A chart of major characters who die is here:
The Buffista Book Club: the Harry Potter iteration
This thread is a focused discussion group. Please see the first post below for the current topic and upcoming book discussions. While natter will inevitably happen, we encourage you to treat this like a virtual book club and try to keep your posts in that spirit.
By consensus, this thread is reopened specifically to discuss Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. It will be closed again once that discussion has run its course.
***SPOILER ALERT***
- **Spoilers for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows lie here. Read at your own risk***
Thank goodness, Deatheaters are no better shots than Imperial Storm Troopers.
ffawkes?
I bet Dumbledore's death freed him. . . or something.
The Mundane Spoiler Challenge. Very amusing. Some are quite clever: "Ron impresses Hermione with his tongue in chapter 31."
To get a taste, check out the mundane spoilers for HBP. Some are hilarious.
The first six books in 100 words or less:
BOOK ONE:
Harry: :D
BOOK TWO:
Harry: :)
BOOK THREE:
Harry: :|
BOOK FOUR:
Harry: :/
BOOK FIVE:
Harry: :(
BOOK SIX:
Harry: :'
For those who hated the epilogue, I suggest reading this post, which is slightly ficcish in that it's written from Harry's perspective, but I consider it more of an analysis of what else is going on in that scene that Rowling didn't touch on.
My back had been going out anyway, but the hours of reading Harry Potter were the final blow. I just went to my chiropractor, who said I was the fifth person today attributing back pain to long hours with the Deathly Hallows. She's calling it the curse of Harry Potter. She's a friend, and the first thing she said was, "Don't tell me anything! I just got it yesterday."
Ha! I had neck pain yesterday.
I have a migraine today, and had to leave work because looking at manuscripts was making me ill. Possibly brought on by eyestrain?
One Slate author's comment on the book:
Nyuk:
...a long and only slightly ridiculous chapter set (maybe?) in the afterlife—which looks exactly like King's Cross railway station, except that the only bearded transient Harry meets is Dumbledore, and unlike the bums in King's Cross Dumbledore only exposes himself to Harry emotionally.
I liked the epilogue. I thought people liked endings that were ambiguous and anything could happen. All we know is that on that day, these families made an effort to be happy so their kids would get on the train in peaceful circumstances. We don't know what will happen at home when most of the kids are gone. Ron may secretly be a bastard to Hermione, he may be famous for hunting down every former Death Eater and making sure they're executed--except the ones who are useful. We don't know what Malfoy is acknowledging--a tryst, a conspiracy, whatever. Ginny may secrety hate Harry but won't give up the position of being Mrs. Harry Potter.
Harry is happy. Harry may be blinding himself so he can think he really did win and he did get his happy ever after.
And maybe it is happy ever after. Not everything is angst and suffering and sometimes people do get to be happy. So it wasn't a smart, hip, sophisticated, ambiguous, "life is full of pain and our actions will haunt us, woe, woe" ending. Maybe they are haunted. Maybe it isn't our business anymore, they keep their nightmares to themselves and have gotten on with being alive.