ratcreature: RatCreature as Harry Potter in a Quidditch uniform. (hp)
RatCreature ([personal profile] ratcreature) wrote2007-07-22 01:10 am
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my first reactions to Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows

So, like many other people I spent much of today (well technically yesterday) reading the new Harry Potter book.


First, I'm really glad that I managed to remain completely unspoiled, as I enjoyed the twists, and the tension and suspense worked for me, even though I never thought Harry would die, so I wasn't afraid of that when he confronted Voldemort.

Overall I'm happy with this conclusion. It's not that I wouldn't have liked Remus, Tonks, Fred, Dobby and Snape to survive (though I was rather resigned to the likelihood of Snape's death), but if nobody (or only "red shirts") had died, the story would have been much less powerful and the conflict kind of cheapened. I was happy that Snape was on Dumbledore's side, which I hoped for, but I wasn't 100% sure. The pensieve chapter was heart-wrenching. And I thought it was awesome that Harry named one of his sons after both Dumbledore and Snape in the end despite his conflicted history with both.

I liked the additional background we got for Dumbledore and Grindelwald, that Dumbledore wasn't perfect, but still a decent person, even though his brother was understandably bitter with him. I thought Aberforth was great here throughout, btw. Also, with his love for goats. *hearts* I loved seeing the glimpses of Snape's past history with Lily and Lily's with Petunia. When first seeing the doe I didn't guess that it was Snape, but I really liked that it turned out that way.

The Goblins' position on the sword and the inheritance of artifacts made actually sense to me,and explains much about the constantly mentioned past wizard-goblin conflicts. As for the house elves, I liked that Kreacher was somewhat "rehabilitated" but still mostly cooperated and fought out of his attachment for Regulus, and that Dobby played a crucial role too.

I thought Harry, Ron and Hermione on their quest were great, that they were alternating between hope and frustration, that things didn't really work like they expected, that Ron left, but came back, all of that really worked for me. And I was happy to get glimpses at least of how all the others also fought in various ways, that Neville, Luna and Ginny organized a resistance, that Lee Jordan produced underground radio broadcasts... *flail!* I have so much love for all those characters and look forward to the ton of fanfic telling their resistance stories in more detail.

There were some smaller things I didn't get, like why Hermione said she had never performed a memory charm, when they modified the Death Eaters' memories, while earlier she said she messed with her parents' minds, also, that the snake-animated Bathilda was supposed to only speak Parseltongue, well that explains why Hermione jumped when she heard the "Come!" from the next room, but not why she didn't mention to Harry that she heard loud hissing, which it must have sounded like for her.

But overall I had a lot of fun reading, and I thought the thing with the wand, stone and cloak that complicated their decisions to "just" search for the horcruxes was quite cool.

[identity profile] retsuko.livejournal.com 2007-07-22 04:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Love your Snape icon! (First time I've seen it.)

Yes, the best-friend first thing made more sense than a puppy love type of situation. I was also impressed that she pointed out where he was going wrong and this was what broke them up, not James Potter sweeping her off her feet.

What I meant about the memory charms was that previously the only experience Hermione had with them was Lockhart, and she found this rather horrifying; but in this book, I got the feeling that she realized the gravity of the situation and performed charms that she wouldn't have normally considered. Harry did so, too, the imperius curse (for good reason) and the crucio (for a little less good reason.)