Mr Weasley was actually suppose to die in book 5
Actually, Rowling loves Mr Weasley, she said in that interview that she was never capable of killing him, lol.
Mr Weasley was actually suppose to die in book 5
Although I would have liked to read about the scene where Lupin and Tonks die, it would have been nice to see them fall together.
Mr Weasley was actually suppose to die in book 5
From Tuesday Morning Quarterback:
"Spoiler Warning! Harry's Fine at the End of "Harry Potter and the Global Marketing Campaign of Doom": "And you knew this? You knew all along?" Actual statement by Harry Potter to Dumbledore on page 710 of the final book. Near the end of each Potter installment, Dumbledore reveals to our hero information that, had it been conveyed earlier, would have rendered much of the book's action unnecessary. Near the end of each volume, I've wanted to yell at Dumbledore, WHY DIDN'T YOU TELL HIM BEFORE! But then there would have been no books. Here are my leftover Harry Potter questions:
• How did the sword of Godric Gryffindor get into the Sorting Hat? When last we saw the sword, subject of much intrigue, it had been seized by a goblin who hated wizards and carried off far from Hogwarts. Suddenly, in the final confrontation with Voldemort, the mystical sword is conveniently at hand. Huh? There's not even a hint of explanation.
• Why didn't the good wizards and witches buy guns? In the final confrontation, the centaurs kill some Death Eaters using bow-and-arrow, so projectile weapons work against dark-side magic. The seventh book happens in the English countryside in the year 1998. In that year handguns were hard to acquire in England but rifles and shotguns were readily available in shops. The situation is a battle to the death, why didn't the good guys get guns?
• If Harry is true master of the Elder Wand, how is Tom Riddle able to use this implement to "kill" our hero? The wand wouldn't harm its own master, and indeed mere hours later, after Harry has come back to life, the Elder Wand refuses to harm Harry, killing Riddle instead.
• What the heck is happening in the scene where Harry is "dead"? Dumbledore gives some garbled gibberish about Voldemort having Harry's blood in his veins, but there isn't so much as a morsel of explanation of how this allows Harry to survive a fatal blow, enter a zone between life and death, and choose which direction he goes. Sci-fi and fantasy are plagued by heroes coming back from death. Harry dies, then he and Dumbledore converse in some kind of purgatory, then Harry is totally fine again: No explanation. The decisive plot twist in the final Potter book made no more sense than a "Battlestar Galactica" episode.
To me, the amazing thing about the Potter oeuvre is that J.K. Rowling managed to write more than 4,000 pages without ever really explaining Tom Riddle. For instance, if Voldemort is both super-intelligent and obsessed with attaining immortality, why does he go out of his way to make powerful enemies? That's some feat of flatfoot writing to ship seven books and never explicate one of the central characters. But Rowling did give us endless lines like this, from page 740 of what we hope is the final volume: "… Harry said, as he saw Voldemort's nostrils flare." Horses can flare their nostrils. Only in really bad writing do the nostrils of villains flare."
oh yay! we can talk about harry potter now
did you hear, i got kicked out of borders on opening day because i shouted out "HERMIONE DIES!"
haha. i hope im still allowed back there =.=
but otherwise, harry potter has just become so general fantasy, there isnt anything special about it anymore after like, book 3
This quote wins.Its almost funny in a way, how Voldemort's quest for immortality led him to a basically inhuman existence.
It WAS predictable, mate. But when Kreacher explained that clearly, we all were like "Ohhhh, m'kay".Is it just me, or was the whole "R.A.B." thing predictable? I think most people guessed at Regulus and they were right.
From Tuesday Morning Quarterback:
"Spoiler Warning! Harry's Fine at the End of "Harry Potter and the Global Marketing Campaign of Doom": "And you knew this? You knew all along?" Actual statement by Harry Potter to Dumbledore on page 710 of the final book. Near the end of each Potter installment, Dumbledore reveals to our hero information that, had it been conveyed earlier, would have rendered much of the book's action unnecessary. Near the end of each volume, I've wanted to yell at Dumbledore, WHY DIDN'T YOU TELL HIM BEFORE! But then there would have been no books. Here are my leftover Harry Potter questions:
• How did the sword of Godric Gryffindor get into the Sorting Hat? When last we saw the sword, subject of much intrigue, it had been seized by a goblin who hated wizards and carried off far from Hogwarts. Suddenly, in the final confrontation with Voldemort, the mystical sword is conveniently at hand. Huh? There's not even a hint of explanation.
Rowling said something about a link between the sword and the hat, dunno the details, for anyone that's interested check the link I posted.
• Why didn't the good wizards and witches buy guns? In the final confrontation, the centaurs kill some Death Eaters using bow-and-arrow, so projectile weapons work against dark-side magic. The seventh book happens in the English countryside in the year 1998. In that year handguns were hard to acquire in England but rifles and shotguns were readily available in shops. The situation is a battle to the death, why didn't the good guys get guns?
Death Eaters already hate Muggles, why use their weapons? Plus, I have this feeling Shield Charms work against bullets, but who knows?
• If Harry is true master of the Elder Wand, how is Tom Riddle able to use this implement to "kill" our hero? The wand wouldn't harm its own master, and indeed mere hours later, after Harry has come back to life, the Elder Wand refuses to harm Harry, killing Riddle instead.
Exactly, it never "killed" Harry at all, just the part of him that wasn't really him (Voldemort's soul)
• What the heck is happening in the scene where Harry is "dead"? Dumbledore gives some garbled gibberish about Voldemort having Harry's blood in his veins, but there isn't so much as a morsel of explanation of how this allows Harry to survive a fatal blow, enter a zone between life and death, and choose which direction he goes. Sci-fi and fantasy are plagued by heroes coming back from death. Harry dies, then he and Dumbledore converse in some kind of purgatory, then Harry is totally fine again: No explanation. The decisive plot twist in the final Potter book made no more sense than a "Battlestar Galactica" episode.
