Hey! What do you two think you're doing? Fightin' at a time like this. You'll use up all the air!

Jayne ,'Out Of Gas'


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."


Jessica - Jul 17, 2005 4:55:39 am PDT #8291 of 10002
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

Jars and I are one in this, including the favorite unintentional funny line.

It may just be the looooooong wait between books, but I feel like she needs to get to the frelling point already. Books 1-4 all had their own storylines in addition to the overall arc. Books 5-6 have mainly been Harry running around saying "The sky is falling!" and nobody believing him, and then a tiny piece of sky really does fall in the last 50 pages. Maybe HP7 will be nonstop action, but I'm losing faith.

I also still think Rowling can't write this age range as well as she could the pre-teens.


sumi - Jul 17, 2005 7:55:06 am PDT #8292 of 10002
Art Crawl!!!

I want book 7 now!


Lilty Cash - Jul 17, 2005 8:10:15 am PDT #8293 of 10002
"You see? THAT's what they want. Love, and a bit with a dog."

I finished. I loved it. I was prepared for Dumbledore's death, but it still just slayed me, especially Harry remembering his silly words during the service.

I have more to say, I'm sure, but I think I need a re-read.

Also, in regards to Harry's conversation with Ginny at the end. Did anyone else think, "yeah, I saw Spider-Man 2 too, Rowling."?


sumi - Jul 17, 2005 8:12:47 am PDT #8294 of 10002
Art Crawl!!!

I loved the bit where Harry remembers Dumbledore's words too. That other thing seemed familiar but I thought it was more something I'd read in FF. Although you could be right. It could be that I remember it from Spidey 2.


Scrappy - Jul 17, 2005 8:14:44 am PDT #8295 of 10002
Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

What killed me was "Dumledore's man, through and through" both when it made Dumbledore tear up and when Harry repeated it at the end.


Lilty Cash - Jul 17, 2005 8:15:33 am PDT #8296 of 10002
"You see? THAT's what they want. Love, and a bit with a dog."

Not that I didn't eat it up, sumi. I just, you know, wanted her to know that I know.


Scrappy - Jul 17, 2005 8:17:00 am PDT #8297 of 10002
Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

I also really liked that moment at the funeral when Ginny got fierce instead of teary and Harry noticed and knew what it meant and admired it.


beekaytee - Jul 17, 2005 8:41:02 am PDT #8298 of 10002
Compassionately intolerant

I'm with y'all on the Spidey 2-ness of the "We can't be together" speech. Though I have seen that about a million times elsewhere too.

Two other references that occurred to me were the: 24-ness of the Snape scene at the end. It seemed like he was going all Jack with the doing bad things for the right reasons.

Could be wishful thinking on my part there.

And: the LOTR-ness of the dead bodies under the water in the cave.

Must confess that my least favorite scene was the entire cave section.

Then again, I was 22 hours into it and perhaps not at my discerning best. Must reread.

Beyond these things that sort of took me out of the story, I loved it a lot.


Melpomene - Jul 17, 2005 10:43:05 am PDT #8299 of 10002
Ever fired your gun in the air and yelled, 'Aaaaaaah?'

Could be wishful thinking on my part there.

I definitely think that Snape was following Dumbledore's orders. There was that moment that Hagrid (I think) overheard DD telling SS to do something that SS didn't want to do. I bet that thing was killing DD if the situation was needed. It paralleled DD asked HP to force him to drink in the cave. There was also SS's reaction to being called a coward. SS always seemed to respect DD and DD was the only person to completely trust SS. Killing him must've been really emotionally difficult to do. Poor Snape. He's now completely alone. He needs a hug.


Fay - Jul 17, 2005 10:54:31 am PDT #8300 of 10002
"Fuck Western ideologically-motivated gender identification!" Sulu gasped, and came.

As I was plowing through, I kept startling myself by laughing outloud, or shouting "NO!", or offering a big "HUH!"

I was worried after Pheonix. I didn't love it so much. Prince has completely won me back to the fold.

Wordy McWord.

My favourite HP book so far. Man. Man. So many things I enjoyed. Really looking forward to the discussion. In the interim, there's HPB_Chapters over at LJ, for anyone who wants to post a chapter-by-chapter review, or just read other people's thoughts.

I think Jilli is going to love this book.

eta I totally, totally, totally agree with Melponene. Yes. For this reason I spent the last 3 chapters of the book crying like a baby. I had the whole horrified 'OMG, Draco's supposed to kill DUMBLEDORE, not Harry! OMG! They're arguing because Dumbledore's telling Snape he may have to kill him, and Snape is all 'no way', and now Hagrid's overheard bits and the trio are going to just think that Snape's Eeeevil, and he's not, he's not, he's a heroic unappreciated woobie martyr guy!' thing a little earlier on, and once I'd decided that nothing else in the book contradicted it, and now I'm totally aboard the Snape Is Still Loyal To Dumbledore train. Now with added tragedy. It's so fucking GREEK, man.