards the dangers of using Harry's blood, 22 Voldemort's grand plan to regenerate himself does succeed in the short term. But the unexpected "Priori Incantatem" 23 effect, caused by brother wands being unable to fight against each other, allows Harry to escape back to Hogwarts with Cedric's body to warn of what has taken place. However, the Death Eaters who witnessed the event would deny Voldemort's arrival to Fudge, who disbelieves any need for Dumbledore's plans to combat Voldemort, thanks to Rita's articles and despite Barty Crouch's impersonation of Moody being unmasked.

Step Five: Ensuring the Researcher Has the Full Story

Hermione's capture of Rita in bug form does lead eventually to Rita's writing an article informing the wizarding world what really happened at Voldemort's rebirthing, but it does not at first halt the Daily Prophet 's campaign against Harry's allegations about Voldemort and the Triwizard contest. Cursory reading of the newspaper might not reveal government hostility, but careful examination shows how Harry is being traduced and Dumbledore is steadily being removed from his influential positions. A cleverer student than Harry might realize that Fudge blames Hogwarts' education for Cedric's death, and so appoints Dolores Umbridge as Defence Against the Dark Arts teacher, armed with Wilbert Slinkhard's Defensive Magical Theory , 24 a study in disinformation which fails to teach the competencies OWLs level students would need to master. Yet Umbridge is also to become High Inquisitor, then headmistress.

Like conscientious students who feel they need more information about what they are dealing with, Harry, Hermione, and Ron form their own study group with like-minded students to reach the standard they need to achieve. This group, calling itself Dumbledore's Army, meets in the Room of Requirement, which, much to Hermione's satisfaction, is suitably furnished, not only with cushions, whistles, dark detectors and much else, but also books, including The Dark Arts Outsmarted , Jinxes for the Jinxed , and Self-Defensive Spellwork . 25 In addition, Sirius and Lupin's Christmas present to Harry, Practical Defensive Magic and Its Use Against the Dark Arts , 26 supports the D.A. idea. Yet the library remains a useful gathering place for study after Marietta's betrayal of the D.A., despite Madame Pince's objections to anyone eating chocolate there. 27 Who knows, if Harry offered some to this underfed librarian, would Madame Pince have been a more of a help to students in acquiring needed information withheld elsewhere?

While Umbridge's sadistic ideas of "giving lines" 28 scars Harry permanently, her treatment of other teachers, including Professor Trelawney and even Dumbledore himself, shows her aim is to undermine school functions, purging it of what she considers undesirable elements, such as Hagrid, who has giant ancestry, or Harry, whom she regards as a criminal with no place in wizarding society, regardless of what grades he might achieve in the all-important OWLs exams or what career he might hope to follow. It is easy to recognize in Umbridge a classical dictator, who discourages any questions or dissent, locks off any communication from the school, except for her own office, and whose big picture is of herself in charge of every aspect of school life or research, including what answers are permitted in class or school assignments.

But Umbridge's censorship is not Harry's only difficulty. He is having Voldemort-inspired dreams, headaches and episodes which allow him insight into what is happening, notably the attack on Ron's father at the Ministry. Why then does Harry not practice the Occlumency lessons, which Snape has been teaching him under the guise of remedial Potions, to ward off such intrusions? The extra lessons Harry and the D.A. have undertaken pay dividends; D.A. members pass their Defence Against the Dark Arts OWLs, unlike Crabbe and Goyle. 29 But Harry's failure to master Occlumency and to appreciate why he needed to learn the subject leaves him open to Voldemort's trickery. In that way, Harry falls for going to his godfather's rescue in the Department of Mysteries. Voldemort wants Harry to retrieve the full record of a prophecy which applies to both of them, and of which Voldemort has only heard the part he acted on, when he killed Harry's parents.

This adventure puts not only Harry, but also Neville, Ginny, Luna, Hermione, and Ron, who accompany Harry to the Department of Mysteries, in great danger from the Death Eater onslaught awaiting them there. Despite their extra D.A. training they barely survive until the Order of the Phoenix arrives, with them Sirius, who is then killed. It is small comfort to Harry afterwards that Voldemort has been revealed to Fudge, who is forced to admit the truth, or that the Death Eaters except for Bellatrix have been imprisoned, and that Voldemort never gets to see the full prophecy which was smashed in the Department of Mysteries. After all, had Harry chosen to act less impulsively, Sirius might have survived. Had Dumbledore informed Harry about his destiny earlier, or had Harry practiced Occlumency as diligently as he trained his fellow D.A. members, he might never have been tempted to go to the Department of Mysteries in such a badly-informed way.

Step Six: Determining the Best Information

Dumbledore has promised to tell Harry everything he knows, from the contents of the prophecy to why Harry lived with the Dursleys. Unlike Harry's foray into Snape's worst memory, Harry's experiences with the Pensieve in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince are conducted at Dumbledore's invitation, 30 with himself as mentor and guide. The method of informing Harry of the nature of the villain he faces is by examining memories Dumbledore has accumulated, and these are almost like episodes in an interactive Muggle TV serial, or like videorecordings of the life and times of one Tom Riddle, before he became Lord Voldemort. The most crucial memory for Harry's strategy to defeat Voldemort has been tampered with, and so Harry is assigned the task of recovering an undamaged copy of it from the new Potions master, Slughorn.

