Post by Alexandria Eelanor on Jul 26, 2005 4:29:31 GMT -4
I wasn't sure if the other board had no-spoilers or not, so I concluded to make my own little bit. ^^' hope it's alright.
and if someone else has already gone through all this.. I'm terribly sorry. ^^ we'll just pretend I'm backing you're ideas up, neh?
The most overlying feature of the 6th book is quite certainly Death. Delt with on nearly every level, you can sense the growing fear and anticipation that is coming. Or, quite truthfully that it is already there. Murmurs of rumors and newspapers all over the school.. the students know quite well that the time has come, and that school, while still important, is not all there is to life.
It also developed alot of the other characters (besides our beloved trio) We get alot of insight into Ginny Weasly, and how she wants to be free of her brother's control and dominering manner, and Ron who sometimes seems to feel alot less 'important' than harry, due to the attetion he always gets. Yet, he soon comes to his own when he gets a real steady girlfriend before him (Cho was crazy, and really was only a confused schoolgirl- not a real 'steady' relationship)
Hermoine comes to terms with the fact that she's... well a girl and a good deal different from her two closest friends. Yet, through this, the three become not one single character where harry sometimes seperates himself to prove himself alone, but instead three very different young adults who stick together and support each other while having each of their own traits. This is obvious when the two at the end of the book swear (and not speaking at hte same time) to go with him. They are, in a sense, his 'death eaters' Yet, they aren't. Because unlike Lord Voldemort, they are his FRIENDS, which will in the end prove much more valuble.
The major death was nessecary and shows that Harry is becoming the one person that he fears, and will have to face evil on his own- it's a basic principle of storytelling that has been common in stories forever.
Snape, though seemingly a perfectly vile detestable creature at this point, will in the end help Harry. It is more than certain that in his killing of Dumbledore that he will become the closest any deatheater has gotten to Voldemort. His killing of Dumbledore was more than nessecary for reasons previously stated, but also because should he not have, he would have died. Dumbledore obviously has had a plan all along for Snape, and should he die, most obviously he would not be able to fullfill it.
And therefore he will pull of what could possibly be the biggest foil of all- If harry and all the others hate him, there is no way that there is a chance of revealing the truth. They wont try to communicate with him, and so his work wont be endangered.
Which sets up for the perfect assistance for when the times comes for Harry to bring about Lord voldemort's destruction.
lol.. but those are just my opinions. ^^
and if someone else has already gone through all this.. I'm terribly sorry. ^^ we'll just pretend I'm backing you're ideas up, neh?
The most overlying feature of the 6th book is quite certainly Death. Delt with on nearly every level, you can sense the growing fear and anticipation that is coming. Or, quite truthfully that it is already there. Murmurs of rumors and newspapers all over the school.. the students know quite well that the time has come, and that school, while still important, is not all there is to life.
It also developed alot of the other characters (besides our beloved trio) We get alot of insight into Ginny Weasly, and how she wants to be free of her brother's control and dominering manner, and Ron who sometimes seems to feel alot less 'important' than harry, due to the attetion he always gets. Yet, he soon comes to his own when he gets a real steady girlfriend before him (Cho was crazy, and really was only a confused schoolgirl- not a real 'steady' relationship)
Hermoine comes to terms with the fact that she's... well a girl and a good deal different from her two closest friends. Yet, through this, the three become not one single character where harry sometimes seperates himself to prove himself alone, but instead three very different young adults who stick together and support each other while having each of their own traits. This is obvious when the two at the end of the book swear (and not speaking at hte same time) to go with him. They are, in a sense, his 'death eaters' Yet, they aren't. Because unlike Lord Voldemort, they are his FRIENDS, which will in the end prove much more valuble.
The major death was nessecary and shows that Harry is becoming the one person that he fears, and will have to face evil on his own- it's a basic principle of storytelling that has been common in stories forever.
Snape, though seemingly a perfectly vile detestable creature at this point, will in the end help Harry. It is more than certain that in his killing of Dumbledore that he will become the closest any deatheater has gotten to Voldemort. His killing of Dumbledore was more than nessecary for reasons previously stated, but also because should he not have, he would have died. Dumbledore obviously has had a plan all along for Snape, and should he die, most obviously he would not be able to fullfill it.
And therefore he will pull of what could possibly be the biggest foil of all- If harry and all the others hate him, there is no way that there is a chance of revealing the truth. They wont try to communicate with him, and so his work wont be endangered.
Which sets up for the perfect assistance for when the times comes for Harry to bring about Lord voldemort's destruction.
lol.. but those are just my opinions. ^^