This dual stroller critiques showcase the top models available in the market now. The objective will be to help you decide on the best double stroller that may benefit you and also your kids.
Bob Revolution SE Double Stroller review
Safety Evaluation - 4.5/5
Supports a maximum of 100 lbs Comes with a padded 5 point safety harness to ensure your children are safe in their chairs. Back parking breaks are tough and move all reviews. Outfitted with arm band that attaches to the handlebar.
Comfort Ranking - 5/5
Top wheels set or may be secured to swivel to allow for mobility. Equipped with high- suspension that was flexible and influence wheels to be able to withstand rough-terrain. Flexible reclining chairs may be transferred up from verticle. Chairs are cushioned for ultimate comfort. Rated as on of the finest double strollers.
Added Features - 4/5
Lightweight frame united with a a simple two step fold makes for easy transportation. Readily attach a Bite Dish or a Bob Infant Car-Seat Adapter. Loads of space for storage in the seat back pockets and beneath the chairs.
Overall Rating - 4.75/5
With an ideal rating for level of comfort and highly-rated safety features, children and many parents are fast falling in love with this stroller. The ajustable suspension makes for a smooth ride weather you're in the mall or on rocky grounds. Pointless to State the Frank Revolution SE Duallie Stroller is among the best all terrain strollers on the marketplace. You're not afraid to devote just a little more for a top of the line stroller and if you're looking to own it, that is a feasible option.
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (Book 7) (Hardcover)
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Customer reviews
For those of us that grew up with Harry...
Customer rating 5.0/5.0
July 23, 2007 By Chelsea
82 out of 91 found this helpful
*SPOILERS: please don't read if you haven't finished the book*
After reading the seventh and final installment of the Harry Potter series, as well as many of these reviews, I simply cannot believe that anyone would rate this book with less than 5 stars.
I have read reviews where people say that the ending is too "light and fluffy", or that "Harry should have died", and that the whole deathly hallows part of the plot ispointless because, in the end, Harry does not keep the hallows. Can no-one here see why JK Rowling ended the series as she did? I grew up with Harry Potter, the first book having been released when I was about 9 or 10. I cannot express how depressing it would have been had Harry died, for(forgive me forthe cheeziness) if Harry had died surely there was no hope for therest of us. Furthermore, the ending is not "light and fluffy". Harry overcomes Voldemort as hischaracter develops, as he finally understands how to finish the Dark Lord once and for all- as he allows himself to be sacrificed for the benefit of "the greater good".The deathly hallows merely stand as the temptation for Harry to become all-powerful, to make the same mistake that Voldemort andDumbledore(when he was young) made. His choice to turn down theopportunity to evade death not only speaks on his true character, but sets him apart from those who would try to harness this power. Even if Harry had chosen to keep the Hallows for good purposes, would he not eventually turn into the same type of tyrant as Grindelwald, as Voldemort, and as Dumbledore would have become? Yes, the hallows did appear and disappear in this one book, but because Harry chose NOT to keep them for himself, he chose the path of the pure-hearted. By this action, we truly see how much Harry hasgrown and matured. We also see just how different Harry really is from Voldemort, a question Harry himself had been wondering for some time. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (Book 7) (Hardcover) Price: $19.22
So for those of you that bash this book for not ending in total destruction, and claim that "life is not fair and evil really does win", please remember that life is only what you make of it. Only those of us who grew up with Harry can really say just how much his life means to us, and I would just like to thank JK Rowling for this wonderful finishing piece of the Harry Potter series.
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (Book 6) (Hardcover)
Customer reviews
Harry Potter mirrors our own dark world
Customer rating 5.0/5.0
July 20, 2005 By C. Vestal
21 out of 24 found this helpful
I've just finished reading the latest installment of the Harry Potter chronicles. My chest feels as though my heart has been torn out from the book's tragic ending as I sit here typing, hopelessly admiring the tactic Rowling used to achieve her greatest success to date in this much loved children's book series.
Children and adults who read this book alike will be left reeling in itsaftermath. As an adult I was first attracted to the Harry Potter series quite inadvertently. I had adamantly refused to read any ofthe three Harry Potter books published at the time until I was required to in college in my children's literature class. Almost instantly I was spellbound by Rowling's nostalgic narrative. Children of course (and quite a few adults as well) delighted in the fantasy and Harry's and friends' magical misadventures. However, I think much more alluring to adults is how Rowling's writing somehow manages to transport us in time to a much simpler, secure, and magical era inour own lives.
But in her latest achievement Rowling departed from her usual safe, magical, nostalgic atmosphere, instead embracing alltoo real themes prominent in the world at large. The opening chapter in her book portrays themuggle world hopelessly searchingfor answers to inexplicable acts of terrorism. In doing so, she has effectively raised the stakes in this book. No longer is it just the wizarding community in danger, but ours as well. It seems the ever present daily fear that magical characters live with is a very familiar echo of own terrorist fueled anxiety in this perilous new world we live in.
Gone is mystery obscuring Voldermort, who until this book, moved quietly(with a few notable exceptions) in the shadows of uncertainty and doubt. Every witch and wizard alive now knowsVoldermort is back and that they all are in "mortal peril". Potter and Dumbledore themselves take further steps to pierce the veil ofmystery that has always opaquedthis character. Acting very much like FBI profilers the two reconstruct recollections of Voldermort's past, uncovering thetruth about how a modest muggleborn Tom Riddle became the scourge of the wizarding world, with unimaginable consequences for both.
Perhaps the darkest (and most beautifully poignant) aspect of this novel is the way she strips Potter himself of callow illusions ofsafety. In the first book Potter's mother had imparted some magical shield to him through her death at Lord Voldermort's hands.Indeed all Potter had to do to vanquish the Voldermort specter was touch him. Even when Voldermert was resurrected in the flesh in later books, Potter still had layers of protection consisting of members of the Order of the Phoenix and Dumbledore himself. But in this book every ounce of protection once had, whether real or imagined, is stolen from him, in one fateful moment atop Hogwort's castle. The ultimate irony of this scene is that it is Dumbledore's trusting optimism, inwhich Potter found some sort of emotional respite in earlier books,which tragically leaves Potter very much alone. By the end of this emotional epic Potter has become a man, abandoning all desperate hopes of shirking his final confrontation with his arch nemesis and accepts his destiny with ironclad determination. For adults, Rowling has successfully tapped into our own memory of whatever tragedy or trauma caused us to cease to believe in magic and forget childish illusions of security in our own lives.
This is not to say that the book is completing lacking in humor or the lighthearted moments we have come to expect from Rowling's writing, this book seems to be an effective amalgam of both. From family squabbles over Christmas dinner to hormonal teenagers taking lusty refuge in each other's arms in darkened classrooms or abandoned hallwaysthis book had more than enough comical highlights. Ron and Hermione in their mature(or lack of it) relationship provide a greatdeal of humor in this novel.
However great this story might be or how well it sets the stage for the final epic showdown, this book may not be for everyone. It seems that Rowling is writing for adults or at least the children (now teenagers) that read the first book in the series when it was originally published. The vocabulary that Rowling uses is quite extensive and one should beprepared to have a dictionary on hand to discern the full meaning out of certain passages. Furthermore, as the characters have grown up so too have the series themes matured. Our teenage protagonists are now involved with romantic rivalries, rebelliousness, and quite a bit of making out. As mentioned before the themes and mechanisms Rowling utilizes in her writing may be too mature for younger readers. While this book will surly present hours of enjoyable entertainment to adults, parents would be well advised to wait for the eager younger readers to bea bit older before presenting withthis wonderfully written all too real fantasy masterpiece.