Discussion:
And they all lived happily ever after?
(too old to reply)
peter
2007-08-03 07:49:07 UTC
Permalink
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
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.
.
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.
.
.
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.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.

The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.

And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.

Peter
Welsh Dog
2007-08-03 08:33:30 UTC
Permalink
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
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.
.
Post by peter
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
No argument from me. I think the 'epilogue' could easily have been
another book long... even without a plot as such (and I doubt any of
us would have complained)!!

The tale of rebuilding the Ministry and Hogwart's would have been
really interesting... and the development of the love story between
Harry and Ginny would have been nice to see too. There was after all a
few years between the end of the book and their marriage!

Ah well.. all to late now :(

Welshdog
--
Australian Opinion http://australianopinion.com

News and views... for people like youse!!
Drusilla
2007-08-03 21:21:06 UTC
Permalink
Post by Welsh Dog
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Post by peter
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
No argument from me. I think the 'epilogue' could easily have been
another book long... even without a plot as such (and I doubt any of
us would have complained)!!
The tale of rebuilding the Ministry and Hogwart's would have been
really interesting... and the development of the love story between
Harry and Ginny would have been nice to see too. There was after all a
few years between the end of the book and their marriage!
Ah well.. all to late now :(
I still think it should have been one more chapter between the Battle
and the epilogue.
Ron Hunter
2007-08-03 08:53:54 UTC
Permalink
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
BubblyBabs
2007-08-03 09:09:02 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
Brian Wakeling
2007-08-03 11:44:08 UTC
Permalink
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed,
the whole series has been entralling, and any writer who has kids
queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
(shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the prevasiveness
of
evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards.
Even wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived
Harry's celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up
that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament
onto the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
Canon, on the other hand...
--
Brian Wakeling
www.sabremeister.me.uk/index.html
www.livejournal.com/users/sabremeister
"Tea is no substitute for potatoes."
- Terry Pratchett 20/08/03
BubblyBabs
2007-08-03 12:06:20 UTC
Permalink
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed,
the whole series has been entralling, and any writer who has kids
queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
(shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of
evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards. Even
wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived
Harry's celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up
that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament onto
the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
Canon, on the other hand...
But why bother with fanfiction? If it's not cannon then I don't understand
why people read it... It does not add to the actual story, it only gives
wanna-be writers a chance to write their version of the story of what they
wish happened but it is not what JKR wrote so it's not really what
happened... JKR just should have written a better last book and I can't
believe her editors didn't go 'whoa there sister, you need to tie up some
loose ends or your readers will be unhappy"...
babs
Ron Hunter
2007-08-04 08:30:26 UTC
Permalink
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed,
the whole series has been entralling, and any writer who has kids
queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
(shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of
evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards. Even
wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived
Harry's celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up
that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament onto
the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
Canon, on the other hand...
But why bother with fanfiction? If it's not cannon then I don't understand
why people read it... It does not add to the actual story, it only gives
wanna-be writers a chance to write their version of the story of what they
wish happened but it is not what JKR wrote so it's not really what
happened... JKR just should have written a better last book and I can't
believe her editors didn't go 'whoa there sister, you need to tie up some
loose ends or your readers will be unhappy"...
babs
Well, I don't see fanfiction the way you do. I find reading it very
rewarding, and some of the stories are way better than HBP and DH. If
it gives one pleasure, and it is free, and no harm comes from it, then
why not? And as to it being 'canon' (not 'cannon', thats an artillery
piece), the only requirement for a fanfiction piece to be 'canon' is
that it not violate any of the situations, or 'rules' of the JKR
stories. Those that do are labeled appropriately (AU).
Try it, you might like it.
BubblyBabs
2007-08-04 13:24:47 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed,
the whole series has been entralling, and any writer who has kids
queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
(shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of
evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards.
Even wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived
Harry's celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up
that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament onto
the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
Canon, on the other hand...
But why bother with fanfiction? If it's not cannon then I don't
understand why people read it... It does not add to the actual story, it
only gives wanna-be writers a chance to write their version of the story
of what they wish happened but it is not what JKR wrote so it's not
really what happened... JKR just should have written a better last book
and I can't believe her editors didn't go 'whoa there sister, you need to
tie up some loose ends or your readers will be unhappy"...
babs
Well, I don't see fanfiction the way you do. I find reading it very
rewarding, and some of the stories are way better than HBP and DH. If it
gives one pleasure, and it is free, and no harm comes from it, then why
not? And as to it being 'canon' (not 'cannon', thats an artillery
heh, figures I'd misspell it...
Post by Ron Hunter
piece), the only requirement for a fanfiction piece to be 'canon' is that
it not violate any of the situations, or 'rules' of the JKR stories.
Those that do are labeled appropriately (AU).
Try it, you might like it.
What does AU stand for?
babs
Ron Hunter
2007-08-04 13:44:38 UTC
Permalink
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed,
the whole series has been entralling, and any writer who has kids
queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
(shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of
evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards.
Even wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived
Harry's celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up
that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament onto
the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
Canon, on the other hand...
But why bother with fanfiction? If it's not cannon then I don't
understand why people read it... It does not add to the actual story, it
only gives wanna-be writers a chance to write their version of the story
of what they wish happened but it is not what JKR wrote so it's not
really what happened... JKR just should have written a better last book
and I can't believe her editors didn't go 'whoa there sister, you need to
tie up some loose ends or your readers will be unhappy"...
babs
Well, I don't see fanfiction the way you do. I find reading it very
rewarding, and some of the stories are way better than HBP and DH. If it
gives one pleasure, and it is free, and no harm comes from it, then why
not? And as to it being 'canon' (not 'cannon', thats an artillery
heh, figures I'd misspell it...
Post by Ron Hunter
piece), the only requirement for a fanfiction piece to be 'canon' is that
it not violate any of the situations, or 'rules' of the JKR stories.
Those that do are labeled appropriately (AU).
Try it, you might like it.
What does AU stand for?
babs
AU is 'alternate universe'. It means that just about anything goes.
smaug86
2007-08-28 14:37:44 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed,
the whole series has been entralling, and any writer who has kids
queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
(shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of
evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards.
Even wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived
Harry's celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up
that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament onto
the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
Canon, on the other hand...
But why bother with fanfiction? If it's not cannon then I don't
understand why people read it... It does not add to the actual story, it
only gives wanna-be writers a chance to write their version of the story
of what they wish happened but it is not what JKR wrote so it's not
really what happened... JKR just should have written a better last book
and I can't believe her editors didn't go 'whoa there sister, you need to
tie up some loose ends or your readers will be unhappy"...
babs
Well, I don't see fanfiction the way you do. I find reading it very
rewarding, and some of the stories are way better than HBP and DH. If it
gives one pleasure, and it is free, and no harm comes from it, then why
not? And as to it being 'canon' (not 'cannon', thats an artillery
heh, figures I'd misspell it...
Post by Ron Hunter
piece), the only requirement for a fanfiction piece to be 'canon' is that
it not violate any of the situations, or 'rules' of the JKR stories.
Those that do are labeled appropriately (AU).
Try it, you might like it.
What does AU stand for?
babs
AU is 'alternate universe'. It means that just about anything goes.
All the fanfiction is AU.
Ron Hunter
2007-08-28 16:11:55 UTC
Permalink
Post by smaug86
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed,
the whole series has been entralling, and any writer who has kids
queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
(shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of
evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards.
Even wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived
Harry's celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up
that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament onto
the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
Canon, on the other hand...
But why bother with fanfiction? If it's not cannon then I don't
understand why people read it... It does not add to the actual story, it
only gives wanna-be writers a chance to write their version of the story
of what they wish happened but it is not what JKR wrote so it's not
really what happened... JKR just should have written a better last book
and I can't believe her editors didn't go 'whoa there sister, you need to
tie up some loose ends or your readers will be unhappy"...
babs
Well, I don't see fanfiction the way you do. I find reading it very
rewarding, and some of the stories are way better than HBP and DH. If it
gives one pleasure, and it is free, and no harm comes from it, then why
not? And as to it being 'canon' (not 'cannon', thats an artillery
heh, figures I'd misspell it...
Post by Ron Hunter
piece), the only requirement for a fanfiction piece to be 'canon' is that
it not violate any of the situations, or 'rules' of the JKR stories.
Those that do are labeled appropriately (AU).
Try it, you might like it.
What does AU stand for?
babs
AU is 'alternate universe'. It means that just about anything goes.
All the fanfiction is AU.
NOT.
As long as it contradicts nothing in the books, and follows the rules
JKR has formulated for her imaginary world, it is NOT AU, only 'filling
in the blanks'.
MOST fanfiction IS AU, but some is NOT.
Louis Epstein
2007-08-27 20:29:34 UTC
Permalink
Ron Hunter <***@charter.net> wrote:
: BubblyBabs wrote:
:> "Brian Wakeling" <***@virgin.net> wrote in message
:> news:cyEsi.13758$***@newsfe7-gui.ntli.net...
:>> In a speech called KYCsi.2704$***@bignews4.bellsouth.net,
:>> BubblyBabs (***@whatever.com) spake thusly:
:>>
:>>> "Ron Hunter" <***@charter.net> wrote in message
:>>> news:JoqdnbXR6YK-***@giganews.com...
:>>>> peter wrote:
:>>>>> I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
:>>>>> have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
:>>>>> passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
:>>>>> .
:>>>>> .
:>>>>> .
:>>>>> .
:>>>>> .
:>>>>> .
:>>>>> .
:>>>>> .
:>>>>> .
:>>>>> .
:>>>>> .
:>>>>> .
:>>>>> .
:>>>>> .
:>>>>> .
:>>>>> .
:>>>>> This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
:>>>>> scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
:>>>>> unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
:>>>>> would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
:>>>>> each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
:>>>>> Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
:>>>>> because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
:>>>>> works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed,
:>>>>> the whole series has been entralling, and any writer who has kids
:>>>>> queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
:>>>>>
:>>>>> The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
:>>>>> the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
:>>>>> ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
:>>>>> the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
:>>>>> (shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the prevasiveness
:>>>>> of evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
:>>>>> life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
:>>>>> having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards.
:>>>>> Even wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
:>>>>>
:>>>>> And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
:>>>>> were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived
:>>>>> Harry's celebrity.
:>>>>>
:>>>>> Peter
:>>>>>
:>>>> There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show
:>>>> up that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
:>>>> fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
:>>> But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
:>>> Babs
:>>
:>> Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament
:>> onto the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
:>> Canon, on the other hand...
:>
:> But why bother with fanfiction? If it's not cannon then I don't understand
:> why people read it... It does not add to the actual story, it only gives
:> wanna-be writers a chance to write their version of the story of what
:> they wish happened but it is not what JKR wrote so it's not really what
:> happened... JKR just should have written a better last book and I can't
:> believe her editors didn't go 'whoa there sister, you need to tie up
:> some loose ends or your readers will be unhappy"...
:> babs
:>
:>
: Well, I don't see fanfiction the way you do. I find reading it very
: rewarding, and some of the stories are way better than HBP and DH. If
: it gives one pleasure, and it is free, and no harm comes from it, then
: why not? And as to it being 'canon' (not 'cannon', thats an artillery
: piece), the only requirement for a fanfiction piece to be 'canon' is
: that it not violate any of the situations, or 'rules' of the JKR
: stories. Those that do are labeled appropriately (AU).
: Try it, you might like it.

The canon consists of what the author says it does.
Fanfic can be consistent with canon,but not part of it.

I don't believe in writing in someone else's universe without
their permission and wouldn't want others writing in a universe
of my creation without my permission.

