Gigantic HP7 meara! For even more thoughts, see the LJ post.
When Harry used the Resurrection Stone, I admit it...I started sobbing. And cried pretty much through the end of that chapter.
At first, I thought, "What? That's the purpose? To 'give him strength' or something?" And then I started thinking about what the fuck he was doing, walking into his own death, and goddamn, I'm tearing up right now.
Unfortunately, I thought Remus and Tonks were toast for quite some time now, ever since I read an interview with JKR where she said she just had to kill off two characters, and she cried over doing so.
She cried over writing the words "Remus and Tonks"? Because that appears to have been the extent of their death scene.
Hedwig's death was the first time I blurted "NO!" reading DH, but it wasn't the last.
Oh man. I had to re-read that a bunch of times to believe it just happened. Took me completely by surprise.
I'd feared for the twins, and I'll never be able to read the earlier books quite the same way knowing that Fred doesn't make it.
Yeah, I was one of those people who never bothered to differentiate the two in my mind, and apparently, Fred is the worse one to have killed. I'll pay more attention to him on the re-read. Stopped me right in my tracks, that did.
Instead of it all feeling predictable, it was more like everything snapping into place. I guess she really set it all up properly, so they were payoffs instead of obviousness.
JKR is excellent at plotting. I heart her.
I surprised myself by sobbing when Ron but the socks on Dobby.
I couldn't believe how sad I was for Dobby. I never really liked him, and then she made me want to snuggle him.
It was a bit quick and neat, but oh, how I loved the Kreacher turnaround!
Making sandwiches!
Yes, it dragged in parts, but honestly? How much can I complain about dragging when I couldn't stop reading? Loved it.
Heh, exactly. The first few chapters were incredibly intense, and I didn't know how she could keep that pace up the whole book...and she didn't. The middle was a little slower, but it still kept me turning the pages.
Love that Harry didn't kill Voldie with an AK, that Voldemort basically did it to himself.
Hubris was his downfall! I'm glad that Harry saved the day with fucking Expelliarmus! That's awesome.
I definitely liked Dudley's change of heart in the beginning, but that was just the right amount of schmoop for me.
That got a big awwwww from me.
I've always wanted to know more about Aberforth,
Whereas I didn't realize he existed before this book. This is what I get for not re-reading the books beforehand!
I just got back from watching HPatOotP (finally) and I was trying to remember if the wand battle b/w Dumbledore and Voldemort is the same in the book. If so, that sort of screws with the whole Deathstick theory.
I was wondering that myself, megan! Because if he were using the Elder Wand against Voldemort, he should have kicked his ass, no problem.
I will mention that I was actually expecting rather a higher bodycount, which may be my adult inclinations foisting themselves upon what is still really a children's story. I did feel the "Oh crap, all bets are off" once Hedwig went down. But then JKR seemed to pull back and put the kid gloves back on. I really wanted to see our kids really come to face with the "kill or be killed" of it all, maybe some moral dilemnas involving "but they're under the Imperius curse, and aren't committing these acts of their own volition". Maybe just have someone they merely stunned or disarmed come to and a chapter later come back and kill a student.
I agree with all that, Juliebird. All told, I did expect WORSE from the deaths. And I was puzzled by the lack of discussion given to the constant use of Unforgivable Curse by the good guys. And such.
Harry calling him Tom Riddle at the end - I've always thought that everyone should call him Tom and not the self-important (continued...)