I just want it to be a good ending for for the series. I would love to see Neville do something remarkable with his own talents, like growing a magical plant that saves the day.
The other day, I was out to dinner with a friend. She was going on about the behavior of her 19-year-old daughter. Certainly the fact that she lost a scholarship because she never got around to taking a PE final was worth ranting about. Then, however, my friend launched into a long complaint about how she spent her time. "She's just obsessed with Harry Potter. She spends hours online with people who discuss every little detail. She listens to Harry Potter podcasts. Can you imagine?"
Uhhhh. Obsessive discussion online? Who would do something like that?
DebetEsse, I like your list.
One thing I'm looking forward to, ever since the early books, is to have a scene in which Harry has to trust Snape. I'm hoping for that need to choose, whether to trust or not. Not even necessarily the result (even though I'm firmly in the opinion that if Dumbledore trusts somebody, then I trust them, as well), just the actual need to choose and trust.
So much of the books come down to those two things, choice and trust. Trust of a character's right choices. James trusted Sirius. The he wanted to show trust in Peter Pettigrew, and made him his Secret Keeper, showing him the deepest faith a friend can show, trying to make him feel as welcome and loved as possible, appealing to the best parts of him. Just like Dumbledore has been doing all along. And it failed. It was that same trust that threw James, Lily and Harry straight into Voldemort's wand.
In a strange sense, though, it was that trust who provided the chain of events that ended with Voldemort's curse being reflected upon him and his loss of power. And now, Dumbledore's ongoing trust of Snape, who wasn't just an untrustworthy friend, but also proved himself at least once as a member of the other side, by joining the Death Eaters, that trust seemed to result in Dumbledore's own death. Another failure. Another choice of betrayal.
From, IIRC, "Chamber of Secrets", I thought that one of the final confrontations in the end of the series will be Harry forced to trust Snape, without Dumbledore to lean on, to reassure him that this is the right way, to lead him. Plain and naked trust, either to give or not to. In "Half Blood Prince" while, as always, completely suspecting Snape himself, Harry trusted the Half Blood Prince's book wholeheartedly, without a second's hesitation (in fact it was Hermione, who follows Dumbledore in his trust of Snape, who mistrusted the Prince). He did go along with Snape, even without knowing it. And now what? Will he trust Snape? Will he trust Draco? Will he be right in doing so? Was Dumbledore? James wasn't - will Harry follow his father, or choose his own path, and in what ways?
And that's why I love that the whole question of Snape Good Or Evil could go either way, I think, why I like that complex structure that is playing in my head, the mirror images and reflections and twisted ones and then again. The very fact that it could go either way in a believable way that can be argued about. Even without any connections with the actual results and future events. Because now it's all up to the characters' choices. To looking at the situation and who they want to be and what they want to do with where they are and what they have, and that's what defines them. Not what already happened, but what they choose to happen next.
Yeah. And nicely put.
We've gotten serious reflections and echoes of characters in other characters (Peter and Neville, Draco and Snape), but with different choices. And it is our choices etc.
I just saw a panicked post on LiveJournal that nytimes.com is spoilery for HP on the front page. Here's what it says:
J.K. Rowling’s spell-binding epic ends not with modernist, Soprano-esque equivocation, but with good old-fashioned closure, writes Michiko Kakutani.
I imagine the review gets into more detail, but that doesn't seem spoilery to me.
Jesse, it doesn't to me. But then again, if you read it very literally,
every book ends with closure. Ya know - closing the damn book. Har.
I heard a reference to that review on NPR this morning. I stuck my fingers in my ears and said, "lalalalalala".
And now, no more news for Abi. This slow dissociation from media is kind of entertaining..
Runs off to nytimes.com
Runs back to thread
It's spoilery, but not outrageously so. I think I can read between the lines a little on a few of the things in it that it doesn't spell out, so I'd say read it at your own peril.
Well, sure, like most any review. I mean, they have to talk about what happens!
I read the review in full, and while there are no specific spoilers, if you are spoiler averse I would avoid it. She talks generally about themes, and mentions deaths without naming names, but in a way that fans might find spoily.
Also, she apparently bought the book by walking into a store in NYC???
Maybe she walked in and said, "I'm Michiko Kakutani."