-=-=-
The World Trade Center towers MUST rise again,
at least as tall as before...or terror has triumphed.
smaug86
2007-08-28 14:34:49 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed,
the whole series has been entralling, and any writer who has kids
queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
(shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of
evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards. Even
wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived
Harry's celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up
that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament onto
the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
Canon, on the other hand...
But why bother with fanfiction? If it's not cannon then I don't understand
why people read it... It does not add to the actual story, it only gives
wanna-be writers a chance to write their version of the story of what they
wish happened but it is not what JKR wrote so it's not really what
happened... JKR just should have written a better last book and I can't
believe her editors didn't go 'whoa there sister, you need to tie up some
loose ends or your readers will be unhappy"...
babs
Well, I don't see fanfiction the way you do. I find reading it very
rewarding, and some of the stories are way better than HBP and DH. If
it gives one pleasure, and it is free, and no harm comes from it, then
why not? And as to it being 'canon' (not 'cannon', thats an artillery
piece), the only requirement for a fanfiction piece to be 'canon' is
that it not violate any of the situations, or 'rules' of the JKR
stories. Those that do are labeled appropriately (AU).
Try it, you might like it.
Because it is not written by JKR. That simple. Fanfiction is not canon
and never will be canon. It's just wannabe writers who don't have the
imagination to come up with their own stuff so they borrow other
people's ideas and characters and write what they wanted instead of
just enjoying the world created for them.
Ron Hunter
2007-08-28 16:10:21 UTC
Permalink
Post by smaug86
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed,
the whole series has been entralling, and any writer who has kids
queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
(shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of
evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards. Even
wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived
Harry's celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up
that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament onto
the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
Canon, on the other hand...
But why bother with fanfiction? If it's not cannon then I don't understand
why people read it... It does not add to the actual story, it only gives
wanna-be writers a chance to write their version of the story of what they
wish happened but it is not what JKR wrote so it's not really what
happened... JKR just should have written a better last book and I can't
believe her editors didn't go 'whoa there sister, you need to tie up some
loose ends or your readers will be unhappy"...
babs
Well, I don't see fanfiction the way you do. I find reading it very
rewarding, and some of the stories are way better than HBP and DH. If
it gives one pleasure, and it is free, and no harm comes from it, then
why not? And as to it being 'canon' (not 'cannon', thats an artillery
piece), the only requirement for a fanfiction piece to be 'canon' is
that it not violate any of the situations, or 'rules' of the JKR
stories. Those that do are labeled appropriately (AU).
Try it, you might like it.
Because it is not written by JKR. That simple. Fanfiction is not canon
and never will be canon. It's just wannabe writers who don't have the
imagination to come up with their own stuff so they borrow other
people's ideas and characters and write what they wanted instead of
just enjoying the world created for them.
Just because it wasn't written by JKR, does NOT mean it is not canon.
The term only means that it is consistent with what is in the books, and
contradicts nothing in her magical world. It is a group of people who
want to DO something, create something, and contribute something, rather
than mindlessly reread what JKR wrote. Some people like to do some of
the work for themselves, others mindlessly watch reruns of 20 year old
sitcoms on TV.
Louis Epstein
2007-08-28 18:39:02 UTC
Permalink
Ron Hunter <***@charter.net> wrote:
: smaug86 wrote:
:> On Aug 4, 4:30 am, Ron Hunter <***@charter.net> wrote:
:>> BubblyBabs wrote:
:>>> "Brian Wakeling" <***@virgin.net> wrote in message
:>>> news:cyEsi.13758$***@newsfe7-gui.ntli.net...
:>>>> In a speech called KYCsi.2704$***@bignews4.bellsouth.net,
:>>>> BubblyBabs (***@whatever.com) spake thusly:
:>>>>> "Ron Hunter" <***@charter.net> wrote in message
:>>>>> news:JoqdnbXR6YK-***@giganews.com...
:>>>>>> peter wrote:
:>>>>>>> I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
:>>>>>>> have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
:>>>>>>> passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
:>>>>>>> scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
:>>>>>>> unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
:>>>>>>> would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
:>>>>>>> each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
:>>>>>>> Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
:>>>>>>> because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
:>>>>>>> works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed,
:>>>>>>> the whole series has been entralling, and any writer who has kids
:>>>>>>> queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
:>>>>>>> The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
:>>>>>>> the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
:>>>>>>> ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
:>>>>>>> the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
:>>>>>>> (shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of
:>>>>>>> evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
:>>>>>>> life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
:>>>>>>> having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards. Even
:>>>>>>> wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
:>>>>>>> And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
:>>>>>>> were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived
:>>>>>>> Harry's celebrity.
:>>>>>>> Peter
:>>>>>> There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up
:>>>>>> that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
:>>>>>> fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
:>>>>> But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
:>>>>> Babs
:>>>> Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament onto
:>>>> the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
:>>>> Canon, on the other hand...
:>>> But why bother with fanfiction? If it's not cannon then I don't understand
:>>> why people read it... It does not add to the actual story, it only gives
:>>> wanna-be writers a chance to write their version of the story of what they
:>>> wish happened but it is not what JKR wrote so it's not really what
:>>> happened... JKR just should have written a better last book and I can't
:>>> believe her editors didn't go 'whoa there sister, you need to tie up some
:>>> loose ends or your readers will be unhappy"...
:>>> babs
:>> Well, I don't see fanfiction the way you do. I find reading it very
:>> rewarding, and some of the stories are way better than HBP and DH. If
:>> it gives one pleasure, and it is free, and no harm comes from it, then
:>> why not? And as to it being 'canon' (not 'cannon', thats an artillery
:>> piece), the only requirement for a fanfiction piece to be 'canon' is
:>> that it not violate any of the situations, or 'rules' of the JKR
:>> stories. Those that do are labeled appropriately (AU).
:>> Try it, you might like it.
:>
:> Because it is not written by JKR. That simple. Fanfiction is not canon
:> and never will be canon. It's just wannabe writers who don't have the
:> imagination to come up with their own stuff so they borrow other
:> people's ideas and characters and write what they wanted instead of
:> just enjoying the world created for them.
:>
: Just because it wasn't written by JKR, does NOT mean it is not canon.

It most certainly DOES.

: The term only means that it is consistent with what is in the books, and
: contradicts nothing in her magical world.

No.
The Canon is what JKR has said is canon,and nothing else.
Fanfic that doesn't openly contradict this is "consistent with" canon,
but not PART OF the canon.The canon must be consistent with itself,
and fanfics are free to contradict each other.

: It is a group of people who want to DO something, create something, and
: contribute something, rather than mindlessly reread what JKR wrote.
: Some people like to do some of the work for themselves, others
: mindlessly watch reruns of 20 year old sitcoms on TV.

Writers with enough imagination will not reuse another's ideas.

-=-=-
The World Trade Center towers MUST rise again,
at least as tall as before...or terror has triumphed.
Ron Hunter
2007-08-28 23:35:38 UTC
Permalink
Post by Louis Epstein
:>>>>>>> I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
:>>>>>>> have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
:>>>>>>> passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
:>>>>>>> scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
:>>>>>>> unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
:>>>>>>> would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
:>>>>>>> each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
:>>>>>>> Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
:>>>>>>> because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
:>>>>>>> works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed,
:>>>>>>> the whole series has been entralling, and any writer who has kids
:>>>>>>> queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
:>>>>>>> The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
:>>>>>>> the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
:>>>>>>> ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
:>>>>>>> the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
:>>>>>>> (shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of
:>>>>>>> evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
:>>>>>>> life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
:>>>>>>> having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards. Even
:>>>>>>> wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
:>>>>>>> And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
:>>>>>>> were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived
:>>>>>>> Harry's celebrity.
:>>>>>>> Peter
:>>>>>> There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up
:>>>>>> that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
:>>>>>> fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
:>>>>> But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
:>>>>> Babs
:>>>> Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament onto
:>>>> the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
:>>>> Canon, on the other hand...
:>>> But why bother with fanfiction? If it's not cannon then I don't understand
:>>> why people read it... It does not add to the actual story, it only gives
:>>> wanna-be writers a chance to write their version of the story of what they
:>>> wish happened but it is not what JKR wrote so it's not really what
:>>> happened... JKR just should have written a better last book and I can't
:>>> believe her editors didn't go 'whoa there sister, you need to tie up some
:>>> loose ends or your readers will be unhappy"...
:>>> babs
:>> Well, I don't see fanfiction the way you do. I find reading it very
:>> rewarding, and some of the stories are way better than HBP and DH. If
:>> it gives one pleasure, and it is free, and no harm comes from it, then
:>> why not? And as to it being 'canon' (not 'cannon', thats an artillery
:>> piece), the only requirement for a fanfiction piece to be 'canon' is
:>> that it not violate any of the situations, or 'rules' of the JKR
:>> stories. Those that do are labeled appropriately (AU).
:>> Try it, you might like it.
:>
:> Because it is not written by JKR. That simple. Fanfiction is not canon
:> and never will be canon. It's just wannabe writers who don't have the
:> imagination to come up with their own stuff so they borrow other
:> people's ideas and characters and write what they wanted instead of
:> just enjoying the world created for them.
:>
: Just because it wasn't written by JKR, does NOT mean it is not canon.
It most certainly DOES.
: The term only means that it is consistent with what is in the books, and
: contradicts nothing in her magical world.
No.
The Canon is what JKR has said is canon,and nothing else.
Fanfic that doesn't openly contradict this is "consistent with" canon,
but not PART OF the canon.The canon must be consistent with itself,
and fanfics are free to contradict each other.
: It is a group of people who want to DO something, create something, and
: contribute something, rather than mindlessly reread what JKR wrote.
: Some people like to do some of the work for themselves, others
: mindlessly watch reruns of 20 year old sitcoms on TV.
Writers with enough imagination will not reuse another's ideas.
I feel that using the universe created by another for stories is the
sincerest flattery one can offer. I suppose you never camp where others
have been before, and always blaze your own trail across country when
driving?
Not all of use have the ability to make up a whole new universe, but we
can still tell a pretty good story. So, how much fanfiction have you
actually read?
Paracelsus
2007-08-29 01:06:21 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Louis Epstein
:>>>>>>> I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
:>>>>>>> have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
:>>>>>>> passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
:>>>>>>> scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
:>>>>>>> unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
:>>>>>>> would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
:>>>>>>> each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
:>>>>>>> Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
:>>>>>>> because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
:>>>>>>> works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?.
Indeed,
:>>>>>>> the whole series has been entralling, and any writer who has kids
:>>>>>>> queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
:>>>>>>> The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
:>>>>>>> the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
:>>>>>>> ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
:>>>>>>> the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
:>>>>>>> (shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the
prevasiveness of
:>>>>>>> evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
:>>>>>>> life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
:>>>>>>> having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards. Even
:>>>>>>> wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
:>>>>>>> And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
:>>>>>>> were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived
:>>>>>>> Harry's celebrity.
:>>>>>>> Peter
:>>>>>> There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up
:>>>>>> that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
:>>>>>> fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
:>>>>> But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
:>>>>> Babs
:>>>> Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament onto
:>>>> the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
:>>>> Canon, on the other hand...
:>>> But why bother with fanfiction? If it's not cannon then I don't understand
:>>> why people read it... It does not add to the actual story, it only gives
:>>> wanna-be writers a chance to write their version of the story of what they
:>>> wish happened but it is not what JKR wrote so it's not really what
:>>> happened... JKR just should have written a better last book and I can't
:>>> believe her editors didn't go 'whoa there sister, you need to tie up some
:>>> loose ends or your readers will be unhappy"...
:>>> babs
:>> Well, I don't see fanfiction the way you do. I find reading it very
:>> rewarding, and some of the stories are way better than HBP and DH. If
:>> it gives one pleasure, and it is free, and no harm comes from it, then
:>> why not? And as to it being 'canon' (not 'cannon', thats an artillery
:>> piece), the only requirement for a fanfiction piece to be 'canon' is
:>> that it not violate any of the situations, or 'rules' of the JKR
:>> stories. Those that do are labeled appropriately (AU).
:>> Try it, you might like it.
:> :> Because it is not written by JKR. That simple. Fanfiction is
not canon
:> and never will be canon. It's just wannabe writers who don't have the
:> imagination to come up with their own stuff so they borrow other
:> people's ideas and characters and write what they wanted instead of
:> just enjoying the world created for them.
:> : Just because it wasn't written by JKR, does NOT mean it is not
canon.
It most certainly DOES.
: The term only means that it is consistent with what is in the
books, and : contradicts nothing in her magical world.
No.
The Canon is what JKR has said is canon,and nothing else.
Fanfic that doesn't openly contradict this is "consistent with" canon,
but not PART OF the canon.The canon must be consistent with itself,
and fanfics are free to contradict each other.
: It is a group of people who want to DO something, create something,
and : contribute something, rather than mindlessly reread what JKR
wrote. : Some people like to do some of the work for themselves,
others : mindlessly watch reruns of 20 year old sitcoms on TV.
Writers with enough imagination will not reuse another's ideas.
I feel that using the universe created by another for stories is the
sincerest flattery one can offer. I suppose you never camp where
others have been before, and always blaze your own trail across
country when driving?
Not all of use have the ability to make up a whole new universe, but
we can still tell a pretty good story. So, how much fanfiction have
you actually read?
I have read a bit of fanfiction and even tried my hand at writing a
couple of pieces. Writing fanfiction allows you to have the fun of
telling a story without the hard work of inventing characters and a setting.

What reading and writing fanfiction brought into focus for me was the
difference between a good writer and a great writer. A greater writer
knows what to leave out. A lot of good fanfiction reads like something
that JKR could have written but didn't.