This memory contains the number of Horcruxes Tom Riddle made, as neither his diary's destruction nor that of Marvolo's ring, another Horcrux, has halted Voldemort's progress. Even the fake locket retrieved from the cave the night Dumbledore was killed testified that someone else, the mysterious R.A.B., hoped to destroy a third Horcrux. To assist Harry, Hermione does seek any information the library might have about Horcruxes. However, they are considered such an evil that Dumbledore withdrew the most useful library information to his own study. It takes a really lucky break to coax the damaged memory from Slughorn at Aragog's burial. Though, if Harry had been less distracted by spying on Draco to find out what he was doing or by dreaming of Ginny, he might have succeeded sooner.

That lucky break in getting the memory was inspired by a bottle of "Felix Felicis" 31 Harry wins for his good performance in making the Draught of Living Death, 32 thanks to his borrowed and written over copy of Libatius Borage's Advanced Potion-Making 33 previously owned by someone called the Half-Blood Prince, which helps Harry to achieve good results in potions that year. Hermione, who follows exactly the instructions in her brand-new version, and who thinks using such annotations is tantamount to cheating, resents being outshone in that way. Yet, a good researcher might reflect that if ever a book needed a thoroughly updated second edition, it is this one, which had remained unaltered since its original 1946 publication. Nevertheless, it still is a risk to take those alterations on face value, without knowing who wrote them, on what basis, or why the altered results worked better than the original instructions. Moreover, the unknown person added in a number of useful, but not always well-meaning spells which Harry can't resist trying, without considering how dangerous they can be, or more importantly, what they do, and if the unknown person has supplied the counter spell or antidote.

Responding to a Cruciatus Curse attempted on him, Harry finds out too late that one of these spells, the Sectumsempra curse, could have killed Draco if it weren't for Snape's intervention. How odd that the Half-Blood Prince should turn out to be Severus Snape, himself, the son of Eileen Prince and Tobias Snape, a Muggle, as Hermione discovers from old newspaper files in the library. More strangely, when Harry conceals this book in the Room of Requirement, he unwittingly finds not only the Vanishing Cabinet Draco has been mending there all year but also the lost diadem of Ravenclaw, another of Voldemort's Horcruxes.

What would Hermione say if she knew then that Draco Malfoy, of all people, has been adopting some of her own clever ideas to his own uses? Voldemort has given Draco the mission to kill Dumbledore, but it is the D.A.'s use of the Room of Requirement which suggests not only a peaceful place to work on the Vanishing Cabinet, guarded by Crabbe and Goyle disguised with Polyjuice Potion, but also a way to get Death Eaters into Hogwarts, including the repulsively predatory Fenrir Greyback. For all of Draco's prejudices, it seems that Hermione's ideas were the best information that he could find to help him complete his own mission.

Harry returns to Hogwarts with a dangerously ill Dumbledore, after they visit a cave where Voldemort once took two fellow orphans and where he may have hidden one of his horcruxes, only to find that Draco disarms Dumbledore, who then is killed by Snape. But just as the locket retrieved from the cave is a fake, planted by R.A.B, all is not what it seems when Snape delivers the fatal blow. Is Snape really the trusted Voldemort supporter he appears to be? Could Dumbledore, buried with full honours at Hogwarts, having apprised Harry of what he needed to do, have also behaved as deviously as did Gilderoy Lockhart in claiming to have defeated the Wagga Wagga Werewolf in his book, Wandering with Werewolves ?

Step Seven: Applying the Plan

As the trio packs for their own quest, agreed upon at Dumbledore's funeral, 34 Hermione sifts through so many valued books that Ron observes, "Oh, of course. I forgot we'll be hunting down Voldemort in a mobile library." 35 Somehow, necessary personal books and school texts, like Newt Scamander's Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them join Hermione's Spellman's Syllabary , 36 the information describing Horcruxes and how to destroy them which Hermione had Summoned out of Dumbledore's office after his funeral, 37 and Dumbledore's bequest to her, his volume of The Tales of Beedle the Bard 38 all "stacked by subject." 39 This literary expedition is as well-informed and organised as any researcher could expect, and yet, within months, Hermione still needs to visit a library in their travels to discover where Tom Riddle's orphanage is and what happened to it. 40

Hermione takes other items as well as books, such as Perkins' tent from the Quidditch World Cup, Extendable Ears, and others of Fred and George's products, as well as Harry's indispensable Invisibility Cloak, all packed away in an impossibly dainty little beaded handbag, taken to Bill and Fleur's wedding, from which they escape when the Ministry of Magic falls to Voldemort and his lieutenant, Yaxley. Even when camping in the forest, the trio are equipped with Phineas Nigellus's useful portrait which hung in Grimmauld Place and also a plentiful supply of Polyjuice Potion, so useful to extract firstly the Locketcrux from its eventual holder, Dolores Umbridge, and then the Cupcrux from the Lestrange vault at Gringotts. Perhaps a real life explorer like Charles Sturt, 41 who sailed down the Murrumbidgee River to Wagga Wagga in 1829, was no better supplied, despite horses, helpers and baggage trains, though, like Harry, Ron and Hermione, getting enough to eat would have often been as much of a problem, as would the need to avoid quarrels, such as with Ron, or the well-meaning Lupin, whom Harry sends back to his wife and unborn child.

Their wanderings are dangerous right from the beginning. Harry is Undesirable No. 1 throughout their adventures together, whilst Hermione is also at risk because of the Muggle Registration Board's determination to persecute "Mudbloods." 42 At Godric's Hollow, Harry and Hermione face alone the horrors of Bathilda's secret, a confrontation with Nagini and Voldemort himself, where Harry's own wand is broken. The trio face imprisonment and torture at Malfoy Manor as well as the deaths of valued friends. Luckily, Voldemort has been distracted for months as he seeks out the Elder Wand, the most powerful wand in the world, which has had a terrible history as one of the three Deathly Hallows, and the last owner of which was Dumbledore.