Not too sure of this myself lol
To me, the amazing thing about the Potter oeuvre is that J.K. Rowling managed to write more than 4,000 pages without ever really explaining Tom Riddle. For instance, if Voldemort is both super-intelligent and obsessed with attaining immortality, why does he go out of his way to make powerful enemies? That's some feat of flatfoot writing to ship seven books and never explicate one of the central characters. But Rowling did give us endless lines like this, from page 740 of what we hope is the final volume: "… Harry said, as he saw Voldemort's nostrils flare." Horses can flare their nostrils. Only in really bad writing do the nostrils of villains flare."
Who the heck pays attention to that little nostril flaring detail? As for enemies, Voldemort hated Muggles and Muggle-borns, plain as that.
Personally, I liked it a lot. I started reading it at about 1 A.M. and was done about 9 A.M.
I knew I forgot something. I noticed this as well, since Voldermort used the same sort of fear tactics to control everyone as Hitler did, among other things.And I do believe that a lot of HP7 was a half-reference to the Holocaust, or at least it bears a lot of similarities.
Hey, Spider-man made the same mistake. I think. >.>There was simply no reason in my mind for the "I'm leaving you because I need to fight Voldemort - as if a breakup is going to STOP Voldemort from targeting her"
UnicronEX said:someone trying to be cool by acting Harry Potter is shitty
The Hallows weren't really central to the plot, which is why they weren't much discussed. I think naming the book after them may have been a form of red herring, since at a critical juncture towards the end Harry had to decide wether finding the horcruxes or the hallows was more important. And it's kind of hard to make an intriguing title allong the lines of "Harry Potter and the Quest for the Horcurxes."
Well, "Harry Potter and the Relics of Death" was being considered as well IIRC.
From Tuesday Morning Quarterback:
"Spoiler Warning! Harry's Fine at the End of "Harry Potter and the Global Marketing Campaign of Doom": "And you knew this? You knew all along?" Actual statement by Harry Potter to Dumbledore on page 710 of the final book. Near the end of each Potter installment, Dumbledore reveals to our hero information that, had it been conveyed earlier, would have rendered much of the book's action unnecessary. Near the end of each volume, I've wanted to yell at Dumbledore, WHY DIDN'T YOU TELL HIM BEFORE! But then there would have been no books. Here are my leftover Harry Potter questions:
• How did the sword of Godric Gryffindor get into the Sorting Hat? When last we saw the sword, subject of much intrigue, it had been seized by a goblin who hated wizards and carried off far from Hogwarts. Suddenly, in the final confrontation with Voldemort, the mystical sword is conveniently at hand. Huh? There's not even a hint of explanation.
What do u mean, don't you remember Chamber of Secrets? It isn't "conveniently at hand" in the Deathly Hallows. And I dunno what ur talking about with the goblin either. This whole question doesn't make a lot of sense.
• Why didn't the good wizards and witches buy guns? In the final confrontation, the centaurs kill some Death Eaters using bow-and-arrow, so projectile weapons work against dark-side magic. The seventh book happens in the English countryside in the year 1998. In that year handguns were hard to acquire in England but rifles and shotguns were readily available in shops. The situation is a battle to the death, why didn't the good guys get guns?
If you hadn't noticed the good wizards and witches normally didn't kill the death eaters, just stunned and imprisoned them, so why would they use guns, especially when they could just do the Avada Kedavra curse? Also, I would think that there would be spells to repel gunfire, like a shield charm or something. However, snipers could have been useful outside of battle?
• If Harry is true master of the Elder Wand, how is Tom Riddle able to use this implement to "kill" our hero? The wand wouldn't harm its own master, and indeed mere hours later, after Harry has come back to life, the Elder Wand refuses to harm Harry, killing Riddle instead.
It killed the horcrux, not Harry. It killed Voldemort himself and then killed himself again for good.
• What the heck is happening in the scene where Harry is "dead"? Dumbledore gives some garbled gibberish about Voldemort having Harry's blood in his veins, but there isn't so much as a morsel of explanation of how this allows Harry to survive a fatal blow, enter a zone between life and death, and choose which direction he goes. Sci-fi and fantasy are plagued by heroes coming back from death. Harry dies, then he and Dumbledore converse in some kind of purgatory, then Harry is totally fine again: No explanation. The decisive plot twist in the final Potter book made no more sense than a "Battlestar Galactica" episode.
I don't think Harry was really half-dead, he just sort of had a revelation or something. He survived a fatal blow cuz yea, his wand woudn't kill him, but it killed something inside of him. So he just fainted and had a real dream, kinda like Joseph in the Bible.
To me, the amazing thing about the Potter oeuvre is that J.K. Rowling managed to write more than 4,000 pages without ever really explaining Tom Riddle. For instance, if Voldemort is both super-intelligent and obsessed with attaining immortality, why does he go out of his way to make powerful enemies? That's some feat of flatfoot writing to ship seven books and never explicate one of the central characters. But Rowling did give us endless lines like this, from page 740 of what we hope is the final volume: "… Harry said, as he saw Voldemort's nostrils flare." Horses can flare their nostrils. Only in really bad writing do the nostrils of villains flare."
He's also obsessed with being the best, how can you be the best if you don't defeat anyone? He had 7 (actually 8) Horcruxes, he couldn't die. And wtf you're complaining about his nostrils flaring?
Personally, I liked it a lot. I started reading it at about 1 A.M. and was done about 9 A.M.