Mal: We're still flying. Simon: That's not much. Mal: It's enough.

'Serenity'


We're Literary 2: To Read Makes Our Speaking English Good  

There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."


justkim - Jul 27, 2004 1:05:06 pm PDT #5398 of 10002
Another social casualty...

I'm curious why everyone seems to think Snape and Lily were/should have been a couple. In the extended flashback in OotP, Snape lashes out at Lily for interfering when James was harassing him, and he calls her a mudblood. Even if he had a secret crush on her, I don't see her going out with him if that's how he acted towards her. I suppose they could have gone out and broken up before that scene, but that's not the vibe I got.

Also, while I think it's possible Petunia's a squib, I don't know how that would fit with her comment about how everyone was so excited to have a witch in the family, as if it were an unusal occurance. (I think she says that in OotP.)

I think the half-blood prince is Hagrid, who had quite a large role (no pun intended) in CoS.

t /just reread the whole series recently


Anne W. - Jul 27, 2004 1:27:20 pm PDT #5399 of 10002
The lost sheep grow teeth, forsake their lambs, and lie with the lions.

I'm also frighteningly convinced by that Ron is Dumbledore argument.

So you're saying that Ron is subletting from Dumbledore?


Betsy HP - Jul 27, 2004 1:35:49 pm PDT #5400 of 10002
If I only had a brain...

I fear her characters have grown beyond her ability to write them well.

Yes, this. But I also think she's got a limited fictional worldview. She's very impatient with fans who want there to be more to Draco than Evil Evil Kid. I can certainly see saying "Don't have a crush on Draco, he's not like the actor." But she's also saying that it's disturbing that people want to be Slytherins; that means that in her mind it's perfectly natural to have one house for Evil People.

It just doesn't make sense, dammit. Why would you tolerate several hundred years of a public school one-quarter of whose population are doomed to dress well and cackle a lot?


Beverly - Jul 27, 2004 2:11:19 pm PDT #5401 of 10002
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

in her mind it's perfectly natural to have one house for Evil People.

It just doesn't make sense, dammit. Why would you tolerate several hundred years of a public school one-quarter of whose population are doomed to dress well and cackle a lot?

I get this, too. And no, it doesn't make real sense.


sumi - Jul 27, 2004 4:04:40 pm PDT #5402 of 10002
Art Crawl!!!

Perhaps there is a Scarlet Pimpernel factor -- the Slytherin you think is all cackle, sneer and upper-crusty hauteur turns out to be a powerful (yet manipulative -- that's what Slyth is about, right?) force for good.


Betsy HP - Jul 27, 2004 4:33:21 pm PDT #5403 of 10002
If I only had a brain...

I would like that to be true, but Rowlings has expressed horror at people who think there could be some good in Slytherins. I think she's afraid we are seduced by their power, money, and blond wigs.

[Not that I have an Lucius Malfoy problem or anything.]


Lyra Jane - Jul 28, 2004 4:59:52 am PDT #5404 of 10002
Up with the sun

I think the half-blood prince is Hagrid, who had quite a large role (no pun intended) in CoS.

If this were the case, I would toss the book across the room -- or, okay, skim even more than I normally do and roll my eyes a lot.

Does anyone else find Hagrid an annoying waste of space who should have been fired for real long ago?


Steph L. - Jul 28, 2004 5:08:05 am PDT #5405 of 10002
this mess was yours / now your mess is mine

Does anyone else find Hagrid an annoying waste of space who should have been fired for real long ago?

Only in the movies. I like him in the books, but that's because there's enough time and space (and pages) to flesh out his character fully.

In the movies, partly by necessity of the constraints on running time, he's pretty 2-dimensional.


Lyra Jane - Jul 28, 2004 5:21:57 am PDT #5406 of 10002
Up with the sun

I like him even less in the books. He's just this big annoying guy who keeps getting into stupid complicated subplots that are completely his own fault and needing Harry/Hermione/Ron to get him out of them, endangering students and adding hundreds of pages to the book. Then we're constantly being told what a Woobie he is, just to add insult to injury. He's somewhat more endearing, or at least less distracting, in the movies.

(I've read each book once, so I can't quote chapter and verse on this -- it's just a general impression.)


Connie Neil - Jul 28, 2004 5:23:07 am PDT #5407 of 10002
brillig

Hagrid's too obsequious. I like him in the movies, because he doesn't have as much time to bow and scrape.