I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank. She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions. She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Ron Hunter
2007-08-29 08:35:03 UTC
Permalink
Post by Paracelsus
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Louis Epstein
:>>>>>>> I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
:>>>>>>> have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
:>>>>>>> passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> .
:>>>>>>> This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
:>>>>>>> scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
:>>>>>>> unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
:>>>>>>> would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
:>>>>>>> each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
:>>>>>>> Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
:>>>>>>> because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
:>>>>>>> works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?.
Indeed,
:>>>>>>> the whole series has been entralling, and any writer who has kids
:>>>>>>> queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
:>>>>>>> The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
:>>>>>>> the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
:>>>>>>> ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
:>>>>>>> the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
:>>>>>>> (shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the
prevasiveness of
:>>>>>>> evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
:>>>>>>> life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
:>>>>>>> having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards. Even
:>>>>>>> wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
:>>>>>>> And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
:>>>>>>> were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived
:>>>>>>> Harry's celebrity.
:>>>>>>> Peter
:>>>>>> There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up
:>>>>>> that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
:>>>>>> fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
:>>>>> But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
:>>>>> Babs
:>>>> Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament onto
:>>>> the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
:>>>> Canon, on the other hand...
:>>> But why bother with fanfiction? If it's not cannon then I don't understand
:>>> why people read it... It does not add to the actual story, it only gives
:>>> wanna-be writers a chance to write their version of the story of what they
:>>> wish happened but it is not what JKR wrote so it's not really what
:>>> happened... JKR just should have written a better last book and I can't
:>>> believe her editors didn't go 'whoa there sister, you need to tie up some
:>>> loose ends or your readers will be unhappy"...
:>>> babs
:>> Well, I don't see fanfiction the way you do. I find reading it very
:>> rewarding, and some of the stories are way better than HBP and DH. If
:>> it gives one pleasure, and it is free, and no harm comes from it, then
:>> why not? And as to it being 'canon' (not 'cannon', thats an artillery
:>> piece), the only requirement for a fanfiction piece to be 'canon' is
:>> that it not violate any of the situations, or 'rules' of the JKR
:>> stories. Those that do are labeled appropriately (AU).
:>> Try it, you might like it.
:> :> Because it is not written by JKR. That simple. Fanfiction is
not canon
:> and never will be canon. It's just wannabe writers who don't have the
:> imagination to come up with their own stuff so they borrow other
:> people's ideas and characters and write what they wanted instead of
:> just enjoying the world created for them.
:> : Just because it wasn't written by JKR, does NOT mean it is not
canon.
It most certainly DOES.
: The term only means that it is consistent with what is in the
books, and : contradicts nothing in her magical world.
No.
The Canon is what JKR has said is canon,and nothing else.
Fanfic that doesn't openly contradict this is "consistent with" canon,
but not PART OF the canon.The canon must be consistent with itself,
and fanfics are free to contradict each other.
: It is a group of people who want to DO something, create something,
and : contribute something, rather than mindlessly reread what JKR
wrote. : Some people like to do some of the work for themselves,
others : mindlessly watch reruns of 20 year old sitcoms on TV.
Writers with enough imagination will not reuse another's ideas.
I feel that using the universe created by another for stories is the
sincerest flattery one can offer. I suppose you never camp where
others have been before, and always blaze your own trail across
country when driving?
Not all of use have the ability to make up a whole new universe, but
we can still tell a pretty good story. So, how much fanfiction have
you actually read?
I have read a bit of fanfiction and even tried my hand at writing a
couple of pieces. Writing fanfiction allows you to have the fun of
telling a story without the hard work of inventing characters and a setting.
What reading and writing fanfiction brought into focus for me was the
difference between a good writer and a great writer. A greater writer
knows what to leave out. A lot of good fanfiction reads like something
that JKR could have written but didn't.
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank. She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions. She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Well, if you consider the epilogue an example of good writing, you are
pretty much out of touch with the vast majority of other readers who
were downright offended by it!
I found it unsatisfying, and inadequate, leaving more questions than it
answered.
Paracelsus
2007-08-30 00:51:28 UTC
Permalink
[stuff deleted]
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Paracelsus
Post by Ron Hunter
I feel that using the universe created by another for stories is the
sincerest flattery one can offer. I suppose you never camp where
others have been before, and always blaze your own trail across
country when driving?
Not all of use have the ability to make up a whole new universe, but
we can still tell a pretty good story. So, how much fanfiction have
you actually read?
I have read a bit of fanfiction and even tried my hand at writing a
couple of pieces. Writing fanfiction allows you to have the fun of
telling a story without the hard work of inventing characters and a setting.
What reading and writing fanfiction brought into focus for me was the
difference between a good writer and a great writer. A greater writer
knows what to leave out. A lot of good fanfiction reads like
something that JKR could have written but didn't.
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a
literary writer of the first rank. She didn't write it to make her
fans happy by answering all their questions. She could have filled a
chapter or two telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters,
Harry's last year of school, the character's career choices,
political reform in the wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she
focused on what she thought were the essentials. We learn that the
lead characters got married, had children and stayed friends.
Well, if you consider the epilogue an example of good writing, you are
pretty much out of touch with the vast majority of other readers who
were downright offended by it!
I found it unsatisfying, and inadequate, leaving more questions than
it answered.
I do not consider the epilogue an example of good writing. I consider it
great writing. Good writers worry about keeping the fans happy by
answering all their questions by the last chapter. Great writers try to
say something about what they believe to be essential in life. One of
the ways they do that is by stripping their conclusion of all the
details they believe to be inessential. What we learn from the epilogue
is that Harry, Ron and Hermione continued to love and be loved by their
friends and family. JKR is saying that these are the important things,
the questions I didn't answer are secondary.
Ron Hunter
2007-08-30 01:04:31 UTC
Permalink
Post by Paracelsus
[stuff deleted]
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Paracelsus
Post by Ron Hunter
I feel that using the universe created by another for stories is the
sincerest flattery one can offer. I suppose you never camp where
others have been before, and always blaze your own trail across
country when driving?
Not all of use have the ability to make up a whole new universe, but
we can still tell a pretty good story. So, how much fanfiction have
you actually read?
I have read a bit of fanfiction and even tried my hand at writing a
couple of pieces. Writing fanfiction allows you to have the fun of
telling a story without the hard work of inventing characters and a setting.
What reading and writing fanfiction brought into focus for me was the
difference between a good writer and a great writer. A greater writer
knows what to leave out. A lot of good fanfiction reads like
something that JKR could have written but didn't.
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a
literary writer of the first rank. She didn't write it to make her
fans happy by answering all their questions. She could have filled a
chapter or two telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters,
Harry's last year of school, the character's career choices,
political reform in the wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she
focused on what she thought were the essentials. We learn that the
lead characters got married, had children and stayed friends.
Well, if you consider the epilogue an example of good writing, you are
pretty much out of touch with the vast majority of other readers who
were downright offended by it!
I found it unsatisfying, and inadequate, leaving more questions than
it answered.
I do not consider the epilogue an example of good writing. I consider it
great writing. Good writers worry about keeping the fans happy by
answering all their questions by the last chapter. Great writers try to
say something about what they believe to be essential in life. One of
the ways they do that is by stripping their conclusion of all the
details they believe to be inessential. What we learn from the epilogue
is that Harry, Ron and Hermione continued to love and be loved by their
friends and family. JKR is saying that these are the important things,
the questions I didn't answer are secondary.
Remind me not to read any other things you think are by great writers.
It was an insult, compounded with interest.
Louis Epstein
2007-08-30 03:21:35 UTC
Permalink
Paracelsus <***@_nospam_shaw.ca> wrote:
: Ron Hunter wrote:
:
:> Paracelsus wrote:
:>
:>> Ron Hunter wrote:
:>>
: [stuff deleted]
:
:>>> I feel that using the universe created by another for stories is the
:>>> sincerest flattery one can offer. I suppose you never camp where
:>>> others have been before, and always blaze your own trail across
:>>> country when driving?
:>>> Not all of use have the ability to make up a whole new universe, but
:>>> we can still tell a pretty good story. So, how much fanfiction have
:>>> you actually read?
:>>
:>>
:>> I have read a bit of fanfiction and even tried my hand at writing a
:>> couple of pieces. Writing fanfiction allows you to have the fun of
:>> telling a story without the hard work of inventing characters and a
:>> setting.
:>>
:>> What reading and writing fanfiction brought into focus for me was the
:>> difference between a good writer and a great writer. A greater writer
:>> knows what to leave out. A lot of good fanfiction reads like
:>> something that JKR could have written but didn't.
:>>
:>> I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a
:>> literary writer of the first rank. She didn't write it to make her
:>> fans happy by answering all their questions. She could have filled a
:>> chapter or two telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters,
:>> Harry's last year of school, the character's career choices,
:>> political reform in the wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she
:>> focused on what she thought were the essentials. We learn that the
:>> lead characters got married, had children and stayed friends.
:>
:>
:> Well, if you consider the epilogue an example of good writing, you are
:> pretty much out of touch with the vast majority of other readers who
:> were downright offended by it!
:> I found it unsatisfying, and inadequate, leaving more questions than
:> it answered.
:
: I do not consider the epilogue an example of good writing. I consider
: it great writing. Good writers worry about keeping the fans happy by
: answering all their questions by the last chapter. Great writers try
: to say something about what they believe to be essential in life. One
: of the ways they do that is by stripping their conclusion of all the
: details they believe to be inessential. What we learn from the epilogue
: is that Harry, Ron and Hermione continued to love and be loved by their
: friends and family. JKR is saying that these are the important things,
: the questions I didn't answer are secondary.

Readers who prefer to have their questions answered
will not prefer writers who refuse to answer them.

-=-=-
The World Trade Center towers MUST rise again,
at least as tall as before...or terror has triumphed.
Barry Gray
2007-08-31 19:14:29 UTC
Permalink
[Huge snip}
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank. She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions. She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Well, if you consider the epilogue an example of good writing, you are
pretty much out of touch with the vast majority of other readers who
were downright offended by it!
Evidence for this statement please.
--
Barry Gray
http://www.barrygray.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk
Ron Hunter
2007-08-31 21:04:38 UTC
Permalink
Post by Barry Gray
[Huge snip}
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank. She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions. She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Well, if you consider the epilogue an example of good writing, you are
pretty much out of touch with the vast majority of other readers who
were downright offended by it!
Evidence for this statement please.
You take the poll. I have been here long enough to know that most of
the people here aren't happy with the epilogue, and neither are some
people who have opinions I trust, who agree that it was terrible.
Green-Eyed Chris
2007-08-31 22:30:45 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Barry Gray
[Huge snip}
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank. She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions. She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Well, if you consider the epilogue an example of good writing, you are
pretty much out of touch with the vast majority of other readers who
were downright offended by it!
Evidence for this statement please.
You take the poll. I have been here long enough to know that most of
the people here aren't happy with the epilogue, and neither are some
people who have opinions I trust, who agree that it was terrible.
I was satisfied. I really hadn't expected more. I also know that I am in
the absolute minority.
--
Chris
DaveD
2007-09-01 10:40:34 UTC
Permalink
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Barry Gray
[Huge snip}
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank. She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions. She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Well, if you consider the epilogue an example of good writing, you are
pretty much out of touch with the vast majority of other readers who
were downright offended by it!
Evidence for this statement please.
Certainly, from reading posts here, the vast majority didn't like the
epilogue. Whether that's true of the wider DH-reading population, who knows.
But it does seem to be true of people posting on afh-p.
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Ron Hunter
You take the poll. I have been here long enough to know that most of
the people here aren't happy with the epilogue, and neither are some
people who have opinions I trust, who agree that it was terrible.
I was satisfied. I really hadn't expected more. I also know that I am in
the absolute minority.
--
Chris
Indeed you are, Chris :)

DaveD
Green-Eyed Chris
2007-09-01 17:46:15 UTC
Permalink
Post by DaveD
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Barry Gray
[Huge snip}
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank. She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions. She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Well, if you consider the epilogue an example of good writing, you are
pretty much out of touch with the vast majority of other readers who
were downright offended by it!
Evidence for this statement please.
Certainly, from reading posts here, the vast majority didn't like the
epilogue. Whether that's true of the wider DH-reading population, who knows.
But it does seem to be true of people posting on afh-p.
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Ron Hunter
You take the poll. I have been here long enough to know that most of
the people here aren't happy with the epilogue, and neither are some
people who have opinions I trust, who agree that it was terrible.
I was satisfied. I really hadn't expected more. I also know that I am in
the absolute minority.
--
Chris
Indeed you are, Chris :)
And me without a son like you to keep the saucy male line going! <Err,
wait a minute...>
--
Chris
DaveD
2007-09-03 21:26:05 UTC
Permalink
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by DaveD
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Barry Gray
[Huge snip}
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank. She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions. She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Well, if you consider the epilogue an example of good writing, you are
pretty much out of touch with the vast majority of other readers who
were downright offended by it!
Evidence for this statement please.
Certainly, from reading posts here, the vast majority didn't like the
epilogue. Whether that's true of the wider DH-reading population, who knows.
But it does seem to be true of people posting on afh-p.
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Ron Hunter
You take the poll. I have been here long enough to know that most of
the people here aren't happy with the epilogue, and neither are some
people who have opinions I trust, who agree that it was terrible.
I was satisfied. I really hadn't expected more. I also know that I am in
the absolute minority.
--
Chris
Indeed you are, Chris :)
And me without a son like you to keep the saucy male line going! <Err,
wait a minute...>
--
Chris
ROFL - exactly! (And pretty much my father's reaction too!)

DaveD
Sue H
2007-09-01 13:50:14 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Barry Gray
[Huge snip}
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank. She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions. She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Well, if you consider the epilogue an example of good writing, you are
pretty much out of touch with the vast majority of other readers who
were downright offended by it!
Evidence for this statement please.
You take the poll. I have been here long enough to know that most of
the people here aren't happy with the epilogue, and neither are some
people who have opinions I trust, who agree that it was terrible.
I don't know about you're thinking people say it's great writing. I
think most here did not like it. So opposite reasons listed:

It seemed rushed
It did not give updates on other pretty major characters
It didn't give us a more detailed view of what happened to life in
general (who was imprisoned etc) after the war
We never got to see if characters like Mrs. Weasley did ok afterwards
It was too easy to foresee some of the outcomes it DID have.
Bill Blakely
2007-09-01 15:38:01 UTC
Permalink
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank.
If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
certainly on the short list.
Post by Paracelsus
She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions.
Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
Post by Paracelsus
She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Those are not the essentials, not all of them, anyway, and the
epilogue told us almost nothing we wouldn't have just assumed would
happen without it as of the end of DH.

Even leaving aside what it should have been but wasn't and taking it
on its own merits, the epilogue is weak, to put it charitably, and
reads like fan fiction, which is exactly why I was sure it was a fake
when it was leaked on the net.

I wish JKR had saved the best for last, but unfortunately, she didn't.


