The Deathly Hallows become my favortite after I finished reading it...especially the epilogue, before that it was Order of the Phoenix.
The Deathly Hallows become my favortite after I finished reading it...especially the epilogue, before that it was Order of the Phoenix.
Would I be correct if I assumed you had hoped the plot would go in a different direction?I am stunned The Deathly Hollows is getting so many votes. That's the only book of the series I hate and it succeeded in ruining the whole thing for me. I can't envision myself ever reading any of the books ever again because of it (ripple effect, what can I say?)--coincidentally I'm actually giving away all 7 of my hardback copies to a co-worker tomorrow.
Would I be correct if I assumed you had hoped the plot would go in a different direction?
Er... riiiggghht. That's pretty stupid.When Dumbledore arranged his own death with Severus Snape, he meant for Snape to "end up with the Elder Wand." Because his death would not have been the result of his defeat, Dumbledore hoped this might break the wand's power. However, since Draco disarmed Dumbledore, the plan failed and Draco became the wand's new master. After Dumbledore's death, the wand was placed inside his tomb. In the final book, Voldemort learns about the wand and goes on a search for it. The Dark Lord eventually knows that Dumbledore possessed the wand and opened his tomb and claimed the wand as his own. Only later did he learn that he never mastered the wand because he did not gain ownership from its previous owner. Thereafter he slew Snape, not realizing that the wand's allegiance had passed to Draco, even though Draco never had the Elder Wand itself in his possession; furthermore, Draco was disarmed by Harry, and thus relieved of the Elder Wand's allegiance, before Voldemort even took possession of the wand itself. In the Battle of Hogwarts, the Elder Wand recognizes Harry as its true master, and when confronted with Harry's Expelliarmus charm, the wand causes Voldemort's final Killing Curse to rebound and kill him.
Makes sense to me. The Elder Wand is the ultimate wand, hence, it's got special properties that don't apply to normal wands; hence, the whole mastery thing becomes more important (there was always a certain amount of relationship between the wand and its owner, as the selection process in #1 made clear).Er... riiiggghht. That's pretty stupid.
Goblet is all about his scheme to return; the whole climax revolves around him.Thus, the two books that have the least to do with him, being Azkaban and Goblet, are the best, imo.
The whole house elf thing was, from the start (or, from book four, when their status became an actual issue) portrayed as complicated. The Hogwarts elves resented Hermione's intrusions into their perfectly nice lives, for example (for me, one of the key aspects of the elves is where exactly they come from).The slavery theme of the house-elves ends up being "slavery's all right as long as you treat your slaves well - I wonder if my house-elf who has just fought at my side in the final battle will make me a sandwich?"
Huh?It is our choices which show what we are, we should not judge others by their blood. Unless it's magic blood inherited from their martyred mother.
I'm not sure I follow here. Harry understands that his death is necessary to kill part of Voldemort's soul, and so he selflessly allows that to happen.The fact that Harry's survival in the Forbidden Forest is predicated on him a)choosing not to fight and b) deliberately choosing not to think for himself because it's too hard also gets to me.
I didn't say it didn't make sense; I rather thought that it was too much history to give an inanimate object, and a shoddy way to dispose of the villain.Makes sense to me. The Elder Wand is the ultimate wand, hence, it's got special properties that don't apply to normal wands; hence, the whole mastery thing becomes more important (there was always a certain amount of relationship between the wand and its owner, as the selection process in #1 made clear).Er... riiiggghht. That's pretty stupid.
Thank you, I've read the book and seen the film. You'll notice, however, that Voldemort had very little to do with the Tournament that took up the considerable majority of both.Goblet is all about his scheme to return; the whole climax revolves around him.Thus, the two books that have the least to do with him, being Azkaban and Goblet, are the best, imo.
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The problem with Voldemort is that he, and by extension his goons, are boring. Darth Vader had an interesting vulnerbility in his reliance upon his mechanical breather, and then became genuinely interesting when we learned who he really was. Voldemort's evil from the get-go, even as a child.
Just read up on the Elder Wand stuff on Wikipedia, and it's worse than I thought:
Er... riiiggghht. That's pretty stupid.When Dumbledore arranged his own death with Severus Snape, he meant for Snape to "end up with the Elder Wand." Because his death would not have been the result of his defeat, Dumbledore hoped this might break the wand's power. However, since Draco disarmed Dumbledore, the plan failed and Draco became the wand's new master. After Dumbledore's death, the wand was placed inside his tomb. In the final book, Voldemort learns about the wand and goes on a search for it. The Dark Lord eventually knows that Dumbledore possessed the wand and opened his tomb and claimed the wand as his own. Only later did he learn that he never mastered the wand because he did not gain ownership from its previous owner. Thereafter he slew Snape, not realizing that the wand's allegiance had passed to Draco, even though Draco never had the Elder Wand itself in his possession; furthermore, Draco was disarmed by Harry, and thus relieved of the Elder Wand's allegiance, before Voldemort even took possession of the wand itself. In the Battle of Hogwarts, the Elder Wand recognizes Harry as its true master, and when confronted with Harry's Expelliarmus charm, the wand causes Voldemort's final Killing Curse to rebound and kill him.
Shame that the first 634 pages are so boring.Btw, I disagree that Goblet is good cos of the lack of Voldemort. It's best feature (besides giving the first true glimpse of the wider Magic world) is 'Voldemort Rising' in those gripping last 100 pages. It's just unbelievably well plotted, written, edited stuff - absolutely unputdownable.
Yes. Yes it is.the Wand now has to become omniscient (to know what has happened to Draco when it's not even being wielded by Draco).
It's beyond stupid!!
I actually agree with you that that section is awesome - but part of the reason it's awesome is because it wasn't the main focus of the book until then. If HBP and DH had been 200-300 pages or so, maybe they could have been as cool. But at 600+ pages apiece, with no compelling plot digressions to distract, they just don't work.Btw, I disagree that Goblet is good cos of the lack of Voldemort. It's best feature (besides giving the first true glimpse of the wider Magic world) is 'Voldemort Rising' in those gripping last 100 pages. It's just unbelievably well plotted, written, edited stuff - absolutely unputdownable.
I think it's the constant undermining of the ostensible moral keynotes of the series that get to me most.
The slavery theme of the house-elves ends up being "slavery's all right as long as you treat your slaves well - I wonder if my house-elf who has just fought at my side in the final battle will make me a sandwich?"
I'd say that an unfortunate theme of the books is conformity, not rocking the boat (there was the negative portrayal of Fudge, but he was presented as an aberration, people and governments usually being better).
SPEW is one of my least favorite aspects of the series. If Hermione should be fronting any sort of political campaign, imo, it'd be for openness between the magical and nonmagical communities, with wizards fighting third world disease, hunger, helping to mediate conflicts, etc.I think Rowling meant it to be a joke from the beginning-she gave Hermione decent arguments but had Harry, Ron and the Elves she was fighting for not care or actively oppose the idea.
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