Re: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
It's curious. I honestly think Rowling's success is based upon her ability to mirror adolescence so well. After all, most of us in our generation have grown up with the series, arguably from naive innocence to a more worldly perspective... as have the main characters themselves.
Even though the series has popularity with older adults, I think it's so powerful to us because it manages to match our progress through life. More and more difficulties and new experiences arise as Harry gets older, and I'd say most of us feel the same.
So now, if we want to predict what's in the book, all we have to think about is the ultimate stage before we become truly adults in every sense of the word. Is it the experience of sacrifice, of transition to independence... of complete uncertainty?
I honestly don't know. But whatever it is, I still reckon Harry's pretty much going to die, if only as a symbolic end to the series that bears his name.