-------------------------------------------------
Stopping a president who thinks he can do no wrong takes people with the courage to do what's right.
Sue H
2007-09-01 17:03:43 UTC
Permalink
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 11:38:01 -0400, Bill Blakely
Post by Bill Blakely
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank.
If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
certainly on the short list.
Post by Paracelsus
She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions.
Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
Although I agree with you personally, the other poster is correct.
She didn't write this for the fans. She admitted that. She said it
was only for herself but she's glad people liked it.
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Paracelsus
She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Those are not the essentials, not all of them, anyway, and the
epilogue told us almost nothing we wouldn't have just assumed would
happen without it as of the end of DH.
Even leaving aside what it should have been but wasn't and taking it
on its own merits, the epilogue is weak, to put it charitably, and
reads like fan fiction, which is exactly why I was sure it was a fake
when it was leaked on the net.
I wish JKR had saved the best for last, but unfortunately, she didn't.
-------------------------------------------------
Stopping a president who thinks he can do no wrong takes people with the courage to do what's right.
Ron Hunter
2007-09-01 20:36:12 UTC
Permalink
Post by Sue H
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 11:38:01 -0400, Bill Blakely
Post by Bill Blakely
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank.
If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
certainly on the short list.
Post by Paracelsus
She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions.
Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
Although I agree with you personally, the other poster is correct.
She didn't write this for the fans. She admitted that. She said it
was only for herself but she's glad people liked it.
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Paracelsus
She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Those are not the essentials, not all of them, anyway, and the
epilogue told us almost nothing we wouldn't have just assumed would
happen without it as of the end of DH.
Even leaving aside what it should have been but wasn't and taking it
on its own merits, the epilogue is weak, to put it charitably, and
reads like fan fiction, which is exactly why I was sure it was a fake
when it was leaked on the net.
I wish JKR had saved the best for last, but unfortunately, she didn't.
Where did she find anyone who liked it? Her publicist? Her accountant?
Surely not her average reader.
Bill Blakely
2007-09-01 22:00:51 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Sue H
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 11:38:01 -0400, Bill Blakely
Post by Bill Blakely
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank.
If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
certainly on the short list.
Post by Paracelsus
She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions.
Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
Although I agree with you personally, the other poster is correct.
She didn't write this for the fans. She admitted that. She said it
was only for herself but she's glad people liked it.
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Paracelsus
She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Those are not the essentials, not all of them, anyway, and the
epilogue told us almost nothing we wouldn't have just assumed would
happen without it as of the end of DH.
Even leaving aside what it should have been but wasn't and taking it
on its own merits, the epilogue is weak, to put it charitably, and
reads like fan fiction, which is exactly why I was sure it was a fake
when it was leaked on the net.
I wish JKR had saved the best for last, but unfortunately, she didn't.
Where did she find anyone who liked it? Her publicist? Her accountant?
Surely not her average reader.
Apparently she originally wrote a far better epilogue, then somehow
talked herself out of using it, which is sad. As it is, it's a little
Beethoven ending his Ninth Symphony with the sound of someone sitting
on a whoopee cushion and almost gives the appearance of her thumbing
her nose at her fans, although I don't believe that was her intent.


-------------------------------------------------
Stopping a president who thinks he can do no wrong takes people with the courage to do what's right.
Green-Eyed Chris
2007-09-01 23:24:58 UTC
Permalink
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Sue H
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 11:38:01 -0400, Bill Blakely
Post by Bill Blakely
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank.
If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
certainly on the short list.
Post by Paracelsus
She didn't write it to make her fans
happy by
answering all their questions.
Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
Although I agree with you personally, the other poster is correct.
She didn't write this for the fans. She admitted that. She said it
was only for herself but she's glad people liked it.
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Paracelsus
She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Those are not the essentials, not all of them, anyway, and the
epilogue told us almost nothing we wouldn't have just assumed would
happen without it as of the end of DH.
Even leaving aside what it should have been but wasn't and taking it
on its own merits, the epilogue is weak, to put it charitably, and
reads like fan fiction, which is exactly why I was sure it was a fake
when it was leaked on the net.
I wish JKR had saved the best for last, but unfortunately, she didn't.
Where did she find anyone who liked it? Her publicist? Her accountant?
Surely not her average reader.
Apparently she originally wrote a far better epilogue, then somehow
talked herself out of using it, which is sad. As it is, it's a little
Beethoven ending his Ninth Symphony with the sound of someone sitting
on a whoopee cushion and almost gives the appearance of her thumbing
her nose at her fans, although I don't believe that was her intent.
LOL! I see a great irony in that evaluation. As far back as we can trace
the male line of my family (ca. 1450), we have all been born and/or
lived in what is now historical Beethoven territory. The second language
on the streets is Japanese for all the tourists we get who worship the
Ninth. The big family question on the ending is "What the hell was the
man ever thinking when he wrote that?". Perhaps the Japanese will love
JKR's epilogue when it's translated.

BTW, most locals prefer Schumann's Third (Rhenish/Rheinische) Symphony.
--
Chris
Ron Hunter
2007-09-02 07:54:58 UTC
Permalink
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Sue H
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 11:38:01 -0400, Bill Blakely
Post by Bill Blakely
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank.
If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
certainly on the short list.
Post by Paracelsus
She didn't write it to make her fans
happy by
answering all their questions.
Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
Although I agree with you personally, the other poster is correct.
She didn't write this for the fans. She admitted that. She said it
was only for herself but she's glad people liked it.
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Paracelsus
She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Those are not the essentials, not all of them, anyway, and the
epilogue told us almost nothing we wouldn't have just assumed would
happen without it as of the end of DH.
Even leaving aside what it should have been but wasn't and taking it
on its own merits, the epilogue is weak, to put it charitably, and
reads like fan fiction, which is exactly why I was sure it was a fake
when it was leaked on the net.
I wish JKR had saved the best for last, but unfortunately, she didn't.
Where did she find anyone who liked it? Her publicist? Her accountant?
Surely not her average reader.
Apparently she originally wrote a far better epilogue, then somehow
talked herself out of using it, which is sad. As it is, it's a little
Beethoven ending his Ninth Symphony with the sound of someone sitting
on a whoopee cushion and almost gives the appearance of her thumbing
her nose at her fans, although I don't believe that was her intent.
LOL! I see a great irony in that evaluation. As far back as we can trace
the male line of my family (ca. 1450), we have all been born and/or
lived in what is now historical Beethoven territory. The second language
on the streets is Japanese for all the tourists we get who worship the
Ninth. The big family question on the ending is "What the hell was the
man ever thinking when he wrote that?". Perhaps the Japanese will love
JKR's epilogue when it's translated.
BTW, most locals prefer Schumann's Third (Rhenish/Rheinische) Symphony.
--
Chris
Perhaps, but imagine if the whole thing was written for only a single
instrument. How much would people like it?
Ron Hunter
2007-09-02 07:53:34 UTC
Permalink
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Sue H
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 11:38:01 -0400, Bill Blakely
Post by Bill Blakely
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank.
If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
certainly on the short list.
Post by Paracelsus
She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions.
Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
Although I agree with you personally, the other poster is correct.
She didn't write this for the fans. She admitted that. She said it
was only for herself but she's glad people liked it.
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Paracelsus
She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Those are not the essentials, not all of them, anyway, and the
epilogue told us almost nothing we wouldn't have just assumed would
happen without it as of the end of DH.
Even leaving aside what it should have been but wasn't and taking it
on its own merits, the epilogue is weak, to put it charitably, and
reads like fan fiction, which is exactly why I was sure it was a fake
when it was leaked on the net.
I wish JKR had saved the best for last, but unfortunately, she didn't.
Where did she find anyone who liked it? Her publicist? Her accountant?
Surely not her average reader.
Apparently she originally wrote a far better epilogue, then somehow
talked herself out of using it, which is sad. As it is, it's a little
Beethoven ending his Ninth Symphony with the sound of someone sitting
on a whoopee cushion and almost gives the appearance of her thumbing
her nose at her fans, although I don't believe that was her intent.
I wonder if it would be possible to start a letter-writing campaign to
get her to put the original epilogue on her website....
Sue H
2007-09-02 15:03:34 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Sue H
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 11:38:01 -0400, Bill Blakely
Post by Bill Blakely
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank.
If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
certainly on the short list.
Post by Paracelsus
She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions.
Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
Although I agree with you personally, the other poster is correct.
She didn't write this for the fans. She admitted that. She said it
was only for herself but she's glad people liked it.
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Paracelsus
She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Those are not the essentials, not all of them, anyway, and the
epilogue told us almost nothing we wouldn't have just assumed would
happen without it as of the end of DH.
Even leaving aside what it should have been but wasn't and taking it
on its own merits, the epilogue is weak, to put it charitably, and
reads like fan fiction, which is exactly why I was sure it was a fake
when it was leaked on the net.
I wish JKR had saved the best for last, but unfortunately, she didn't.
Where did she find anyone who liked it? Her publicist? Her accountant?
Surely not her average reader.
Apparently she originally wrote a far better epilogue, then somehow
talked herself out of using it, which is sad. As it is, it's a little
Beethoven ending his Ninth Symphony with the sound of someone sitting
on a whoopee cushion and almost gives the appearance of her thumbing
her nose at her fans, although I don't believe that was her intent.
I wonder if it would be possible to start a letter-writing campaign to
get her to put the original epilogue on her website....
I contacted her publisher once. She doesn't get any letters sent to
her. They are instructed to get rid of them without opening them.
Her, Radcliffe and Oldman are my missing graphs. Anyway, maybe an
email petition?
Louis Epstein
2007-09-02 17:35:51 UTC
Permalink
Sue H <***@cox.net> wrote:
: On Sun, 02 Sep 2007 02:53:34 -0500, Ron Hunter <***@charter.net>
: wrote:
:
:>Bill Blakely wrote:
:>> On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 15:36:12 -0500, Ron Hunter <***@charter.net>
:>> wrote:
:>>
:>>> Sue H wrote:
:>>>> On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 11:38:01 -0400, Bill Blakely
:>>>> <***@hughesnet.com> wrote:
:>>>>
:>>>>> On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
:>>>>> <***@_nospam_shaw.ca> wrote:
:>>>>>
:>>>>>> I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
:>>>>>> writer of the first rank.
:>>>>> If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
:>>>>> certainly on the short list.
:>>>>>
:>>>>>> She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
:>>>>>> answering all their questions.
:>>>>> Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
:>>>>> her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
:>>>> Although I agree with you personally, the other poster is correct.
:>>>> She didn't write this for the fans. She admitted that. She said it
:>>>> was only for herself but she's glad people liked it.
:>>>>
:>>>>>> She could have filled a chapter or two
:>>>>>> telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
:>>>>>> school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
:>>>>>> wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
:>>>>>> were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
:>>>>>> children and stayed friends.
:>>>>> Those are not the essentials, not all of them, anyway, and the
:>>>>> epilogue told us almost nothing we wouldn't have just assumed would
:>>>>> happen without it as of the end of DH.
:>>>>>
:>>>>> Even leaving aside what it should have been but wasn't and taking it
:>>>>> on its own merits, the epilogue is weak, to put it charitably, and
:>>>>> reads like fan fiction, which is exactly why I was sure it was a fake
:>>>>> when it was leaked on the net.
:>>>>>
:>>>>> I wish JKR had saved the best for last, but unfortunately, she didn't.
:>>>>>
:>>>
:>>> Where did she find anyone who liked it? Her publicist? Her accountant?
:>>> Surely not her average reader.
:>>
:>> Apparently she originally wrote a far better epilogue, then somehow
:>> talked herself out of using it, which is sad. As it is, it's a little
:>> Beethoven ending his Ninth Symphony with the sound of someone sitting
:>> on a whoopee cushion and almost gives the appearance of her thumbing
:>> her nose at her fans, although I don't believe that was her intent.
:>>
:>I wonder if it would be possible to start a letter-writing campaign to
:>get her to put the original epilogue on her website....
:
: I contacted her publisher once. She doesn't get any letters sent to
: her. They are instructed to get rid of them without opening them.

Very interesting!
So just where does she get her "FAQ Poll" entries if
she never sees her letters?...or are contents tabulated
for her by the people who throw them away?

: Her, Radcliffe and Oldman are my missing graphs. Anyway, maybe an
: email petition?