Other articles and books add to their arsenal of information, such as letters, photographs, even a copy of Rita Skeeter's book and the inscriptions on gravestones at the church in Godric's Hollow. The trio learned what the mysterious symbol that Krum said was Grindelwald's sign 43 means. In reality, it is the symbol of the Deathly Hallows. Finally, Harry learns from Aberforth Dumbledore, not Rita Skeeter, the truth of Albus's tragic secrets. And by the time Crabbe sets loose a dangerous fire in the Room of Requirement which he had never learned to contain, Harry has pieced together from the information he extracted from Ravenclaw's reticent ghost the whereabouts of Rowena's missing diadem.

At length, the trio succeed in their mission. By the time Voldemort notices his Horcruxes are in danger, the trio have discovered that R.A.B was Sirius's brother, have found and destroyed the Locketcrux and have retrieved the Cupcrux from Gringotts. Despite his neglect of that all important subject History of Magic, Harry has learned much from the previous year's Pensieve lessons, from his past mistakes as well as the lessons of his school career up to date, including the evils of discrimination. The trio have learned to plan ventures such as their raid on the Ministry of Magic or their Gringotts break-in. They have learned to piece together the information they need and to check everything they hear for accuracy.

When Harry examines Snape's dying memories in Dumbledore's Pensieve, he realizes how he has misjudged this enigmatic man. And when he faces Voldemort as predicted in the prophecy, he is accompanied by the love and good wishes of his parents and their friends, thanks to the Resurrection Stone, another of the Deathly Hallows. Harry then finally defeats Voldemort at the climax of the Battle of Hogwarts for the public good, putting into action a plan formed from Dumbledore's information, as well as from the assistance he has from Ron, Hermione, Ginny, Luna, and especially Neville, who decapitates Nagini. But was it really love that defeated Voldemort or was he defeated because, being arrogant, this reputedly brilliant student failed to check his information thoroughly before acting?

It is easy to read about adventures like Gilderoy Lockhart's vainglorious fiction, Wandering with Werewolves , but such adventures are often a good deal less thrilling in the experience than in the retelling, as Harry would admit. Hard work, planning, and even sacrifice are involved not only in real life explorations and study but also in Harry's adventures at Hogwarts, where he spends much time in the library and in his experiences afterwards, where he is able to apply what he has learned.

Of course, libraries are terrific places to relax with such books and meet friends who share the same interests, but they are also places for serious research, as many a harried student would admit. Information-literate students undertaking assignments could do worse than imitate the steps Harry Potter and his friends learn to consider to complete their mission, that is, to define their problem, gather their resources, check how reliable they were, piece together their facts, plan their strategy, check they have everything and that their information was the best available, and then apply that information to the job at hand. Perhaps following the lead of Harry and their friends would go some way to ensure a successful outcome to their assignments and other endeavours.

1. Rowling, "Harry, Carrie and Garp: #2."

2. Rowling, Philosopher's Stone , 32.

3. Ibid., 145.

4. Ibid., 52.

5. Ibid., 161.

6. Rowling, Order of the Phoenix , 96.

7. Ibid., Chamber of Secrets , 228.

8. Ibid., 48.

9. Ibid., 124.

10. Ibid., 214’15.

11. Ibid., 38.

12. Ibid., 122.

13. Wagga Wagga City Council, About Wagga Wagga .

14. Lockhart Shire Council, Welcome to Lockhart .

15. Rowling, Prisoner of Azkaban , 221.

16. Rowling, Goblet of Fire , 613.

17. Rowling, Half-Blood Prince , 314.

18. Rowling, Deathly Hallows , 528.

19. Rowling, Goblet of Fire , 195.

20. Rowling, Order of the Phoenix , 348.

21. Ibid., 203.

22. Rowling, Goblet of Fire , 13’14.

23. Ibid., 575’80, 605.

24. Rowling, Order of the Phoenix , 216.

25. Ibid., 346.

26. Ibid., 443.

27. Ibid., 578.

28. Ibid., 245.

29. Rowling, Half-Blood Prince , 303.

30. Ibid., 188.

31. Ibid., 177.

32. Ibid., 179, 181’82.

33. Ibid., 179’81.

34. Ibid., 606’7.

35. Rowling, Deathly Hallows , 83.

36. Ibid., 83, 259.

37. Ibid., 88.

38. Ibid., 106, 259.

39. Ibid., 135.

40. Ibid., 238’39.

41. Charles Sturt University, Charles Sturt ’ The Explorer .

42. Rowling, Deathly Hallows , 172’73.

43. Ibid., 124.

Bibliography

Charles Sturt University. Charles Sturt ’ The Explorer . http://www.csu.edu.au/about/charles/explor.htm (accessed 19 August 2007).

Lockhart, Gilderoy (n.d.). Wandering with Werewolves . London: Obscurus.

Lockhart Shire Council. Welcome to Lockhart, the verandah town . 2007. http://www.lockhart.nsw.gov.au/ (accessed 29 May 2007).

Rowling, J.K. "An Evening with Harry, Carrie and Garp: Readings and Questions #2." Transcript, Accio Quote . http://www.accio-quote.org/articles/2006/0802-radiocityreading2.html (accessed 20 May 2007).

”””. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them . London: Bloomsbury, 2001.

”””. Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets . London: Bloomsbury, 1998.

”””. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows . London: Bloomsbury, 2007.

”””. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire . London: Bloomsbury, 2000.

”””. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince . London: Bloomsbury, 2005.

”””. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix . London: Bloomsbury, 2003.

”””. Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone . Film ed. London: Bloomsbury, 2001.

”””. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban . London: Bloomsbury, 1999.

