I feel weird writing this post, because I don't really feel like posting, yet it seems like I should, and then I think--what, do you imagine the public is waiting on pins and needles for your words? Get over yourself!:-D

Anyway, I didn't much like it. Perhaps my feelings will change, but stop here if you don’t want to read any negative stuff. I don't have any rants prepared or anything or want to harsh anybody's buzz. (But misery also loves company!) I was talking to someone who's asked me what I needed from the book, what I wanted to happen or what would have made me satisfied, and the truth is, I don't have an answer. I don't have a list of prescriptive criticism, or think things were done badly, or should have been done a different way.

Well, except one little thing, which couldn't be helped. When that white doe showed up I never doubted for a second it was Snape's Lily!Patronus (cause she's a lady!James!). We'd seen Arthur's and Kingsley's Patronuses talk, and oh, how I wanted that beautiful sparkly stag to come up to Harry and tell him to get this Quest going already in Snape's sarcastic voice.

I've never loved these books the way some do--which should not be taken as a criticism of people who do. I just mean that I know there are people who re-read the books over and over as comfort, and that's not something I ever did. I didn't ever want to re-read to spend time with these people or in this world. There are other books I do feel that way about, books that other people find meh. Basically, I felt like JKR was writing a story of good and evil, and life and death, that resonated with her and satisfied her, and felt like a triumph for her--just not me. So I was a bit left out of the story, objectively even seeing characters doing good, brave things, and just not sharing much in the emotions. More than once I felt like I was seeing more story outline/structure than story so that it seemed very contrived (a couple of times Harry himself seemed to admit it) and made it feel like nothing was building to anything.

What it mostly made me do is go over all the ways I was reading it wrong, making my issues more central than the author really considered them. I don't think I was ever so off as, say, a Harmonian banking on the Hippogriff o'love or anything like that, and some things that happened I did predict (Snape/Lily, obviously, and DDM!Snape). But in general I think I was reading Rowling a bit too much like a Tolkien fan, and maybe too much as a Jungian (not that I'm any expert on Jung, but I was reading from my own idea of his stuff). And I think when JKR said that she was Christian and if she talked about her faith we'd know the ending, I immediately began interrogating from the *wrong* Christian perspective and got that wrong too.

Contrary to what some may have thought at times-or not-I don't hate the good guys. Still don't hate them, just still would not want to spend time with them or re-read the books to spend time with them. The characters I liked the most I think less of now or am just kind of confused by, which is unfortunate. I find Harry affectionately naming his child Albus Severus downright creepy--but that wasn't the first time in the book where that kind of thing happened.

Not sure what I predict fanfic-wise. I wonder if people might not start writing some interesting stuff. I did at one point think how I wanted to take a favorite character and put him in a different story.

Oh, also I've been dreading the epilogue for years, because I've always hated epilogues. Even when I was too young to know the name for them I hated them. Some books I guess can make a case for them being appropriate. HP is really not one of them that I can see. There was no reason I could see for needing to see these people married with children. The one good thing I read about it was after it was leaked, before I read it, and I read a comment where someone said the epilogue read like any cliché H/G fic...or any cliché post-war H/D fic.;-)
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From: [identity profile] albichorizon.livejournal.com


Basically, I'm feeling what you're going through.

When I was reading DH it often felt contrived and the emotions never really connected with me. JKR had a lot of stuff that Harry needed to do before she could end the book and it all unfortunately had to be done by Harry & co. I just kind of trudged through all that writing so that I could get back to reading fanfic.

I found myself on several occasions comparing this to OotP. Specifically, if whoever wrote the screenplay for OotP could cut out a lot of the story and make it interesting (or so I've heard), what parts would they cut out of this book to make it move quicker?

I was disappointed by how little Snape and Draco were in the story, since I think they had a lot of potential that was built up in the previous books and not used here. My hopes were rasied (and crushed) after I read James mention that he'd leave if he was sorted into Slytherin.

Also, I'm trying forget the epilogue. There was no need for it, any reader with a spark of imagination could figure out what was going to happen. I only was comforted by the fact that Draco was not imprisoned or anything (and I completely reject that Draco's hair would recede, especially in his late thirties).

ext_6866: (Mag-zilla)

From: [identity profile] sistermagpie.livejournal.com


It was funny that I did think there might be interesting fanfic to come out of it. On another lj there was discussion of the bizarro Remus/Tonks marriage. I suspect it was supposed to be straightforward and happy, that Remus was luckily shamed into courageously accepting his happiness just before he and his wife tragically died, but it seemed like it was genuinely a bad marriage with lots of reasons not to happen.

Like I said, sometimes I catch myself thinking the story I thought started in HBP hasn't finished yet. So much of what I thought was the point was actually just more technical set up for the magical solution.

From: [identity profile] cressida0201.livejournal.com


I'd bet a lot that Remus and Tonks were the two characters JKR was originally going to let survive and then killed off at the last minute. The story seems to me to be set up to be "the rocky start to their marriage before they got past Those Issues," except with the sad ending. Which would also explain why neither of them gets an actual death scene.

Also, Harry's arguments to send Remus back home were mostly centered around his responsibility toward his child, not about Tonks. Which suggests to me that he was originally supposed to, well, get to be a father to his child someday thanks to Harry's good advice. I don't know why JKR would have written that scene that way if she was always planning to kill R/T off. (Can't help suspecting the fanwank drove her to it!)
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