-=-=-
The World Trade Center towers MUST rise again,
at least as tall as before...or terror has triumphed.
Sue H
2007-09-02 19:24:34 UTC
Permalink
Post by Louis Epstein
:>>
:>>>> On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 11:38:01 -0400, Bill Blakely
:>>>>
:>>>>> On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
:>>>>>
:>>>>>> I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
:>>>>>> writer of the first rank.
:>>>>> If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
:>>>>> certainly on the short list.
:>>>>>
:>>>>>> She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
:>>>>>> answering all their questions.
:>>>>> Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
:>>>>> her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
:>>>> Although I agree with you personally, the other poster is correct.
:>>>> She didn't write this for the fans. She admitted that. She said it
:>>>> was only for herself but she's glad people liked it.
:>>>>
:>>>>>> She could have filled a chapter or two
:>>>>>> telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
:>>>>>> school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
:>>>>>> wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
:>>>>>> were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
:>>>>>> children and stayed friends.
:>>>>> Those are not the essentials, not all of them, anyway, and the
:>>>>> epilogue told us almost nothing we wouldn't have just assumed would
:>>>>> happen without it as of the end of DH.
:>>>>>
:>>>>> Even leaving aside what it should have been but wasn't and taking it
:>>>>> on its own merits, the epilogue is weak, to put it charitably, and
:>>>>> reads like fan fiction, which is exactly why I was sure it was a fake
:>>>>> when it was leaked on the net.
:>>>>>
:>>>>> I wish JKR had saved the best for last, but unfortunately, she didn't.
:>>>>>
:>>>
:>>> Where did she find anyone who liked it? Her publicist? Her accountant?
:>>> Surely not her average reader.
:>>
:>> Apparently she originally wrote a far better epilogue, then somehow
:>> talked herself out of using it, which is sad. As it is, it's a little
:>> Beethoven ending his Ninth Symphony with the sound of someone sitting
:>> on a whoopee cushion and almost gives the appearance of her thumbing
:>> her nose at her fans, although I don't believe that was her intent.
:>>
:>I wonder if it would be possible to start a letter-writing campaign to
:>get her to put the original epilogue on her website....
: I contacted her publisher once. She doesn't get any letters sent to
: her. They are instructed to get rid of them without opening them.
Very interesting!
So just where does she get her "FAQ Poll" entries if
she never sees her letters?...or are contents tabulated
for her by the people who throw them away?
Probably from the website/emails and chats. Of course I wrote her
about 2 years ago so maybe it's changed now.
Post by Louis Epstein
: Her, Radcliffe and Oldman are my missing graphs. Anyway, maybe an
: email petition?
-=-=-
The World Trade Center towers MUST rise again,
at least as tall as before...or terror has triumphed.
Louis Epstein
2007-09-03 00:33:24 UTC
Permalink
Sue H <***@cox.net> wrote:
: On Sun, 02 Sep 2007 12:35:51 -0500, Louis Epstein <***@main.put.com>
: wrote:
:
:>Sue H <***@cox.net> wrote:
:>: On Sun, 02 Sep 2007 02:53:34 -0500, Ron Hunter <***@charter.net>
:>: wrote:
:>:
:>:>Bill Blakely wrote:
:>:>> On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 15:36:12 -0500, Ron Hunter <***@charter.net>
:>:>> wrote:
:>:>>
:>:>>> Sue H wrote:
:>:>>>> On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 11:38:01 -0400, Bill Blakely
:>:>>>> <***@hughesnet.com> wrote:
:>:>>>>
:>:>>>>> On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
:>:>>>>> <***@_nospam_shaw.ca> wrote:
:>:>>>>>
:>:>>>>>> I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
:>:>>>>>> writer of the first rank.
:>:>>>>> If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
:>:>>>>> certainly on the short list.
:>:>>>>>
:>:>>>>>> She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
:>:>>>>>> answering all their questions.
:>:>>>>> Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
:>:>>>>> her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
:>:>>>> Although I agree with you personally, the other poster is correct.
:>:>>>> She didn't write this for the fans. She admitted that. She said it
:>:>>>> was only for herself but she's glad people liked it.
:>:>>>>
:>:>>>>>> She could have filled a chapter or two
:>:>>>>>> telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year
:>:>>>>>> of school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
:>:>>>>>> wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
:>:>>>>>> were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married,
:>:>>>>>> had children and stayed friends.
:>:>>>>> Those are not the essentials, not all of them, anyway, and the
:>:>>>>> epilogue told us almost nothing we wouldn't have just assumed would
:>:>>>>> happen without it as of the end of DH.
:>:>>>>>
:>:>>>>> Even leaving aside what it should have been but wasn't and taking it
:>:>>>>> on its own merits, the epilogue is weak, to put it charitably, and
:>:>>>>> reads like fan fiction, which is exactly why I was sure it was a fake
:>:>>>>> when it was leaked on the net.
:>:>>>>>
:>:>>>>> I wish JKR had saved the best for last, but unfortunately, she didn't.
:>:>>>>>
:>:>>>
:>:>>> Where did she find anyone who liked it? Her publicist? Her accountant?
:>:>>> Surely not her average reader.
:>:>>
:>:>> Apparently she originally wrote a far better epilogue, then somehow
:>:>> talked herself out of using it, which is sad. As it is, it's a little
:>:>> Beethoven ending his Ninth Symphony with the sound of someone sitting
:>:>> on a whoopee cushion and almost gives the appearance of her thumbing
:>:>> her nose at her fans, although I don't believe that was her intent.
:>:>>
:>:>I wonder if it would be possible to start a letter-writing campaign to
:>:>get her to put the original epilogue on her website....
:>:
:>: I contacted her publisher once. She doesn't get any letters sent to
:>: her. They are instructed to get rid of them without opening them.
:>
:>Very interesting!
:>So just where does she get her "FAQ Poll" entries if
:>she never sees her letters?...or are contents tabulated
:>for her by the people who throw them away?
:
: Probably from the website/emails and chats.

Her website is deliberately designed to have no email link
or forum (you may recall the postings here from someone who
set up a message board her people thought implied too strongly
that it was for discussion attached to her website,and they
demanded the domain name be turned over and website closed).

: Of course I wrote her about 2 years ago so maybe it's changed now.
:
:>: Her, Radcliffe and Oldman are my missing graphs. Anyway, maybe an
:>: email petition?
:>
:>-=-=-
:>The World Trade Center towers MUST rise again,
:>at least as tall as before...or terror has triumphed.
:
Ron Hunter
2007-09-02 19:32:24 UTC
Permalink
Post by Sue H
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Sue H
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 11:38:01 -0400, Bill Blakely
Post by Bill Blakely
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank.
If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
certainly on the short list.
Post by Paracelsus
She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions.
Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
Although I agree with you personally, the other poster is correct.
She didn't write this for the fans. She admitted that. She said it
was only for herself but she's glad people liked it.
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Paracelsus
She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Those are not the essentials, not all of them, anyway, and the
epilogue told us almost nothing we wouldn't have just assumed would
happen without it as of the end of DH.
Even leaving aside what it should have been but wasn't and taking it
on its own merits, the epilogue is weak, to put it charitably, and
reads like fan fiction, which is exactly why I was sure it was a fake
when it was leaked on the net.
I wish JKR had saved the best for last, but unfortunately, she didn't.
Where did she find anyone who liked it? Her publicist? Her accountant?
Surely not her average reader.
Apparently she originally wrote a far better epilogue, then somehow
talked herself out of using it, which is sad. As it is, it's a little
Beethoven ending his Ninth Symphony with the sound of someone sitting
on a whoopee cushion and almost gives the appearance of her thumbing
her nose at her fans, although I don't believe that was her intent.
I wonder if it would be possible to start a letter-writing campaign to
get her to put the original epilogue on her website....
I contacted her publisher once. She doesn't get any letters sent to
her. They are instructed to get rid of them without opening them.
Her, Radcliffe and Oldman are my missing graphs. Anyway, maybe an
email petition?
That's pretty darn RUDE. Most celebs at least hire people to send form
letters in response to fan mail.
Sue H
2007-09-02 19:45:38 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Sue H
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Sue H
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 11:38:01 -0400, Bill Blakely
Post by Bill Blakely
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank.
If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
certainly on the short list.
Post by Paracelsus
She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions.
Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
Although I agree with you personally, the other poster is correct.
She didn't write this for the fans. She admitted that. She said it
was only for herself but she's glad people liked it.
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Paracelsus
She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Those are not the essentials, not all of them, anyway, and the
epilogue told us almost nothing we wouldn't have just assumed would
happen without it as of the end of DH.
Even leaving aside what it should have been but wasn't and taking it
on its own merits, the epilogue is weak, to put it charitably, and
reads like fan fiction, which is exactly why I was sure it was a fake
when it was leaked on the net.
I wish JKR had saved the best for last, but unfortunately, she didn't.
Where did she find anyone who liked it? Her publicist? Her accountant?
Surely not her average reader.
Apparently she originally wrote a far better epilogue, then somehow
talked herself out of using it, which is sad. As it is, it's a little
Beethoven ending his Ninth Symphony with the sound of someone sitting
on a whoopee cushion and almost gives the appearance of her thumbing
her nose at her fans, although I don't believe that was her intent.
I wonder if it would be possible to start a letter-writing campaign to
get her to put the original epilogue on her website....
I contacted her publisher once. She doesn't get any letters sent to
her. They are instructed to get rid of them without opening them.
Her, Radcliffe and Oldman are my missing graphs. Anyway, maybe an
email petition?
That's pretty darn RUDE. Most celebs at least hire people to send form
letters in response to fan mail.
Actually my contact was via email. I wrote and had no response and so
tried the publisher for a "statement" I could take to fans. They said
it's not that she doesn't appreciate the fans, it's just that it's
such a large volume of mail it can't be handled so they chose that
method. There was also mention of no longer doing book tours and
signing in the US either because there was an incident. I put that in
my online diary at the time.

Seems that a couple years back there was a brawl at a book signing
which started with two women arguing over someone cutting in line and
apparently it became a huge incident. She felt the entire thing was
very undignified and it was adults causing the problems. From there
she just went on to sign for charities and a handful of people close
to her. With the exception of one or two recently, any autographs
from POA, GOF, OOTP, HPB are 95% forgeries. Don't buy off Ebay. Her
signature is one of the most forged.
DaveD
2007-09-03 21:26:06 UTC
Permalink
Post by Sue H
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Sue H
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Sue H
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 11:38:01 -0400, Bill Blakely
Post by Bill Blakely
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
I wonder if it would be possible to start a letter-writing campaign to
get her to put the original epilogue on her website....
I contacted her publisher once. She doesn't get any letters sent to
her. They are instructed to get rid of them without opening them.
Her, Radcliffe and Oldman are my missing graphs. Anyway, maybe an
email petition?
That's pretty darn RUDE. Most celebs at least hire people to send form
letters in response to fan mail.
Actually my contact was via email. I wrote and had no response and so
tried the publisher for a "statement" I could take to fans. They said
it's not that she doesn't appreciate the fans, it's just that it's
such a large volume of mail it can't be handled so they chose that
method. There was also mention of no longer doing book tours and
signing in the US either because there was an incident. I put that in
my online diary at the time.
Hmm, I seem to recall a programme about her a little while ago and she had a
couple of secretaries/PAs or small team who did go through her post and
respond.

Unless she gets that much business post alone it takes 2 people just to deal
with that side of things (who knew being so rich was such hard work, lol)
and she ignores the fanmail as that would then require a small army...

DaveD.

DaveD
2007-09-02 19:47:59 UTC
Permalink
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Sue H
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 11:38:01 -0400, Bill Blakely
Post by Bill Blakely
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
Where did she find anyone who liked it? Her publicist? Her accountant?
Surely not her average reader.
LOL - exactly!
Post by Bill Blakely
Apparently she originally wrote a far better epilogue, then somehow
talked herself out of using it, which is sad. As it is, it's a little
Beethoven ending his Ninth Symphony with the sound of someone sitting
on a whoopee cushion and almost gives the appearance of her thumbing
her nose at her fans, although I don't believe that was her intent.
I wonder if it would be possible to start a letter-writing campaign to get
her to put the original epilogue on her website....
They do say always trust your instincts - like in exams, never change your
first answer unless you are absolutely sure and can prove it's wrong
(unfortunately I hadn't heard that advice 2 years ago, and did exactly that
in an exam. I left out depreciation in an answer, then thought that was
wrong and so raced the rest of the paper to have enough time to go back and
include depreciation. It turns out that was the one occasion where you do
ignore it!)

Looks like JKR made the same mistake here - whatever convinced her to change
it? But given she presumably has already written it (or planned it enough to
make writing it fairly easy) perhaps she could either put it on her site or
even include it as an appendix to the encyclopaedia she's suggested doing.

Either way, perhaps a petition from leaky or mugglenet is the way to go, as
she's more likely to listen to them and they're more likely to get large
numbers signing :)

DaveD
Drusilla
2007-09-03 03:24:19 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Sue H
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 11:38:01 -0400, Bill Blakely
Post by Bill Blakely
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a
literary writer of the first rank.
If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
certainly on the short list.
Post by Paracelsus
She didn't write it to make her
fans happy by answering all their questions.
Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
Although I agree with you personally, the other poster is correct.
She didn't write this for the fans. She admitted that. She said it
was only for herself but she's glad people liked it.
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Paracelsus
She could have filled a chapter or two telling us about the
trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of school, the
character's career choices, political reform in the wizarding
world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought were
the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married,
had children and stayed friends.
Those are not the essentials, not all of them, anyway, and the
epilogue told us almost nothing we wouldn't have just assumed would
happen without it as of the end of DH.
Even leaving aside what it should have been but wasn't and taking it
on its own merits, the epilogue is weak, to put it charitably, and
reads like fan fiction, which is exactly why I was sure it was a fake
when it was leaked on the net.
I wish JKR had saved the best for last, but unfortunately, she didn't.
Where did she find anyone who liked it? Her publicist? Her
accountant? Surely not her average reader.
Apparently she originally wrote a far better epilogue, then somehow
talked herself out of using it, which is sad. As it is, it's a little
Beethoven ending his Ninth Symphony with the sound of someone sitting
on a whoopee cushion and almost gives the appearance of her thumbing
her nose at her fans, although I don't believe that was her intent.
I wonder if it would be possible to start a letter-writing campaign to
get her to put the original epilogue on her website....
If this epilogue had more than one page - which surely did - I suppose
we might see at least one of them on her website as one of the rewards
for the scrapbook.
Bill Blakely
2007-09-01 21:23:35 UTC
Permalink
Post by Sue H
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 11:38:01 -0400, Bill Blakely
Post by Bill Blakely
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank.
If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
certainly on the short list.
Post by Paracelsus
She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions.
Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
Although I agree with you personally, the other poster is correct.
She didn't write this for the fans. She admitted that. She said it
was only for herself but she's glad people liked it.
Who liked it!!?? I feel very safe in saying that people in general
did not like it.