”””. Quidditch Through the Ages . London: Bloomsbury, 2001.

Wagga Wagga City Council. About Wagga Wagga . http://www.wagga.nsw.gov.au/www/html/298-history.asp (accessed 29 May 2007).

Comments? Discuss this essay here on the Scribbulus forum .

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Harry Potter Archive

Trans Rights are Human Rights

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Leaky Crafts

Harry Potter Essays

Finding Hogwarts

Books and Writing

Gilderoy Lockhart

"It is my job to arm you against the foulest creatures known to wizardkind!" -- Gilderoy Lockhart

CS6: Gilderoy Lockhart

Ron receives a Howler , they learn about mandrakes in Herbology , Colin Creevey asks for an autographed photo, Lockhart is the new  Defence Against the Dark Arts teacher, and they learn about Cornish pixies .

Calendar and Dates

The entire action of this chapter takes place on the first day of classes of the 1992 - 1993 school year. The date is September 2. Typically, in Harry Potter's world, September 2 is a Monday. There is nothing to indicate that for this book, however.

Interesting facts and notes

Unlike many of the chapters named after individual characters ( e.g. , C14, C15, OP10 ), this chapter isn't the first in which Harry (or the readers) encounter the character face-to-face. Instead, the most spectacular incident of the chapter involves Lockhart's first lesson in Defence Against the Dark Arts .

This chapter introduces Howlers and mandrakes . It also contrasts Harry's attitude toward fame and adoration (as reflected in his dealings with Colin Creevey ) with Lockhart's attitude.

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"Just been showing Professor Sprout the right way to doctor a Whomping Willow! ... I just happen to have met several of these exotic plants on my travels..."

Doubtful he was showing her anything, considering the fact that she's battered and bruised and dirty and he's immaculate. More likely he was talking while she did the work. From Lockhart's comment, it appears that the Whomping Willow is not a unique plant, though certainly rare.

About twenty pairs of different-colored ear muffs

The class consists of Hufflepuffs and Gryffindors, and there are twenty pairs of earmuffs . When Rowling was planning the background of her books, she invented exactly forty students for Harry's year, ten for each house. Note that the film shows all the first years in this class, including the Slytherins, but that's a film invention.

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The Mandrake forms an essential part of most antidotes.

We see an example here of the close connection between herbology and potions . A similar connection exists between potions and Care of Magical Creatures , but we can assume that herbology is more closely connected to common potion magic, as it's taught to all students while Care of Magical Creatures is an elective and not offered until third year. Presumably it is much more likely that the average witch or wizard would be growing magical plants in the front garden than raising magical creatures.

Harry snapped the earmuffs over his ears. They shut out sound completely.

In other words, they're magical earmuffs .

"...be careful of the Venomous Tentacula, it's teething."

She gave a sharp slap to a spiky, dark red plant as she spoke, making it draw in the long feelers that had been inching sneakily over her shoulder.

This is another of Rowling's lovely visual gags.

He was supposed to be turning a beetle into a button

Presumably this sort of transformation is made easier because a beetle and a button are visually similar and because the words beetle and button both start with the letter 'b' and have the letter 't' in the middle.

"Eat slugs, Malfoy," said Ron angrily.

This is where the idea gets into Ron's head which translates later into the Slug Curse .

"they'll be starting a Harry Potter fan club"

Rowling wrote this book in 1997. The next year, after this book was published, the first Harry Potter Fan Club was formed by Bloomsbury, Rowling's UK publisher. The club offered as one of it's perks a series of Daily Prophet newsletters , written by Jo herself.

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"And a few of you need to read Wanderings with Werewolves more carefully - I clearly state in chapter twelve that my ideal birthday gift would be harmony between all magic and non-magic peoples..."

See essay on the number twelve .

Two of them seized Neville by the ears and lifted him into the air.

This is obviously some kind of magical power of the pixies . No one's ears could actually support their weight.

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"Peskipiksi Pesternomi!"

Unlike a real spell, this phrase comes not from Latin but from English. It would seem that Lockhart is saying English words, but trying to make them sound impressive. The words are "pesky pixie, pester no me." It's not unlike someone trying to sound like they can speak another language when all they're doing is talking with a fake accent.

one of the pixies seized his wand and threw it out of the window

Ron does the same thing to Lockhart's wand before forcing him to accompany him and Harry into the Chamber of Secrets .

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Exceptional character moments

Hermione, in a situation where her reliance on and trust of books has led her to believe Lockhart's reputation against all direct evidence to the contrary. Because she read about it, she believes it must be true.

Lockhart, lecturing Sprout (the real expert) on how to do her job, all the while making her late for class - then implying that he is the more expert herbologist in front of the entire class of Gryffindor second-years.

Memorable lines

"Awfully brave chap. Have you read his books? I'd have died of fear if I'd been cornered in a telephone box by a werewolf, but he stayed cool and zap - just fantastic." [Justin Finch-Fletchley on Lockhart]

Words and phrases

Characters introduced.

