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Rev Mom wrote:I'll bet both of you get snow each winter. I'm so jealous. Do you know what it's like to have 60 and 70 degree temps in January? It's downright depressing... My husband is always talking about moving us north. I've requested another continent.
Siana you're very astute to point out that DD seems to never be around when Harry has to face LV. I think, and suspect you do too, that's a deliberate move on JKR's part. It's also part of writing children's lit. If you write for kids, the kids have to be working out their problems. This is a standard feature in that part of the publishing world. If you write a book where grown-ups are figuring out all the answers, you're soon rejected or told to go back and have the kids working out their problems. So that makes sense to me, that Harry would be left alone to work through these crisis times he has with LV. It's also got a coming of age theme to it with these conflicts that the young people have to grow through that will leave them forever changed. (hopefully for the better.)
Do you really think DD has to "die" or could he make some other type of critical exit? He's such a special character I can't imagine him getting killed off or something that's really contrived. I would think he'd get a special send-off, perhaps like the prophet Elijah, who "never died," but was taken up to heaven in a chariot of fire. (i'm not "rev mom" for nothing.)
If it's 5 pm here in the land of no snow, then are both of you up late?
I know what you mean, I'm in Mobile, AL it was 78 a couple days, but its starting to cool down a bit. I haven't seen snow since I was in 5th grade, and I'm a freshman in college this year. Not fair!Rev Mom wrote:I'll bet both of you get snow each winter. I'm so jealous. Do you know what it's like to have 60 and 70 degree temps in January? It's downright depressing...
Shoveling sounds okay, prying pieces of ice out of my dog's paws is definitely not appealing. But gee whiz have some sympathy for me. We never get a real winter here and it only really snows about once every three years. (the last time was the freak snow-storm of 2002 when we got over 6 inches.) So Tanuki now you can imagine summers in the South where the fleas and ticks are so bad you can't walk out into your yard without wearing insect repellant, or having to take your dog to the vet every three weeks for cortisone shots (and your cats) because all their hair is falling out from flea allergies and they keep you up all night with constant licking and scratching which has now made yucky sores all over their bodies/.. Or maybe, try imagining so many mosquito bites that you're sure you've caught West Nile virus. I think I'd rather have the snow!
And I am afraid, this will happen to DD, too. He is the odd one out, in the end of the story.Rev Mom wrote:... she wrote and wrote and realized Sirius needed to be eliminated in the physical sense in order to get to her planned destination.
Hagger 9003 wrote:yes, carsten, you hav the main points down, but how can DD die at the end of book 6? he wont be telling all his plan before then, and plus, its such a big climax, that if it happens at all, it has to happen at the end. as well, DD has been protecting harry in "ways even he (harry) doesn't know about", so if DD died, alot of that protection would disappear. this needs to be just before the final confrontation with voldemort, because if DD is dead, what is stopping LV just killing him (or trying) instantly, when he is mourning/sad, with his guard down. DD may die, but if he does, only in book 7
Exactly. Things don't happen when they should happen, but fate hits at random - both in reality and good books.Tanuki wrote:You're assuming Harry can't take care of himself before book 7. I think he's growing by leaps and bounds and even before the end of book 6, he'll be able to do much more than many people expect
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