HPHBP is going to be 672 pages long. And the deluxe edition will be 704 pages long.
Deluxe edition?
From Harry Potter Automatic News Aggregator.
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."
HPHBP is going to be 672 pages long. And the deluxe edition will be 704 pages long.
Deluxe edition?
From Harry Potter Automatic News Aggregator.
I don't suppose the deluxe addition has the missing scenes where Sirius comes back and has a lovely little "reunion" scene with Remus?
Edit on reading the article: Guess not.
Matt and Brenda are correct. The Romans were really practical about encountering a new culture's gods, and simply assigning them a place, at least in the early parts of the Roman empire. Look at the Celtic gods. It was all about tradition.
They did get a little upset about Isis, though, but mainly that's because her followers were just too luxurious, emotional and so darned un_Roman.
Early Romans were like the Borg when it comes to gods: We Will assimilate.
Now, after Constantine turned the Empire Xian, things were a little different.
Not all that different. St. Brighid looks a lot like the Celtic goddess who preceded her. Heck, Christianity has a certain amount in common with Mithraism, or so I've been told.
Syncretism is an excellent survival strategy for a religion.
Now, after Constantine turned the Empire Xian, things were a little different.
Oh, I meant in that religion became a little more religous to the Romans with Xianity, than it had been with the pantheon. Course, Romans were pretty pragmatic and a lot of them converted easily, with no real qualms...but many were mightily worried about the Emperor taking religion so seriously.
Disquieting in its resonance. Though I don't really believe...well, maybe that's a thought best expressed somewhere else.
Now I"m curious, Erika.
I don't really believe Bush is for real. I think that is the appearance of conviction. But how does heathen me know? Apart from that, color me Roman.
I think the conviction is real. BUT I don't think he's ever thought about religion at all; I think he seized it as an absolute idea, a my way or the highway approach.
St. Brighid looks a lot like the Celtic goddess who preceded her.
There was a very well done bit about this in The Book of Kells by R. A. MacAvoy