  • Bandon Banshee
  • Creevey family
  • Mrs. Finch-Fletchley

Related images:

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Pensieve (Comments)

Tags: celebrity classes embarrassment fame learning photographs red school showy

Editors: Steve VanderArk , William Silvester , Michele Worley and Beth

  • 1612 : Dymphna Furmage is born
  • 1698 : Dymphna Furmage dies
  • 1912 : Minister for Magic Crickerly dies in a gardening accident
  • September 2nd, 1992 : Cornish pixies wreak havoc in Lockhart's class

Harry Potter Wiki

Gilderoy Lockhart's published works

The published works of Gilderoy Lockhart were all of the works written by this noted and best-selling author. Due to their popularity, the books were rather expensive. [1]

  • 1 Collected works
  • 4 Appearances
  • 5 Notes and references

Collected works [ ]

  • Magical Me (autobiography) [1]
  • Gilderoy Lockhart's Guide to Household Pests [2]
  • Break with a Banshee [1]
  • Gadding with Ghouls [1]
  • Holidays with Hags [1]
  • Travels with Trolls [1]
  • Voyages with Vampires [1]
  • Wanderings with Werewolves [1]
  • Year with the Yeti [1]
  • The Travel Trilogy (collection of Holidays with Hags , Voyages with Vampires and Wanderings with Werewolves ) [3] [4]
  • Marauding with Monsters [5]
  • Who Am I? [3]

Magical Me

Content [ ]

The published works of Gilderoy Lockhart was a collection of what appeared to be autobiographical books containing the highlights from a life dedicated to the eradication of the Dark Forces . They were written as though the heroics described in them were accomplished by Lockhart himself and rife with exaggerations and embellishments to make said accounts sound even more impressive than they were originally when he first heard them from the dozen great witches and wizards whose feats of bravery he stole the credit by modifying their memories to make them forget that they themselves had accomplished what Lockhart would later proclaim to have done himself. [6] [7] Despite of the revisions he did to these tales, however, they were completely believable and accurately described how to confront and handle a myriad dangerous situations; seen as how his books received best-seller status and even former teachers thought they might have misjudged him when word reached Hogwarts of all the feats of bravery he was said to have been credited with after his graduation. These accounts included:

  • A stay at the home of some fans of his located somewhere in the wilds of Essex whose garden he saved from a Horklump infestation [5]
  • Venturing into " the black, vampire-infested forest " of central Romania to hunt vampires attacking humans. [5]
  • Venturing into the "twisted heart" of the New Forest in Hampshire , where he fended off Gytrashes [5]
  • A "particularly dangerous trek" along the banks of the River Clyde in Glasgow , Scotland in search of the fabled ' Weetimorousbeastie ' [5]
  • Journeyed to the capital of the Surat Thani Province in Thailand and saved the city of Bandon by banishing a Banshee that was terrorising the the locals . [8]
  • Travelling to the Australian city of Wagga Wagga , where he defeated a werewolf that was attacking townspeople. [9]
  • A peculiarly perspicacious journey into the heart of the Fijian rainforest , while engaged in a legendary odyssey to rescue the Giant Fire Crab from extinction at the hands of unscrupulous wizard poachers . [5]
  • Encountering Trolls in an expedition to or near the Maris Profondus , the Archipelago Ridiculus , and the Maris Cristallus
  • Journeying to the Sahara Desert in Northern Africa
  • Travelling to Ouagadougou , the capital city of  Burkina Faso , where he put a stop to " a series of attacks " by giving the townspeople protective amulets
  • Wrestling with werewolves [10]
  • Defying demons [10]
  • Battle beasts [10]
  • Escaping from Trolls that captured him in Stockton-on-Tees
  • Trapped a ghoul using only a tea-strainer
  • Banishing the bogle-banshee in Kathmandu
  • Curing a Transylvanian villager of a Babbling Curse [9]
  • Giving a Yeti a head cold [9]
  • "Dealing with" a vampire that was left eating nothing but lettuce after their confrontation. [9]
  • Subduing a Hungarian Horntail with nothing but a sulphur-flavoured Bertie Bott's Every Flavour Bean [11]
  • Winning the Dunstable Duelling Championship

History [ ]

Lockhart assigned seven of his books for all students the 1992–1993 school year of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry for Defence Against the Dark Arts , each of which costs 5 galleons, resulting in an expensive 35 galleons book list. [1] It was actually an excuse for Lockhart to sell his books to students. [1] [8]

Lockhart gave Harry Potter a complete set of his collected works for appearing with him in a photo op for the Daily Prophet in Flourish and Blotts , though Potter had no desire for the event or the books, and donated them to Ginny Weasley . [1]

Lockhart admitted that had the readers learned that he was not the hero he wrote himself to be, his books would not have "sold half as well". [6]

A wizard placed a "for sale" ad in the classifieds of the 8 February 1999 Daily Prophet for a set of the collected works of Gilderoy Lockhart. [12]

Although Lockhart was a fraud and his books depicted him accomplishing feats far beyond his abilities, it is possible that the "wealth of invented details" Lockhart added was merely literary devices to make the dangers described sound more profound and the tales of how they were overcome more thrilling to the reader, but otherwise contain instructive safety- and survival tips on how to get out of encounters with various dangerous, dark creatures alive. After all, Hermione Granger would have unlikely considered taking one of Lockhart's books with them on the Horcrux hunt, [13] if its content could not be applied practically in fending off dark creatures such as those they might encounter out in the real life.

Appearances [ ]

  • Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (First appearance)
  • Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (film)
  • Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (video game)
  • Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
  • Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (video game)
  • Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
  • Quidditch Through the Ages
  • Wizarding World
  • Daily Prophet Newsletters
  • Harry Potter Trading Card Game
  • The Wizarding World of Harry Potter
  • Harry Potter Page to Screen: The Complete Filmmaking Journey
  • Harry Potter: The Character Vault
  • The Art of Harry Potter: Mini Book of Graphic Design
  • Harry Potter: Hogwarts Mystery
  • Harry Potter: Wizards Unite
  • Harry Potter: Puzzles & Spells (Mentioned only)

Notes and references [ ]

  • ↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets , Chapter 4 ( At Flourish and Blotts )
  • ↑ Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets , Chapter 3 ( The Burrow )
  • ↑ 3.0 3.1 Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (film)
  • ↑ The Wizarding World of Harry Potter
  • ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (video game) - Console versions
  • ↑ 6.0 6.1 Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets , Chapter 16 ( The Chamber of Secrets )
  • ↑ Writing by J. K. Rowling: "Gilderoy Lockhart" at  Wizarding World
  • ↑ 8.0 8.1 Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets , Chapter 6 ( Gilderoy Lockhart )
  • ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets , Chapter 10 ( The Rogue Bludger )
  • ↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (film) (see this image )
  • ↑ Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (video game)
  • ↑ Daily Prophet Newsletters
  • ↑ Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows , Chapter 6 ( The Ghoul in Pyjamas )
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Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Magic/Books and Textbooks

Like Muggles, the wizarding world obtains and records information through books . They use books for reference, research and information gathering.