-------------------------------------------------
Stopping a president who thinks he can do no wrong takes people with the courage to do what's right.
Sue H
2007-09-02 14:41:15 UTC
Permalink
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 17:23:35 -0400, Bill Blakely
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Sue H
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 11:38:01 -0400, Bill Blakely
Post by Bill Blakely
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank.
If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
certainly on the short list.
Post by Paracelsus
She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions.
Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
Although I agree with you personally, the other poster is correct.
She didn't write this for the fans. She admitted that. She said it
was only for herself but she's glad people liked it.
Who liked it!!?? I feel very safe in saying that people in general
did not like it.
-------------------------------------------------
Stopping a president who thinks he can do no wrong takes people with the courage to do what's right.
Maybe they don't like it, but JK doesn't care.
Ron Hunter
2007-09-02 19:31:05 UTC
Permalink
Post by Sue H
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 17:23:35 -0400, Bill Blakely
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Sue H
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 11:38:01 -0400, Bill Blakely
Post by Bill Blakely
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank.
If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
certainly on the short list.
Post by Paracelsus
She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions.
Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
Although I agree with you personally, the other poster is correct.
She didn't write this for the fans. She admitted that. She said it
was only for herself but she's glad people liked it.
Who liked it!!?? I feel very safe in saying that people in general
did not like it.
-------------------------------------------------
Stopping a president who thinks he can do no wrong takes people with the courage to do what's right.
Maybe they don't like it, but JK doesn't care.
I don't know if she does, or doesn't, but having a few billion pounds
might make one downright independent!
Wish I could say that from experience....
Drusilla
2007-09-03 03:33:26 UTC
Permalink
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Sue H
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 11:38:01 -0400, Bill Blakely
Post by Bill Blakely
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank.
If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
certainly on the short list.
Post by Paracelsus
She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions.
Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
Although I agree with you personally, the other poster is correct.
She didn't write this for the fans. She admitted that. She said it
was only for herself but she's glad people liked it.
Who liked it!!?? I feel very safe in saying that people in general
did not like it.
I ended up... liking it. But, alas, I like lettuce although I would
choose some other option I am offered instead. Whatsoever, the
epilogue... Nope. I didn't like it at all. Nothing should be that
'overcheesed' except perhaps my burger.
Sirius Kase
2007-09-03 15:39:38 UTC
Permalink
Post by Drusilla
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Sue H
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 11:38:01 -0400, Bill Blakely
Post by Bill Blakely
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank.
If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
certainly on the short list.
Post by Paracelsus
She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions.
Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
Although I agree with you personally, the other poster is correct.
She didn't write this for the fans. She admitted that. She said it
was only for herself but she's glad people liked it.
Who liked it!!?? I feel very safe in saying that people in general
did not like it.
I ended up... liking it. But, alas, I like lettuce although I would
choose some other option I am offered instead. Whatsoever, the
epilogue... Nope. I didn't like it at all. Nothing should be that
'overcheesed' except perhaps my burger.
I found it to be unnecessary. It didn't tell us much. I felt it
was there simply to fulfil a promise whe made to the fans, but it was
minimal at doing that. I would hve been happy not having it at all.

However, I would not have liked it if the epilogue was long, and any
epilogue that would catch us up on the goings on of all the
interesting characters would be as long as a book. Cause I would have
felt obligated to read the whole thing before discussing the main
book.

I think she should write another book, a pamphlet, maybe, if she
thinks she can do short. But, an epilogue that properly explains what
happened to everyone would be another work of fiction complete with
plots for the story of every character. We would have the story of
Hagrid, the story of Malfoy, the story of quite a few people because
she managed to make quite a few of the characters interesting. I
would love to know how George is doing without the WWW and without
Fred. But, this would turn into a collection of short stories, and I
don't know if Jo could do that, I fear she'd wind up with a several
inch think volume for each of about a hundred characters. That would
be a good excuse to tote the old Britanica to the dump to make room
for a new set of books.
Paracelsus
2007-09-01 18:52:16 UTC
Permalink
Post by Bill Blakely
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank.
If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
certainly on the short list.
Post by Paracelsus
She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions.
Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
I am reminded of a story about Alec Guiness. He was once introduced to a
young boy whose mother proudly announced that he had watched Star Wars
100 times. Guiness looked the boy in the eye and said, "I want you to do
me a favour."

"Yes, Mr. Guiness, I'd do anything"

"I want you to promise me never to watch Star Wars again."

At some point fans, especially young fans, can become something of an
embarrassment for a serious artist. I can fully understand JKR wanting
to say to her young fans, this story is done, I'm moving on to
sotmething else, you should do the same.
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Paracelsus
She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Those are not the essentials, not all of them, anyway, and the
epilogue told us almost nothing we wouldn't have just assumed would
happen without it as of the end of DH.
Tell me, what do you consider to be the essentials?
Post by Bill Blakely
Even leaving aside what it should have been but wasn't and taking it
on its own merits, the epilogue is weak, to put it charitably, and
reads like fan fiction, which is exactly why I was sure it was a fake
when it was leaked on the net.
I wish JKR had saved the best for last, but unfortunately, she didn't.
-------------------------------------------------
Stopping a president who thinks he can do no wrong takes people with the courage to do what's right.
Sue H
2007-09-01 19:20:05 UTC
Permalink
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 18:52:16 GMT, Paracelsus
Post by Paracelsus
Post by Bill Blakely
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank.
If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
certainly on the short list.
Post by Paracelsus
She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions.
Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
I am reminded of a story about Alec Guiness. He was once introduced to a
young boy whose mother proudly announced that he had watched Star Wars
100 times. Guiness looked the boy in the eye and said, "I want you to do
me a favour."
"Yes, Mr. Guiness, I'd do anything"
"I want you to promise me never to watch Star Wars again."
At some point fans, especially young fans, can become something of an
embarrassment for a serious artist. I can fully understand JKR wanting
to say to her young fans, this story is done, I'm moving on to
sotmething else, you should do the same.
Ah yes, Guinness did go through that stage (a lot of them do). His
problem with Star Wars came from his own embarrassment over taking the
role for the money. He thought it a "silly" story and felt
embarrassed being a part of it. With a lot of actors, they think they
should only be associated with acclaimed plays and Academy/BAFTA
Awards etc. Towards the latter part of his life he came to embrace
the films and did make many positive statements about it. I have
friends who had personal communications with him and he was happy to
be part of something very well loved by the world and he admitted that
there must indeed be something to it for it to have amassed so much
acclaim and so many fans. People do move on (and come back to their
favorites).
Post by Paracelsus
Post by Bill Blakely
Post by Paracelsus
She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Those are not the essentials, not all of them, anyway, and the
epilogue told us almost nothing we wouldn't have just assumed would
happen without it as of the end of DH.
Tell me, what do you consider to be the essentials?
Post by Bill Blakely
Even leaving aside what it should have been but wasn't and taking it
on its own merits, the epilogue is weak, to put it charitably, and
reads like fan fiction, which is exactly why I was sure it was a fake
when it was leaked on the net.
I wish JKR had saved the best for last, but unfortunately, she didn't.
-------------------------------------------------
Stopping a president who thinks he can do no wrong takes people with the courage to do what's right.
Ron Hunter
2007-09-01 20:35:19 UTC
Permalink
Post by Bill Blakely
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:06:21 GMT, Paracelsus
Post by Paracelsus
I think that the epilogue is what really establishes JKR as a literary
writer of the first rank.
If that's not the strangest thing I've read on this news group, it's
certainly on the short list.
Post by Paracelsus
She didn't write it to make her fans happy by
answering all their questions.
Oh, heaven forbid that she should make her fans, fans who stayed with
her for up to ten years and who made her a billionaire, happy!!
Post by Paracelsus
She could have filled a chapter or two
telling us about the trials with the Death Eaters, Harry's last year of
school, the character's career choices, political reform in the
wizarding world and so forth. Instead, she focused on what she thought
were the essentials. We learn that the lead characters got married, had
children and stayed friends.
Those are not the essentials, not all of them, anyway, and the
epilogue told us almost nothing we wouldn't have just assumed would
happen without it as of the end of DH.
Even leaving aside what it should have been but wasn't and taking it
on its own merits, the epilogue is weak, to put it charitably, and
reads like fan fiction, which is exactly why I was sure it was a fake
when it was leaked on the net.
I wish JKR had saved the best for last, but unfortunately, she didn't.
Actually, most fanfiction is BETTER than that epilogue!
Louis Epstein
2007-08-29 06:20:20 UTC
Permalink
Ron Hunter <***@charter.net> wrote:
: Louis Epstein wrote:
:> Ron Hunter <***@charter.net> wrote:
:> : smaug86 wrote:
:> :> On Aug 4, 4:30 am, Ron Hunter <***@charter.net> wrote:
:> :>> BubblyBabs wrote:
:> :>>> "Brian Wakeling" <***@virgin.net> wrote in message
:> :>>> news:cyEsi.13758$***@newsfe7-gui.ntli.net...
:> :>>>> In a speech called KYCsi.2704$***@bignews4.bellsouth.net,
:> :>>>> BubblyBabs (***@whatever.com) spake thusly:
:> :>>>>> "Ron Hunter" <***@charter.net> wrote in message
:> :>>>>> news:JoqdnbXR6YK-***@giganews.com...
:> :>>>>>> peter wrote:
:> :>>>>>>> I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
:> :>>>>>>> have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
:> :>>>>>>> passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts
:> :>>>>>>> to scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
:> :>>>>>>> unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
:> :>>>>>>> would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
:> :>>>>>>> each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
:> :>>>>>>> Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
:> :>>>>>>> because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
:> :>>>>>>> works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed,
:> :>>>>>>> the whole series has been entralling, and any writer who has kids
:> :>>>>>>> queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
:> :>>>>>>> The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
:> :>>>>>>> the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
:> :>>>>>>> ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
:> :>>>>>>> the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
:> :>>>>>>> (shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the prevasiveness
:> :>>>>>>> of evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
:> :>>>>>>> life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
:> :>>>>>>> having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards.
:> :>>>>>>> Even wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
:> :>>>>>>> And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
:> :>>>>>>> were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived
:> :>>>>>>> Harry's celebrity.
:> :>>>>>>> Peter
:> :>>>>>> There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show
:> :>>>>>> up that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
:> :>>>>>> fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
:> :>>>>> But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
:> :>>>>> Babs
:> :>>>> Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament
:> :>>>> onto the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
:> :>>>> Canon, on the other hand...
:> :>>> But why bother with fanfiction? If it's not cannon then I don't understand
:> :>>> why people read it... It does not add to the actual story, it only gives
:> :>>> wanna-be writers a chance to write their version of the story of what
:> :>>> they wish happened but it is not what JKR wrote so it's not really what
:> :>>> happened... JKR just should have written a better last book and I can't
:> :>>> believe her editors didn't go 'whoa there sister, you need to tie up
:> :>>> some loose ends or your readers will be unhappy"...
:> :>>> babs
:> :>> Well, I don't see fanfiction the way you do. I find reading it very
:> :>> rewarding, and some of the stories are way better than HBP and DH. If
:> :>> it gives one pleasure, and it is free, and no harm comes from it, then
:> :>> why not? And as to it being 'canon' (not 'cannon', thats an artillery
:> :>> piece), the only requirement for a fanfiction piece to be 'canon' is
:> :>> that it not violate any of the situations, or 'rules' of the JKR
:> :>> stories. Those that do are labeled appropriately (AU).
:> :>> Try it, you might like it.
:> :>
:> :> Because it is not written by JKR. That simple. Fanfiction is not canon
:> :> and never will be canon. It's just wannabe writers who don't have the
:> :> imagination to come up with their own stuff so they borrow other
:> :> people's ideas and characters and write what they wanted instead of
:> :> just enjoying the world created for them.
:> :>
:> : Just because it wasn't written by JKR, does NOT mean it is not canon.
:>
:> It most certainly DOES.
:>
:> : The term only means that it is consistent with what is in the books, and
:> : contradicts nothing in her magical world.
:>
:> No.
:> The Canon is what JKR has said is canon,and nothing else.
:> Fanfic that doesn't openly contradict this is "consistent with" canon,
:> but not PART OF the canon.The canon must be consistent with itself,
:> and fanfics are free to contradict each other.
:>
:> : It is a group of people who want to DO something, create something, and
:> : contribute something, rather than mindlessly reread what JKR wrote.
:> : Some people like to do some of the work for themselves, others
:> : mindlessly watch reruns of 20 year old sitcoms on TV.
:>
:> Writers with enough imagination will not reuse another's ideas.
:
:
: I feel that using the universe created by another for stories is the
: sincerest flattery one can offer. I suppose you never camp where others
: have been before, and always blaze your own trail across country when
: driving?
: Not all of use have the ability to make up a whole new universe, but we
: can still tell a pretty good story. So, how much fanfiction have you
: actually read?

More than I should but not as much as you.

If you can't come up with a universe of your own,
try one that's public domain...don't poach on the
turf of a living writer you claim to respect.

I tend to think of this from the writer's perspective;
I know I'd be appalled at others writing in my worlds
without my permission.Where I get ideas for stories set
in other writers' worlds (which is often) I think there
are only two ethical things to do...offer the writer the
idea unconditionally to do with as they please,and offer
to write the story subject to whatever financial and editorial
terms the writer might dictate.

I have tried both and been left in each case feeling I should
not have...that turning my imagination to worlds wholly mine
is a better use of my creative energy and more mindful of the
writers I admire.

I stipulate that some (television,comic,etc) characters are
designed to be written by many hands,but there too there are
rights to be respected.

