by Athena Appleton » Tuesday 23 October 2007 2:10:15am
Personally, I don't like it.
It's not that I have a problem with gays or lesbians, or that I consider it a character flaw or anything like that. But I liked the fact that Dumbledore was just eccentric. Finding out that he's a gay character kind of puts a twist on that eccentricity, and however stereotypical or ignorant it may be, in my mind, learning that he's gay took him from being an offbeat, eccentric man to a flamboyant homosexual.
It was nice to learn that he had loved before. He spoke so much of love, I had actually begun to wonder if he had ever experienced it himself. Like, maybe it was something he held so high on a pedestal because he spent his whole life yearning for it.
It does make it have a new, meaningful twist that he ended up having to fight and defeat Grindelwald. It really brings out the dedication he had to doing the right thing, regardless of how he felt about it personally. By that time, they were not all that close, but I know that I could never have a real fight like that, that could possibly end in death, with my first love.
As someone says in the epilogue of DH (new information does not mean we don't watch ourselves with any spoilers!!!), Severus Snape was an incredibly brave man. But if he had learned that Voldemort was planning to kill Frank, Alice and Neville Longbottom, not Lily Potter, he would have done nothing to stop him. In fact, if only James and Harry were the targets, he woudl most likely have done nothing. After Lily died, he had no real interest in helping protect Harry until Dumbledore talked him into it.
It really emphasizes how brave and responsible Dumbledore was, to go up against the only man he had ever loved.