Houses of the Wizarding community also have books in cooking, housework and references. The Hogwarts students devote most of their time in the library to doing their homework, and sometimes borrow library books to read in their own common room. Not all books in the Hogwarts library can be accessed by the students. Some of them are in the Restricted Section of the library, and books in that section contain particularly advanced magic and information about the Dark Arts. In order to borrow books in the Restricted Section, students need a signed permission slip from a professor.

Flourish and Blotts is the main supplier of school and other books, and is located in Diagon Alley .

Lists of Books by Title

(Included in this list are the books mentioned in the entire series, including the annual Hogwarts booklists)

  • Achievements in Charming
  • Advanced Potion-Making by Libatius Borage
  • Advanced Rune Translation
  • The Adventures of Martin Miggs, the Mad Muggle
  • Ancient Runes Made Easy
  • Ancient Runes Translation
  • An Anthology of Eighteenth Century Charms
  • An Appraisal of Magical Education in Europe
  • Armando Dippet: Master or Moron? by Rita Skeeter
  • Asiatic Anti-Venoms
  • Basic Hexes for the Busy and Vexed
  • A Beginner's Guide to Transfiguration
  • Blood Brothers: My Life Amongst the Vampires by Eldred Worple
  • Break With a Banshee by Gilderoy Lockhart
  • Charm Your Own Cheese by Greta Catchlove
  • Common Magical Ailments and Afflictions
  • A Compendium of Common Curses and Their Counter-Actions
  • Confronting the Faceless
  • Curses and Counter-curses (Bewitch Your Friends and Befuddle Your Enemies with the Latest Revenges: Hair Loss, Jelly-Legs, Tongue-Tying, and Much, Much More) by Professor Vindictus Viridian
  • The Dark Arts Outsmarted
  • The Dark Forces: A Guide to Self-Protection by Quentin Trimble
  • Death Omens: What To Do When You Know The Worst Is Coming
  • Defensive Magical Theory by Wilbert Slinkhard
  • Dragon Breeding for Pleasure and Profit
  • Dragon Species of Great Britain and Ireland
  • Dreadful Denizens of the Deep
  • The Dream Oracle by Inigo Imago
  • Enchantment in Baking
  • Encyclopedia of Toadstools
  • The Essential Defence Against the Dark Arts by Arsenius Jigger
  • Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them by Newt Scamander
  • Flesh-Eating Trees of the World
  • Flying With the Cannons
  • Fowl or Foul? A Study of Hippogriff Brutality
  • From Egg to Inferno, A Dragon Keeper's Guide
  • Gadding With Ghouls by Gilderoy Lockhart
  • Gilderoy Lockhart's Guide to Household Pests by Gilderoy Lockhart
  • Great Wizarding Events of the Twentieth Century
  • Great Wizards of the Twentieth Century
  • Guide to Advanced Transfiguration
  • A Guide to Medieval Sorcery
  • Handbook of Do-It-Yourself Broom Care
  • Handbook of Hippogriff Psychology
  • The Healer's Helpmate
  • A History of Magic by Bathilda Bagshot
  • Hogwarts, A History
  • Holidays With Hags by Gilderoy Lockhart
  • Home Life and Social Habits of British Muggles by Wilhelm Wigworthy
  • Important Modern Magical Discoveries
  • Intermediate Transfiguration
  • Invisible Book of Invisibility
  • Jinxes for the Jinxed
  • The Life and Lies of Albus Dumbledore by Rita Skeeter
  • Madcap Magic for Wacky Warlocks
  • Magical Drafts and Potions by Arsenius Jigger
  • Magical Hieroglyphs and Logograms
  • Magical Me by Gilderoy Lockhart
  • Magical Theory by Adalbert Waffling
  • Magical Water Plants of the Mediterranean
  • Magick Most Evile
  • Men Who Love Dragons Too Much
  • Modern Magical History
  • Moste Potente Potions
  • Monster Book of Monsters
  • Nature's Nobility: A Wizarding Genealogy
  • New Theory of Numerology
  • Notable Magical Names of Our Time
  • Numerology and Grammatica
  • Olde and Forgotten Bewitchments and Charmes
  • One Minute Feasts - It's Magic!
  • One Thousand Magical Herbs and Fungi by Phyllida Spore
  • Powers You Never Knew You Had and What To Do With Them Now You've Wised Up
  • Practical Defensive Magic and Its Use Against the Dark Arts
  • Predicting the Unpredictable: Insulate Yourself Against Shocks
  • Prefects Who Gained Power
  • Quidditch Teams of Britain and Ireland
  • Quidditch Through the Ages by Kennilworthy Whisp
  • Quintessence: A Quest
  • The Rise and Fall of the Dark Arts
  • Rune Dictionary
  • Saucy Tricks for Tricky Sorts
  • Secrets of the Darkest Art
  • Self-Defensive Spellwork
  • Sites of Historical Sorcery
  • Sonnets of a Sorcerer
  • Spellman's Syllabary
  • The Standard Book of Spells by Miranda Goshawk
  • A Study of Recent Developments in Wizardry
  • The Tales of Beedle the Bard
  • Travels With Trolls by Gilderoy Lockhart
  • Twelve Fail-Safe Ways to Charm Witches
  • Unfogging the Future by Cassandra Vablatsky
  • Voyages With Vampires by Gilderoy Lockhart
  • Wanderings With Werewolves by Gilderoy Lockhart
  • Weird Wizarding Dilemmas and Their Solutions
  • Where There's a Wand, There's a Way
  • Year With The Yeti by Gilderoy Lockhart