-=-=-
The World Trade Center towers MUST rise again,
at least as tall as before...or terror has triumphed.
Ron Hunter
2007-08-29 08:38:58 UTC
Permalink
Post by Louis Epstein
:> :>>>>>>> I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
:> :>>>>>>> have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
:> :>>>>>>> passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> .
:> :>>>>>>> This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts
:> :>>>>>>> to scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
:> :>>>>>>> unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
:> :>>>>>>> would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
:> :>>>>>>> each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
:> :>>>>>>> Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
:> :>>>>>>> because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
:> :>>>>>>> works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed,
:> :>>>>>>> the whole series has been entralling, and any writer who has kids
:> :>>>>>>> queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
:> :>>>>>>> The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
:> :>>>>>>> the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
:> :>>>>>>> ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
:> :>>>>>>> the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
:> :>>>>>>> (shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the prevasiveness
:> :>>>>>>> of evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
:> :>>>>>>> life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
:> :>>>>>>> having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards.
:> :>>>>>>> Even wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
:> :>>>>>>> And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
:> :>>>>>>> were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived
:> :>>>>>>> Harry's celebrity.
:> :>>>>>>> Peter
:> :>>>>>> There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show
:> :>>>>>> up that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
:> :>>>>>> fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
:> :>>>>> But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
:> :>>>>> Babs
:> :>>>> Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament
:> :>>>> onto the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
:> :>>>> Canon, on the other hand...
:> :>>> But why bother with fanfiction? If it's not cannon then I don't understand
:> :>>> why people read it... It does not add to the actual story, it only gives
:> :>>> wanna-be writers a chance to write their version of the story of what
:> :>>> they wish happened but it is not what JKR wrote so it's not really what
:> :>>> happened... JKR just should have written a better last book and I can't
:> :>>> believe her editors didn't go 'whoa there sister, you need to tie up
:> :>>> some loose ends or your readers will be unhappy"...
:> :>>> babs
:> :>> Well, I don't see fanfiction the way you do. I find reading it very
:> :>> rewarding, and some of the stories are way better than HBP and DH. If
:> :>> it gives one pleasure, and it is free, and no harm comes from it, then
:> :>> why not? And as to it being 'canon' (not 'cannon', thats an artillery
:> :>> piece), the only requirement for a fanfiction piece to be 'canon' is
:> :>> that it not violate any of the situations, or 'rules' of the JKR
:> :>> stories. Those that do are labeled appropriately (AU).
:> :>> Try it, you might like it.
:> :>
:> :> Because it is not written by JKR. That simple. Fanfiction is not canon
:> :> and never will be canon. It's just wannabe writers who don't have the
:> :> imagination to come up with their own stuff so they borrow other
:> :> people's ideas and characters and write what they wanted instead of
:> :> just enjoying the world created for them.
:> :>
:> : Just because it wasn't written by JKR, does NOT mean it is not canon.
:>
:> It most certainly DOES.
:>
:> : The term only means that it is consistent with what is in the books, and
:> : contradicts nothing in her magical world.
:>
:> No.
:> The Canon is what JKR has said is canon,and nothing else.
:> Fanfic that doesn't openly contradict this is "consistent with" canon,
:> but not PART OF the canon.The canon must be consistent with itself,
:> and fanfics are free to contradict each other.
:>
:> : It is a group of people who want to DO something, create something, and
:> : contribute something, rather than mindlessly reread what JKR wrote.
:> : Some people like to do some of the work for themselves, others
:> : mindlessly watch reruns of 20 year old sitcoms on TV.
:>
:> Writers with enough imagination will not reuse another's ideas.
: I feel that using the universe created by another for stories is the
: sincerest flattery one can offer. I suppose you never camp where others
: have been before, and always blaze your own trail across country when
: driving?
: Not all of use have the ability to make up a whole new universe, but we
: can still tell a pretty good story. So, how much fanfiction have you
: actually read?
More than I should but not as much as you.
If you can't come up with a universe of your own,
try one that's public domain...don't poach on the
turf of a living writer you claim to respect.
I tend to think of this from the writer's perspective;
I know I'd be appalled at others writing in my worlds
without my permission.Where I get ideas for stories set
in other writers' worlds (which is often) I think there
are only two ethical things to do...offer the writer the
idea unconditionally to do with as they please,and offer
to write the story subject to whatever financial and editorial
terms the writer might dictate.
I have tried both and been left in each case feeling I should
not have...that turning my imagination to worlds wholly mine
is a better use of my creative energy and more mindful of the
writers I admire.
I stipulate that some (television,comic,etc) characters are
designed to be written by many hands,but there too there are
rights to be respected.
I don't believe that JKR has ever made a public comment regarding
fanfiction. I am quite sure, however, that if she were really concerned
about it, she could pretty much eradicate it. With the money she has, a
fleet of lawyers could quickly shut down the websites that carry it.

As long as the writers respect her copyrights, I doubt she will ever be
concerned about it. I am pretty sure that actually contribute to sales
of her works.
Louis Epstein
2007-08-30 19:23:34 UTC
Permalink
Ron Hunter <***@charter.net> wrote:
: Louis Epstein wrote:
:> Ron Hunter <***@charter.net> wrote:
:> : Louis Epstein wrote:
:> :> Ron Hunter <***@charter.net> wrote:
:> :> : smaug86 wrote:
:> :> :> On Aug 4, 4:30 am, Ron Hunter <***@charter.net> wrote:
:> :> :>> BubblyBabs wrote:
:> :> :>>> "Brian Wakeling" <***@virgin.net> wrote in message
:> :> :>>> news:cyEsi.13758$***@newsfe7-gui.ntli.net...
:> :> :>>>> In a speech called KYCsi.2704$***@bignews4.bellsouth.net,
:> :> :>>>> BubblyBabs (***@whatever.com) spake thusly:
:> :> :>>>>> "Ron Hunter" <***@charter.net> wrote in message
:> :> :>>>>> news:JoqdnbXR6YK-***@giganews.com...
:> :> :>>>>>> peter wrote:
:> :> :>>>>>>> I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the
:> :> :>>>>>>> kids have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert
:> :> :>>>>>>> (and also passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and
:> :> :>>>>>>> Juliet!)

Oooo,think of the children ruined by spoiling R&J...

:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts
:> :> :>>>>>>> to scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
:> :> :>>>>>>> unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
:> :> :>>>>>>> would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
:> :> :>>>>>>> each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
:> :> :>>>>>>> Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
:> :> :>>>>>>> because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
:> :> :>>>>>>> works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed,
:> :> :>>>>>>> the whole series has been entralling, and any writer who has kids
:> :> :>>>>>>> queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
:> :> :>>>>>>> The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
:> :> :>>>>>>> the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
:> :> :>>>>>>> ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
:> :> :>>>>>>> the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
:> :> :>>>>>>> (shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the prevasiveness
:> :> :>>>>>>> of evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
:> :> :>>>>>>> life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
:> :> :>>>>>>> having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards.
:> :> :>>>>>>> Even wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
:> :> :>>>>>>> And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
:> :> :>>>>>>> were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived
:> :> :>>>>>>> Harry's celebrity.
:> :> :>>>>>>> Peter
:> :> :>>>>>> There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show
:> :> :>>>>>> up that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
:> :> :>>>>>> fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
:> :> :>>>>> But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
:> :> :>>>>> Babs
:> :> :>>>> Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament
:> :> :>>>> onto the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
:> :> :>>>> Canon, on the other hand...
:> :> :>>> But why bother with fanfiction? If it's not cannon then I don't understand
:> :> :>>> why people read it... It does not add to the actual story, it only gives
:> :> :>>> wanna-be writers a chance to write their version of the story of what
:> :> :>>> they wish happened but it is not what JKR wrote so it's not really what
:> :> :>>> happened... JKR just should have written a better last book and I can't
:> :> :>>> believe her editors didn't go 'whoa there sister, you need to tie up
:> :> :>>> some loose ends or your readers will be unhappy"...
:> :> :>>> babs
:> :> :>> Well, I don't see fanfiction the way you do. I find reading it very
:> :> :>> rewarding, and some of the stories are way better than HBP and DH. If
:> :> :>> it gives one pleasure, and it is free, and no harm comes from it, then
:> :> :>> why not? And as to it being 'canon' (not 'cannon', thats an artillery
:> :> :>> piece), the only requirement for a fanfiction piece to be 'canon' is
:> :> :>> that it not violate any of the situations, or 'rules' of the JKR
:> :> :>> stories. Those that do are labeled appropriately (AU).
:> :> :>> Try it, you might like it.
:> :> :>
:> :> :> Because it is not written by JKR. That simple. Fanfiction is not canon
:> :> :> and never will be canon. It's just wannabe writers who don't have the
:> :> :> imagination to come up with their own stuff so they borrow other
:> :> :> people's ideas and characters and write what they wanted instead of
:> :> :> just enjoying the world created for them.
:> :> :>
:> :> : Just because it wasn't written by JKR, does NOT mean it is not canon.
:> :>
:> :> It most certainly DOES.
:> :>
:> :> : The term only means that it is consistent with what is in the books, and
:> :> : contradicts nothing in her magical world.
:> :>
:> :> No.
:> :> The Canon is what JKR has said is canon,and nothing else.
:> :> Fanfic that doesn't openly contradict this is "consistent with" canon,
:> :> but not PART OF the canon.The canon must be consistent with itself,
:> :> and fanfics are free to contradict each other.
:> :>
:> :> : It is a group of people who want to DO something, create something, and
:> :> : contribute something, rather than mindlessly reread what JKR wrote.
:> :> : Some people like to do some of the work for themselves, others
:> :> : mindlessly watch reruns of 20 year old sitcoms on TV.
:> :>
:> :> Writers with enough imagination will not reuse another's ideas.
:> :
:> :
:> : I feel that using the universe created by another for stories is the
:> : sincerest flattery one can offer. I suppose you never camp where others
:> : have been before, and always blaze your own trail across country when
:> : driving?
:> : Not all of use have the ability to make up a whole new universe, but we
:> : can still tell a pretty good story. So, how much fanfiction have you
:> : actually read?
:>
:> More than I should but not as much as you.
:>
:> If you can't come up with a universe of your own,
:> try one that's public domain...don't poach on the
:> turf of a living writer you claim to respect.
:>
:> I tend to think of this from the writer's perspective;
:> I know I'd be appalled at others writing in my worlds
:> without my permission.Where I get ideas for stories set
:> in other writers' worlds (which is often) I think there
:> are only two ethical things to do...offer the writer the
:> idea unconditionally to do with as they please,and offer
:> to write the story subject to whatever financial and editorial
:> terms the writer might dictate.
:>
:> I have tried both and been left in each case feeling I should
:> not have...that turning my imagination to worlds wholly mine
:> is a better use of my creative energy and more mindful of the
:> writers I admire.
:>
:> I stipulate that some (television,comic,etc) characters are
:> designed to be written by many hands,but there too there are
:> rights to be respected.
:>
:
: I don't believe that JKR has ever made a public comment regarding
: fanfiction. I am quite sure, however, that if she were really concerned
: about it, she could pretty much eradicate it. With the money she has, a
: fleet of lawyers could quickly shut down the websites that carry it.

I believe some adult-fanfic sites have been sent cease-and-desist letters.

: As long as the writers respect her copyrights, I doubt she will ever be
: concerned about it. I am pretty sure that actually contribute to sales
: of her works.

