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Saturday, July 21st, 2007 07:28 pm

Well, I'm done. Everything else below the cut.

Interesting how all my thoughts are about Slytherins...

  • Snape! He did it, all of it, to honor Lily's dying wish? That's it? The whole thing was basically just a giant guilt-trip laid by Dumbledore? And then he just . . . dies, with a whimper. He doesn't really do much of anything all book.
  • I'm also disappointed in Draco. I was hoping we might be set up for some kind of moment of redemption, but I think the best we got was that he didn't actually do anything actively evil after he was pretty much defeated and powerless.
  • And finally, the whole of Slytherin House?! Not a single one of them makes any gesture to take a stand for what's right, or to protect the school, or anything? What's with that crap? It seems what we're left with, at the end of the day, is that nobody sorted into Slytherin can ever become a real hero. It's so hollow.

Yeah, that's the bottom line. Being Slytherin might not make you automatically evil, but apparently it prevents you from being actively good. At best, you can be some sort of reluctant hero, guilted into it because someone died. I wanted something both more and less interesting, where House wasn't such a determinant of both personality and path. Oh, well.

And I really enjoyed reading it. I just wanted more from it.

Oh, wait, one more. Why has nobody who was alive back then ever made any mention of, passing reference to, or even obvious omission of the apparently well-known friendship between Lily and Snape. Since she apparently did know he existed, after all, and people were aware enough of their friendship to give her a hard time about it, why does it feel like it, well, never existed until this book got written?

Sunday, July 22nd, 2007 04:38 pm (UTC)
I was utterly frustrated by the fact that she manages to redeem *all* the Malfoys, and Snape, and *Kreacher*, for goodness' sake, and she can't even give us one token Slytherin saying "no, I'll stay and fight" at the end.

Especially after six books of pounding on the "there must be House unity" drum at every possible opportunity.
Sunday, July 22nd, 2007 05:11 pm (UTC)
Yeah, Snape and Draco and the Slytherins as a whole turned out to be pretty disappointing. But I feel like Neville Longbottom singlehandedly made up for every disappointment in the whole series.
Tuesday, July 24th, 2007 01:26 am (UTC)
Neville was so badass.
Tuesday, July 24th, 2007 03:25 am (UTC)
I didn't read the clearing of the Slytherin table as being as unlikely as you say. Off hand, I would guess there must only be about 10 members of each house who would be old enough to stay and within Slytherin, you've got 3 who are actively pro-Voldemort. Of the other 7 or so, they've been pressured for years to be anti-Harry Potter, so any of them staying doesn't make much sense. Also, McGonnagal doesn't exactly encourage the Slytherins to stay with her dismissal of the house. I got confused about Slughorn. He does stay, doesn't he? However, both of these things aside, you're treating this as if the sorting process is random. People sorted into Slytherin are interested in Power above all else. It makes sense that few of them would be willing to stick their necks out in a reasonably hopeless battle. Personality and path determines house, not the other way around.

I read Draco's inability to identify Harry at the Malfoy Manor and him trying to contain the situation in the Room of Requirement as both being partially redeeming. I do agree that he could have done more.

Friday, July 27th, 2007 10:27 am (UTC)
Draco begins as a fearsome antagonist, but the prep/jock bully is, of course, defeated by the misfit antagonist and friends. It seems like they outgrew him over the years as well. Sure, he continues his opposition and hindrance, and is groomed to be a high-ranking Death Eater, but the heroes have much bigger concerns than Draco. He doesn't turn out to be hardcore evil, but he doesn't rebel against his parents and what he's expected to become. Yes, it would been more satisfying to see him go in that direction.