(Textbooks referred to here are the required textbooks each year, as they appeared in the books. The list cannot be complete, as it varies every year and we only see Harry's year and Harry's chosen electives.)

  • The Standard Book of Spells Year 1 by Miranda Goshawk
  • A Beginner's Guide to Transfiguration by Emeric Switch
  • A History of Magic by Bathilda Bagshott
  • The Standard Book of Spells Year 2 by Miranda Goshawk
  • Break with a Banshee by Gilderoy Lockhart
  • Gadding with Ghouls by Gilderoy Lockhart
  • Holidays with Hags by Gilderoy Lockhart
  • Travels with Trolls by Gilderoy Lockhart
  • Voyages with Vampires by Gilderoy Lockhart
  • Wandering with Werewolves by Gilderoy Lockhart
  • Year with the Yeti by Gilderoy Lockhart
  • The Standard Book of Spells Year 3 by Miranda Goshawk
  • The Monster Book of Monsters
  • Numerology and Gramatica
  • Home Life and Social Habits of British Muggles
  • The Standard Book of Spells Year 4 by Miranda Goshawk
  • The Dark Forces: A Guide to Self Protection by Quentin Trimble
  • The Standard Book of Spells Year 5 by Miranda Goshawk
  • The Standard Book of Spells Year 6 by Miranda Goshawk
  • A Guide to Advanced Transfiguration by Emeric Switch

Curiously, there does not seem to be any Wizarding fiction, apart from the collection of comic books of " The Adventures of Martin Miggs, the Mad Muggle " in Ron 's room. Granted, most of the work produced by Rita Skeeter and Gilderoy Lockhart seems to be largely fictional, however it is not classed as fiction.

Study questions are meant to be left for each student to answer; please don't answer them here.

Greater Picture

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  • Book:Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter

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VIDEO

  1. 42 WEREWOLF & DOGMAN Encounters (COMPILATION)

  2. The Many Faces Of Werewolves In Human Culture| Benevolent Protectors Or Savage Killers?

  3. Top 13 Werewolf Legends

  4. Werewolves- Bring Me to Life

  5. 5 Scary Things You Didn’t Know About Werewolves

  6. Walking With Monsters Ep 1

COMMENTS

  1. Wanderings with Werewolves

    Wanderings with Werewolves was a book written by Gilderoy Lockhart, one of his published works. The book was a required textbook during the 1992-1993 school year, one of seven along with Break with a Banshee, Gadding with Ghouls, Holidays with Hags, Travels with Trolls, Voyages with Vampires and Year with the Yeti.[1] Wanderings with Werewolves was one of the books Lockhart assigned to ...

  2. Wanderings with Werewolves

    Wanderings with Werewolves is one of the books written by Gilderoy Lockhart. It is a required textbook for the second year; as such, it cannot be gifted. It can be purchased at Flourish and Blotts for five Galleons. "Wanderings with Werewolves by Gilderoy Lockhart is one of the books Lockhart assigns to students in his Defence Against the Dark Arts classes." "Learn about Gilderoy Lockhart's ...

  3. Wanderings with Werewolves

    Wanderings with Werewolves is a book written by Gilderoy Lockhart, one of his collected works.The book was a required textbook during the 1992-1993 school year, one of seven along with Break with a Banshee, Gadding with Ghouls, Holidays with Hags, Travels with Trolls, Voyages with Vampires and Year with the Yeti.Lockhart states in chapter twelve, his ideal birthday gift would be harmony ...

  4. Is there any chance that Lockheart's book "Wanderings with Werewolves

    Wanderings with Werewolves sounds more like James' or Sirius' account Reply reply Less-Feature6263 • No. In canon Lockhart traveled a lot overseas, found some good story to steal and then came back to Britain with a new book, which made sense because the british wizarding community is small and you're much more likely to be caught as a ...

  5. 'Wanderings With Werewolves'

    Wanderings With Werewolves written by RidoTheDestroyer. Lockhart's published work wandering with werewolves wrote by Corin ... LOOK WHO FOUND OUT"One of them laughed showing a werewolf scratch.The moon was full and they transformed into ferocious werewolves and the leader quickly hit me on the head before i could think of anything.I woke up ...

  6. Wanderings with Werewolves

    Wanderings with Werewolves oliverdalstonbrowning. Summary: "'I'd have died of fear if I'd been cornered in a telephone box by a werewolf, but he stayed cool and - zap - just fantastic.'" (Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets). In which Gilderoy Lockhart gets into conversation with a certain werewolf while trapped inside a ...

  7. Hogwarts Library

    Wanderings With Werewolves. Title. Wanderings With Werewolves. Subject. Defense Against the Dark Arts . Creator. Lockhart, Gilderoy . Source. CoS. Contributor. JK Rowling . Language. English. Date Added October 5, 2015 Collection The Stacks Tags V-Defense Against the Dark Arts Citation

  8. Wanderings with Werewolves

    Wanderings with Werewolves is a book written by Gilderoy Lockhart. It likely includes the story of the Wagga Wagga werewolf. Lockhart is a fraud who stole the story off an Armenian warlock before erasing their memory.[1] In chapter 12, Lockhart writes that he hopes the wizarding and Muggle worlds will eventually live in harmony together.[2] When he taught Defence Against the Dark Arts, he ...

