And Kaylee, what the hell's goin' on in the engine room? Were there monkeys? Some terrifying space monkeys maybe got loose?

Mal ,'The Train Job'


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."


Polter-Cow - Aug 01, 2005 7:49:12 am PDT #8849 of 10002
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

I don't think Kate visits Bitches, and I'm a-scared of Natter, so congratulations, Kate!!


Kate P. - Aug 01, 2005 7:58:31 am PDT #8850 of 10002
That's the pain / That cuts a straight line down through the heart / We call it love

Hey, thanks! And good call; I'm hardly around either Natter or Bitches these days, and Literary seems a pretty appropriate place for this.


Jeff Mejia - Aug 01, 2005 8:00:51 am PDT #8851 of 10002
"Don't think of yourself as an organic pain collector racing towards oblivion." Dogbert to Dilbert

Fay, when Snape is giving Harry the Occulemency (sp?) lessons, he takes memories out of his own head and stores them in the Pensieve. Then Snape gets called away and Harry looks in the Pensieve, and sees a wee Snape cringing in a corner while his father abuses his mother. (I think the abuse was implied, and the scene was the father yelling and the mother cringing).

That is actually not in the Pensieve memory - it was a memory that Harry picked up from Snape when he (for the only time) fought back during an Occlumency lesson. The Pensieve memory was all one continuous memory.

One point I've stumbled across in my re-reading - In Goblet of Fire, it was stated that Snape became a spy for Dumbeldore before Voldemort's downfall. So theories that Snape's "change of heart" is due to his (unrequited) love for Lily and his regret for causing her death rests on shakier ground.


Connie Neil - Aug 01, 2005 8:03:01 am PDT #8852 of 10002
brillig

I'm curious because I've never seen that much of James in Harry, aside from looks and what Snape infers.

General snottiness and as much as Harry can get away with towards a professor without being summarily expelled.


Aims - Aug 01, 2005 8:06:44 am PDT #8853 of 10002
Shit's all sorts of different now.

General snottiness and as much as Harry can get away with towards a professor without being summarily expelled.

I see the genereal snottiness - most teenage boys have it in spades. But the only professor I really see him pushing the envelope with sometimes is Snape, who, well, kind of started it. He's pushed McGonagall a couple of times, but not in a classroom situation, that I remember.

My favorite thing about these books - how differently people that read the books and are fans see each character so differently.


Volans - Aug 01, 2005 9:46:40 am PDT #8854 of 10002
move out and draw fire

That is actually not in the Pensieve memory - it was a memory that Harry picked up from Snape when he (for the only time) fought back during an Occlumency lesson

I thought I might be mis-remembering as I wrote that, but I couldn't be arsed to check. I need a Remembrall!


P.M. Marc - Aug 01, 2005 9:56:03 am PDT #8855 of 10002
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

Yeah, what Aimee said about Snape pretty much starting it. Though I'd say that it's not just the teen boys with spades of snotty. Hell, I had it, damn it. (I've mellowed in my old age.)

According to my mother, there was a big deal for grade and high school graduations in America when she went to school back in the early-mid 20th century because it was not uncommon for that to be the end of any schooling that a person received.

My mother was her graduating class. No ceremony, which she's still cranky about over 50 years later, just a diploma on her desk and a see-ya. It was considered extraordinary that of the five sisters, four of them graduated and the other made it to grade 8 before dropping out to work.

The only graduation we had was high school, and anything else doesn't make sense, even as a parent.


Narrator - Aug 01, 2005 10:08:50 am PDT #8856 of 10002
The evil is this way?

It was considered extraordinary that of the five sisters, four of them graduated and the other made it to grade 8 before dropping out to work.

My mom mentioned that she was one of only a few women she knew who graduated high school in her neighborhood. Many of her girl friends never made it past grade school, and some did not finish then. There was no money due to the Depression and no real thought to women getting an education as a matter of course.


DavidS - Aug 01, 2005 10:11:02 am PDT #8857 of 10002
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Emmett graduated from kindergarten which was ridiculous, but kind of worth it for me anyway because all the kids got dressed up so there were a lot of really cute pictures.

I graduated from Kindergarten and Nursery school - and I think I still have my diplomas. So it's not that new as a concept, but might be more popular.

Though anything other than high school or college graduation seems ridiculous to me.


tommyrot - Aug 01, 2005 10:18:10 am PDT #8858 of 10002
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Though anything other than high school or college graduation seems ridiculous to me.

Mr. Incredible would agree with you.