Voldemort, great guy and strong leader, wants to make wizardry great again while orphan loser Potter is rigging the system. #TrumpBookReport



— imfabulous (@imfabulous13) October 20, 2016

Brutus, Classy Guy believe me, Julius GREAT negotiator, calendar not so GREAT, I like Dictators who don't get assasinated #TrumpBookReport



— Kenny Stabach (@KennyStabach) October 21, 2016

I prefer the Mockingbirds that don't get killed. 🐤 #TrumpBookReport



— Jeff Barrett (@BarrettAll) October 20, 2016

Mein Kampf. Tough on immigration. Tough on bankers. Tough on enemies. Make Germany Great Again. Great leader. My hero! #TrumpBookReport



— Top Conservative Cat (@TeaPartyCat) October 21, 2016

NOBODY, I mean NOBODY, has more pride than me. And NOBODY has more prejudice. I have so much pride. And so much prejudice. #TrumpBookReport



— Dax Varley (@daxvarley) October 20, 2016

This Dracula. An immigrant, a criminal, a bad hombre. I'd build a Transylvanian border wall & make vampires pay for it. #TrumpBookReport



— Henry Tudor (@KngHnryVIII) October 20, 2016

With inputs from AP.

NEW DELHI: What would a book report written by Donald Trump sound like? That's a question several Twitter users have been asking themselves, and they've been posting their rib-tickling responses on the social networking website with the hashtag #TrumpBookReportThe 'reports' mock Trump's way of speaking at rallies, and parody statements he's made during his election campaign. Here are a few of them.First up, the Trump report on the Harry Potter series, as imagined by this Twitter user.Trump's campaign slogan, of course, is 'Make America Great Again.'The tweet also presumably refers to his allegation that this year's presidential election is rigged against him - an allegation that prompted US President Barack Obama to ask him to "stop whining."What's more, Trump shocked viewers during the third Presidential debate when he refused to say unconditionally that he would accept the result of the forthcoming polls. He later mockingly said that he would - provided that he won.Now, here's a (William Shakespeare's) Julius Caesar-based parody of Trump's remarks about former prisoner-of-war (and former presidential nominee) John McCain. Trump said in July he liked people who "weren't captured."Here's another tweet that mocks the same statement, based on Harper Lee's To Kill A Mockingbird.Here's what this Twitter user thinks Trump's book report on Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf would sound like.This is Pride and Prejudice, by Jane Austen.And here's one on Bram Stoker's Dracula. It's a reference to Trump's proposal to build on wall along the US-Mexico border to keep out illegal immigrants from America's southern neighbour.This is by no means an exhaustive sample of the profusion of book reports 'a la Trump' that have inundated the #TrumpBookReport hashtag page. There are 'reports' on Anne Frank's diary, The Chronicles of Narnia, A Tale of Two Cities, and several other well-known works of literature.Readers whose curiosity has been piqued need only go see for themselves.