  9. Wanderings With Werewolves, a harry potter fanfic

    Wanderings With Werewolves. Summary: Harry Potter died when he was eight years old. The world grieved and moved on. Now, almost a decade later a desperate Order finds him. But he refuses to speak about his past. The Wizarding World is getting ready for war once again but all Harry wants to do is go home. He bids his time knowing the person who ...

  10. Wanderings With Werewolves

    Wan Wanderings with werewolves About the author. Based on a book from JK Rowling's book Harry Potter but it hasn't been made.She has some of the rights to this book but Corin Mcdonnell is the proud writer and came up with the things that happen in this story.

  11. Wanderings with Werewolves Chapter 1: Prologue, a harry ...

    Yes, Albus decided, setting Wanderings with Werewolves down. Yes, he liked this idea. Mentally patting himself on the back for dually getting rid of Lockhart and managing to procure someone who would be excellent with the students, he crumbled up the first parchment and replaced it, picking up his quill again. 'Dear Mr Lupin,' it began.

  12. What "Wandering with Werewolves" Could Reveal: A Literary Expedition

    Gilderoy Lockhart's autobiographical bestiaries, like Wanderings with Werewolves, should have been just as informative as these interviews, or as helpful as his volume of household hints that ...

  13. Wanderings With Werewolves

    Perhaps the encounter which Lockhart claimed to have had with the Wagga Wagga werewolf is described in this book. Part of the answer to question 54 on the first quiz the second year students take in Gilderoy Lockhart's class (Lockhart's ideal birthday gift) can be found in chapter twelve of Wanderings with Werewolves .

  14. Wanderings with Werewolves, a harry potter fanfic

    Wanderings with Werewolves. September 1991 "Now Draco," said Lucius Malfoy, kneeling down on one knee on the platform so his eyes were level with his son's, "I want you to promise me something. Don't go into the Forbidden Forest after nightfall."

  15. [Harry Potter] What happens to muggles bitten by werewolves?

    According to Wanderings with Werewolves, Muggles bitten by werewolves generally lack the ability to reverse the transformation-- a notable case occurred in suburban Toronto in 2000 where a pair of Muggle sisters, Ginger and Brigitte Fitzgerald, were attacked by a werewolf. The younger sister managed to delay her own transformation using Aconite ...

  16. Wanderings with Werewolves in St Mungo's, a harry potter fanfic

    Wanderings with Werewolves in St. Mungo's He'd been in this ward once before, but as a patient when he was a small boy… Hung on the paneled oak wall was the same portrait of the glaring wizard that had done nothing to soothe his fears as he listened to the people talking about him in very audible though hushed whispers.

  17. Wanderings with Werewolves by Gilderoy Lockhart

    VI. Werewolves & Their Common Traits VII. A History of the Werewolf VIII. Additional 'Wanderings' IX. My Awards and Published Works X. Biography XI. Contacting Gilderoy Lockhart *** I. An Introduction by Gilderoy Lockhart This book is for all witches and wizards, who should be educated about all of the werewolves I have defeated!

  18. CS6: Gilderoy Lockhart

    Rowling wrote this book in 1997. The next year, after this book was published, the first Harry Potter Fan Club was formed by Bloomsbury, Rowling's UK publisher. The club offered as one of it's perks a series of Daily Prophet newsletters, written by Jo herself. "And a few of you need to read Wanderings with Werewolves more carefully - I clearly ...

  19. Gilderoy Lockhart's published works

    The published works of Gilderoy Lockhart were all of the works written by this noted and best-selling author. Due to their popularity, the books were rather expensive.[1] Magical Me (autobiography)[1] Gilderoy Lockhart's Guide to Household Pests[2] Break with a Banshee[1] Gadding with Ghouls[1] Holidays with Hags[1] Travels with Trolls[1] Voyages with Vampires[1] Wanderings with Werewolves[1 ...

  20. Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Magic/Books and Textbooks

    Wanderings With Werewolves by Gilderoy Lockhart; Weird Wizarding Dilemmas and Their Solutions; Where There's a Wand, There's a Way; Y [edit | edit source] Year With The Yeti by Gilderoy Lockhart; Textbooks [edit | edit source] (Textbooks referred to here are the required textbooks each year, as they appeared in the books. The list cannot be ...

  21. Wanderings with Werewolves: The True Story

    However, we note that his bestselling book Wanderings with Werewolves was published some five months after this incident. Considering its contents in light of this, it is hard not to suppose a connection. Remus Lupin, on the other hand, assures us that the manuscript at issue here was eventually published, but holds further details confidential

  22. Gilderoy Lockhart is writing next book

    We know that he took credit for other people's events. He wrote many books, for example: Break with a Banshee, Gadding with Ghouls, Holidays with Hags, Travels with Trolls, Voyages with Vampires, Wanderings with Werewolves, Year with the Yeti. In 1992 he released Magical Me. He must have been writing something next, knowing him. What could it be?

  23. Wanderings with Werewolves: The True Story, a harry potter fanfic

    Wanderings with Werewolves: The True Story behind the Bestselling Book. Harry Potter fanfic by Fox in the Stars. With his mended clothes and untrimmed hair, Remus Lupin felt out of place in the gleaming, cavernous study, like a dandelion on a silver tray. Not what he would think of as a study, the room soared to a high, arched cieling.