lettered: (Default)
It's Lion Turtles all the way down ([personal profile] lettered) wrote2007-07-21 08:56 pm

SPOILERS FOR HARRY POTTER

QUESTIONS:

Does someone want to explain the whole, Voldemort has Harry's blood thing? Got the part about Harry being a Horcrux, and needing to sacrifice himself to live, and all the stuff about the wands, but didn't get the thing about part of Lily's sacrifice being transferred to Voldemort?

Did anyone spend a long time thinking the Malfoys were all dead?

Did anyone else find the epilogue kind of chilling?

Did anyone find the part where the trio were on the run, camping out in different spots, quite slow and a bit drag-y? Especially while Ron was off being a prat?

Who had the Lupins slated for death the moment their baby was born healthy?

How many times did you cry, and at what parts?

How many times did you laugh, or, uh. Possibly cheer or whoop? At what parts?

How long did it take you to read?

Phineas says, "Remember the part the Slytherins played!" What part did they play? We see Slugghorn running about helping--is there a suggestion, or did I just miss it, that the Syltherins who left when McGonagall said to prepare to fight, helped muster the forces of thestrals and families and whatnot?


*

OVERALL:

I loved this book. A lot.

To say the least, there was a lot of hype leading up to it. To me almost all of that seems justified now. Not the people being dickheads parts of the hype, but the general excitement.

As for myself, I had my own set of expectations. I've always liked HP. I've always liked it quite a bit, actually. And there were certain aspects I could get fannish about, but not the 'verse as a whole. I just thought the books were good, and fun, and entertaining, but certain things sat wrong with me and I couldn't ever see myself really dying of love for any of it. That changed about eight months ago. Something clicked in my head, and since then I've been pretty much mad for them. Some of you have seen me drooling over Harry/Draco but it wasn't just that; it was all of it.

The thing that clicked was I just started seeing the books in a different light. I started, uh, interrogating them from a different perspective. And I started thinking about what it all meant, what it would mean for book 7, where JKR would go with all this. And I formed a lot of ideas and theories about not just what was going to happen but what had to happen (particularly thematically). If they didn't happen, the could still be fun nice adventure books, but pretty much the way I had started to view the books would collapse. I could still hold that view, of course, but I'd have to discount book 7. It would've been a disappointment.

I had meant to write these ideas down, several large proofs about what I thought would happen and why. I wish I had now just for the pleasure of looking at them and saying, "OMG I was so smart! So right!" But that's just me liking to gloat--not over anyone--to just gloat for the sake of gloating. But mostly, I'm just happy the things I needed to happen for this world to work for me not only happened but happened and then some. Most of the points I wanted to be made were very explicit. Stuff like:

-Snape loving Lily. Snape turning from Voldemort because Voldemort was hunting Lily. Snape being Dumbledore's because of Lily. Dumbledore trusting Snape because he knew the power of Snape's love. Snape's love being a weapon against Voldemort.
-Harry having to sacrifice himself. Harry having to willingly die in order to live. Harry's sacrifice mirroring Lily's sacrifice, Harry's sacrifice defeating Voldemort, Harry living.
-Races uniting at the end, goblins and house elves being instrumental to getting Horcruxes/fighting Voldemort.

The things that I thought would really be important that weren't there was I thought Harry would have to have some big moment of forgiving and even loving the human part of Voldemort, the part that was still Tom Riddle, in order to defeat him. But the thing about Harry having to sacrifice himself in order to live took care of a lot of the themes I wanted to be covered on that front. I also thought we'd see a little more in House cooperation (namely the admission Slytherin isn't all bad, in more than just a cursory way).

(The latter would be why I find the epilogue chilling. HP is about 4 generations: Dumbledore's, Riddle's, James Potter's, and Harry Potters, and each of those generations has parallels and repetitions that circle, and circle, and circle. What it looked like to me on Platform 9 3/4 was just more history repeating: Ron telling his kid to give Draco's kid a tough time [omg. Draco's kid. *is momentarily manaical with glee!!!*], and there's still prejudice against Slytherin. There's a bit at the end which is maybe supposed to be nice, with Harry telling young Albus any House is alright, with that really amazing and to me completely unexpected tribute payed to Severus Snape. But it's told in whispers, so easily forgotten. Everything seems so much the same as it was in that scene on the train with James, Lily, Severus, and Sirius. As it must have been with Riddle, as it must have been with Albus. I can't figure out whether JKR meant to do that or not--I was so happy just before the epilogue and then the epilogue itself SENT CHILLS DOWN MY SPINE.

Oh, and I like how much happens at King's Cross, all that, too. I wrote a paper in undergrad about the symbolism of a train station in a Pynchon book. Anyway, that bit with Albus was in dreamscape!King's Cross, the Lily,Petunia fight at the station, the end with Harry and kidlets. Which just adds SO MUCH to Voldemort at the train station in movie 5. COOL.)

I have a lot more to say, but now I'm kinda splooging everywhere so I leave you with this.

ETA: I also thought there would be more about the inter-racial cooperation than there was. Some of the stuff about goblins still made me uncomfortable, like Harry wasn't really being fair.

Also, I fucking love this so hard I don't know what to do with myself now.

ETA2: Stoney linked to this; I link as well since it was exactly what popped into my head when I read that epilogue. LMAO.

[identity profile] stefanie-bean.livejournal.com 2007-07-23 01:24 am (UTC)(link)
I too loved that scene in the OotP movie, probably one of the best for me as I didn't like OotP!movie very much. Voldemort just wiggling his head around, dressed in a dark suit, was *uncanny* and *scary,* not because he went all Evil Overlord Wizardy on everyone, but because he just looked ... demented.

It reminded me of those scenes in Adrian Lyne's Jacob's Ladder where the hapless Vietnam War vet has these nightmare visions of the man with no face just *waggling* his head at top speed, seen through car windows, in totally unusual places. Creepy!

The "King's Cross" chapter really "made" the book for me.

That's a good point about the goblins - I didn't realize it till now, but did *Neville* end up with the goblin sword? That represents a major double-cross, and I would think the goblins would want some serious revenge.

ext_7189: (Default)

[identity profile] tkp.livejournal.com 2007-07-23 02:11 am (UTC)(link)
Talking to someone today who said Neville got the sword from the Sorting Hat. Which makes sense--the Hat gave it to Harry in CoS, not because the sword fits in there or anything but because the Hat gives it up in times of great need. Neville had need, so...

I actually thought Voldie at the train station was creepy because it had that "he is among you now" feeling to it.

Haven't seen Jacob's Ladder--sounds cool!

[identity profile] stefanie-bean.livejournal.com 2007-07-23 03:34 am (UTC)(link)
It's a really interesting movie. This Vietnam vet works in the post office, but keeps seeing things, really disturbing things that he can't explain. He contacts some of his old war buddies, and finds something more disturbing than he can almost believe. If you like weird and unusual films, you might enjoy it. (It is kind of gory and graphic in parts, though.)