-=-=-
The World Trade Center towers MUST rise again,
at least as tall as before...or terror has triumphed.
Ron Hunter
2007-08-31 01:52:09 UTC
Permalink
Post by Louis Epstein
:> :> :>>>>>>> I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the
:> :> :>>>>>>> kids have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert
:> :> :>>>>>>> (and also passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and
:> :> :>>>>>>> Juliet!)
Oooo,think of the children ruined by spoiling R&J...
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :>>>>>>> This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts
:> :> :>>>>>>> to scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
:> :> :>>>>>>> unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
:> :> :>>>>>>> would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
:> :> :>>>>>>> each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
:> :> :>>>>>>> Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
:> :> :>>>>>>> because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
:> :> :>>>>>>> works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed,
:> :> :>>>>>>> the whole series has been entralling, and any writer who has kids
:> :> :>>>>>>> queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
:> :> :>>>>>>> The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
:> :> :>>>>>>> the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
:> :> :>>>>>>> ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
:> :> :>>>>>>> the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
:> :> :>>>>>>> (shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the prevasiveness
:> :> :>>>>>>> of evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
:> :> :>>>>>>> life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
:> :> :>>>>>>> having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards.
:> :> :>>>>>>> Even wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
:> :> :>>>>>>> And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
:> :> :>>>>>>> were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived
:> :> :>>>>>>> Harry's celebrity.
:> :> :>>>>>>> Peter
:> :> :>>>>>> There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show
:> :> :>>>>>> up that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
:> :> :>>>>>> fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
:> :> :>>>>> But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
:> :> :>>>>> Babs
:> :> :>>>> Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament
:> :> :>>>> onto the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
:> :> :>>>> Canon, on the other hand...
:> :> :>>> But why bother with fanfiction? If it's not cannon then I don't understand
:> :> :>>> why people read it... It does not add to the actual story, it only gives
:> :> :>>> wanna-be writers a chance to write their version of the story of what
:> :> :>>> they wish happened but it is not what JKR wrote so it's not really what
:> :> :>>> happened... JKR just should have written a better last book and I can't
:> :> :>>> believe her editors didn't go 'whoa there sister, you need to tie up
:> :> :>>> some loose ends or your readers will be unhappy"...
:> :> :>>> babs
:> :> :>> Well, I don't see fanfiction the way you do. I find reading it very
:> :> :>> rewarding, and some of the stories are way better than HBP and DH. If
:> :> :>> it gives one pleasure, and it is free, and no harm comes from it, then
:> :> :>> why not? And as to it being 'canon' (not 'cannon', thats an artillery
:> :> :>> piece), the only requirement for a fanfiction piece to be 'canon' is
:> :> :>> that it not violate any of the situations, or 'rules' of the JKR
:> :> :>> stories. Those that do are labeled appropriately (AU).
:> :> :>> Try it, you might like it.
:> :> :>
:> :> :> Because it is not written by JKR. That simple. Fanfiction is not canon
:> :> :> and never will be canon. It's just wannabe writers who don't have the
:> :> :> imagination to come up with their own stuff so they borrow other
:> :> :> people's ideas and characters and write what they wanted instead of
:> :> :> just enjoying the world created for them.
:> :> :>
:> :> : Just because it wasn't written by JKR, does NOT mean it is not canon.
:> :>
:> :> It most certainly DOES.
:> :>
:> :> : The term only means that it is consistent with what is in the books, and
:> :> : contradicts nothing in her magical world.
:> :>
:> :> No.
:> :> The Canon is what JKR has said is canon,and nothing else.
:> :> Fanfic that doesn't openly contradict this is "consistent with" canon,
:> :> but not PART OF the canon.The canon must be consistent with itself,
:> :> and fanfics are free to contradict each other.
:> :>
:> :> : It is a group of people who want to DO something, create something, and
:> :> : contribute something, rather than mindlessly reread what JKR wrote.
:> :> : Some people like to do some of the work for themselves, others
:> :> : mindlessly watch reruns of 20 year old sitcoms on TV.
:> :>
:> :> Writers with enough imagination will not reuse another's ideas.
:> : I feel that using the universe created by another for stories is the
:> : sincerest flattery one can offer. I suppose you never camp where others
:> : have been before, and always blaze your own trail across country when
:> : driving?
:> : Not all of use have the ability to make up a whole new universe, but we
:> : can still tell a pretty good story. So, how much fanfiction have you
:> : actually read?
:>
:> More than I should but not as much as you.
:>
:> If you can't come up with a universe of your own,
:> try one that's public domain...don't poach on the
:> turf of a living writer you claim to respect.
:>
:> I tend to think of this from the writer's perspective;
:> I know I'd be appalled at others writing in my worlds
:> without my permission.Where I get ideas for stories set
:> in other writers' worlds (which is often) I think there
:> are only two ethical things to do...offer the writer the
:> idea unconditionally to do with as they please,and offer
:> to write the story subject to whatever financial and editorial
:> terms the writer might dictate.
:>
:> I have tried both and been left in each case feeling I should
:> not have...that turning my imagination to worlds wholly mine
:> is a better use of my creative energy and more mindful of the
:> writers I admire.
:>
:> I stipulate that some (television,comic,etc) characters are
:> designed to be written by many hands,but there too there are
:> rights to be respected.
:>
: I don't believe that JKR has ever made a public comment regarding
: fanfiction. I am quite sure, however, that if she were really concerned
: about it, she could pretty much eradicate it. With the money she has, a
: fleet of lawyers could quickly shut down the websites that carry it.
I believe some adult-fanfic sites have been sent cease-and-desist letters.
Which, if I understand correctly, they simply ignored. As long at they
took some precautions to prevent access to the stories by children, they
can put in just about anything they want. Some sites want to see a
photo-id, which is pretty ludicrous, given you can always use someone
else's.
Louis Epstein
2007-08-31 18:21:01 UTC
Permalink
Ron Hunter <***@charter.net> wrote:
: Louis Epstein wrote:
:> Ron Hunter <***@charter.net> wrote:
:> : Louis Epstein wrote:
:> :> Ron Hunter <***@charter.net> wrote:
:> :> : Louis Epstein wrote:
:> :> :> Ron Hunter <***@charter.net> wrote:
:> :> :> : smaug86 wrote:
:> :> :> :> On Aug 4, 4:30 am, Ron Hunter <***@charter.net> wrote:
:> :> :> :>> BubblyBabs wrote:
:> :> :> :>>> "Brian Wakeling" <***@virgin.net> wrote in message
:> :> :> :>>> news:cyEsi.13758$***@newsfe7-gui.ntli.net...
:> :> :> :>>>> In a speech called KYCsi.2704$***@bignews4.bellsouth.net,
:> :> :> :>>>> BubblyBabs (***@whatever.com) spake thusly:
:> :> :> :>>>>> "Ron Hunter" <***@charter.net> wrote in message
:> :> :> :>>>>> news:JoqdnbXR6YK-***@giganews.com...
:> :> :> :>>>>>> peter wrote:
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> kids have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> (and also passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> and Juliet!)
:>
:> Oooo,think of the children ruined by spoiling R&J...
:>
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> .
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> to scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> other works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?.
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> Indeed, the whole series has been entralling, and any writer
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> who has kids queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> (shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the prevasiveness
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> of evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards.
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> Even wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> Ministry were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> survived Harry's celebrity.
:> :> :> :>>>>>>> Peter
:> :> :> :>>>>>> There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to
:> :> :> :>>>>>> show up that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then
:> :> :> :>>>>>> visit fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
:> :> :> :>>>>> But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
:> :> :> :>>>>> Babs
:> :> :> :>>>> Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament
:> :> :> :>>>> onto the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
:> :> :> :>>>> Canon, on the other hand...
:> :> :> :>>> But why bother with fanfiction? If it's not cannon then I don't understand
:> :> :> :>>> why people read it... It does not add to the actual story, it only gives
:> :> :> :>>> wanna-be writers a chance to write their version of the story of what
:> :> :> :>>> they wish happened but it is not what JKR wrote so it's not really what
:> :> :> :>>> happened... JKR just should have written a better last book and I can't
:> :> :> :>>> believe her editors didn't go 'whoa there sister, you need to tie
:> :> :> :>>> up some loose ends or your readers will be unhappy"...
:> :> :> :>>> babs
:> :> :> :>> Well, I don't see fanfiction the way you do. I find reading it very
:> :> :> :>> rewarding, and some of the stories are way better than HBP and DH. If
:> :> :> :>> it gives one pleasure, and it is free, and no harm comes from it, then
:> :> :> :>> why not? And as to it being 'canon' (not 'cannon', thats an artillery
:> :> :> :>> piece), the only requirement for a fanfiction piece to be 'canon' is
:> :> :> :>> that it not violate any of the situations, or 'rules' of the JKR
:> :> :> :>> stories. Those that do are labeled appropriately (AU).
:> :> :> :>> Try it, you might like it.
:> :> :> :>
:> :> :> :> Because it is not written by JKR. That simple. Fanfiction is not canon
:> :> :> :> and never will be canon. It's just wannabe writers who don't have
:> :> :> :> the imagination to come up with their own stuff so they borrow other
:> :> :> :> people's ideas and characters and write what they wanted instead of
:> :> :> :> just enjoying the world created for them.
:> :> :> :>
:> :> :> : Just because it wasn't written by JKR, does NOT mean it is not canon.
:> :> :>
:> :> :> It most certainly DOES.
:> :> :>
:> :> :> : The term only means that it is consistent with what is in the books, and
:> :> :> : contradicts nothing in her magical world.
:> :> :>
:> :> :> No.
:> :> :> The Canon is what JKR has said is canon,and nothing else.
:> :> :> Fanfic that doesn't openly contradict this is "consistent with" canon,
:> :> :> but not PART OF the canon.The canon must be consistent with itself,
:> :> :> and fanfics are free to contradict each other.
:> :> :>
:> :> :> : It is a group of people who want to DO something, create something, and
:> :> :> : contribute something, rather than mindlessly reread what JKR wrote.
:> :> :> : Some people like to do some of the work for themselves, others
:> :> :> : mindlessly watch reruns of 20 year old sitcoms on TV.
:> :> :>
:> :> :> Writers with enough imagination will not reuse another's ideas.
:> :> :
:> :> :
:> :> : I feel that using the universe created by another for stories is the
:> :> : sincerest flattery one can offer. I suppose you never camp where others
:> :> : have been before, and always blaze your own trail across country when
:> :> : driving?
:> :> : Not all of use have the ability to make up a whole new universe, but we
:> :> : can still tell a pretty good story. So, how much fanfiction have you
:> :> : actually read?
:> :>
:> :> More than I should but not as much as you.
:> :>
:> :> If you can't come up with a universe of your own,
:> :> try one that's public domain...don't poach on the
:> :> turf of a living writer you claim to respect.
:> :>
:> :> I tend to think of this from the writer's perspective;
:> :> I know I'd be appalled at others writing in my worlds
:> :> without my permission.Where I get ideas for stories set
:> :> in other writers' worlds (which is often) I think there
:> :> are only two ethical things to do...offer the writer the
:> :> idea unconditionally to do with as they please,and offer
:> :> to write the story subject to whatever financial and editorial
:> :> terms the writer might dictate.
:> :>
:> :> I have tried both and been left in each case feeling I should
:> :> not have...that turning my imagination to worlds wholly mine
:> :> is a better use of my creative energy and more mindful of the
:> :> writers I admire.
:> :>
:> :> I stipulate that some (television,comic,etc) characters are
:> :> designed to be written by many hands,but there too there are
:> :> rights to be respected.
:> :>
:> :
:> : I don't believe that JKR has ever made a public comment regarding
:> : fanfiction. I am quite sure, however, that if she were really concerned
:> : about it, she could pretty much eradicate it. With the money she has, a
:> : fleet of lawyers could quickly shut down the websites that carry it.
:>
:> I believe some adult-fanfic sites have been sent cease-and-desist letters.
:>
:
: Which, if I understand correctly, they simply ignored. As long at they
: took some precautions to prevent access to the stories by children, they
: can put in just about anything they want. Some sites want to see a
: photo-id, which is pretty ludicrous, given you can always use someone
: else's.

I know I never visit any site that demands age verification (such as
those of many alcoholic-beverage companies) because I consider it a
privacy issue.In terms of erotic-story sites I'd worry about being in
a database that could be seized by lawsuit-happy puritans trying to
narrow the bounds of free speech.

-=-=-
The World Trade Center towers MUST rise again,
at least as tall as before...or terror has triumphed.
Barry Gray
2007-08-04 13:30:38 UTC
Permalink
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed,
the whole series has been entralling, and any writer who has kids
queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
(shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of
evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards. Even
wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived
Harry's celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up
that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament onto
the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
Canon, on the other hand...
But why bother with fanfiction? If it's not cannon then I don't understand
why people read it... It does not add to the actual story, it only gives
wanna-be writers a chance to write their version of the story of what they
wish happened but it is not what JKR wrote so it's not really what
happened... JKR just should have written a better last book and I can't
believe her editors didn't go 'whoa there sister, you need to tie up some
loose ends or your readers will be unhappy"...
babs
Actually I am perfectly happy: the story, from from PP onwards, is
about the struggle between Harry and Voldemort, and the story ends
when the struggle ends. There are of course many things people may
wonder about, different people different things as is clear from this
thread, but any book along these lines would become dangerously like a
biography.

"...there is no mystery
About this man who played a certain part in history"

T S Eliot Murder in the Cathedral

I did not like HBP as much as the others, but that is quite another
matter.
--
Barry Gray
http://www.barrygray.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk
Louis Epstein
2007-08-27 20:00:40 UTC
Permalink
Brian Wakeling <***@virgin.net> wrote:
: In a speech called KYCsi.2704$***@bignews4.bellsouth.net,
: BubblyBabs (***@whatever.com) spake
: thusly:
:
:> "Ron Hunter" <***@charter.net> wrote in message
:> news:JoqdnbXR6YK-***@giganews.com...
:>> peter wrote:
:>>> I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the
:>>> kids
:>>> have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
:>>> passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
:>>> .
:>>> .
:>>> .
:>>> .
:>>> .
:>>> .
:>>> .
:>>> .
:>>> .
:>>> .
:>>> .
:>>> .
:>>> .
:>>> .
:>>> .
:>>> .
:>>> This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
:>>> scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
:>>> unsatisfactory. No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I
:>>> would have had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
:>>> each other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
:>>> Quibbler and turning it into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it
:>>> because of improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
:>>> works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed,
:>>> the whole series has been entralling, and any writer who has kids
:>>> queuing up to read a book deserves praise.
:>>>
:>>> The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many
:>>> of
:>>> the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
:>>> ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after
:>>> the defeat of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
:>>> (shamefully omitted from the film) which shows the prevasiveness
:>>> of
:>>> evil and how Frodo is too deeply scarred to return to a normal
:>>> life. Harry's experiences must have similarly affected him, and
:>>> having watched him grow up I want to know how he coped afterwards.
:>>> Even wizards may be susceptible to post traumatic stress disorder.
:>>>
:>>> And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
:>>> were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived
:>>> Harry's celebrity.
:>>>
:>>> Peter
:>>>
:>> There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up
:>> that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
:>> fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
:>
:> But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
:> Babs
:
:
: Of course they're not cannon! Getting that sort of calibre armament
: onto the internet is bloody difficult at the best of times.
: Canon, on the other hand...

Well,generally one must perform satisfactorily at the seminary,
then be ordained and serve well in pastoral or administrative
capacities,before one can hope for election to the Cathedral
Chapter...and if no canonry falls vacant in one's diocese...

-=-=-
The World Trade Center towers MUST rise again,
at least as tall as before...or terror has triumphed.
Ron Hunter
2007-08-03 13:17:51 UTC
Permalink
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
As long as they contradict the Epilogue, they can be considered 'canon'.
Now those who just don't like the way JKR handled the last book might
just write their own version, which would, of course, be AU.
Frankly, I don't like what she did with the last TWO books, and greatly
enjoy the AU stories that keep better to the themes of the earlier books.
Thom-Madura
2007-08-06 23:21:34 UTC
Permalink
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more light on the
futures of the characters as well - I hope you consider HER to be cannon.
BubblyBabs
2007-08-08 09:02:40 UTC
Permalink
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more light on the
futures of the characters as well - I hope you consider HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these interviews so we know
what happened when she should have put them in the book...
Babs
Green-Eyed Chris
2007-08-08 17:38:05 UTC
Permalink
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more light on the
futures of the characters as well - I hope you consider HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these interviews so we know
what happened when she should have put them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's remark
that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose ends are usually
neatly rejoined at the end.*

JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall the author
of a children's series having to give interviews to try to explain only
lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But who am I to argue with
success?


*Raymond Chandler, depending on blood alcohol level, was a notable
exception. I don't think that even he ever knew who fired the shot that
killed Velma.
--
Chris
Drusilla
2007-08-08 21:37:17 UTC
Permalink
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more light on the
futures of the characters as well - I hope you consider HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these interviews so we know
what happened when she should have put them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's remark
that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose ends are usually
neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall the author
of a children's series having to give interviews to try to explain only
lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But who am I to argue with
success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can be easily
explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from the... Magic!",
"How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with the Clo... Magic!" Hey, I
wish I could enter my Basic Structures class and when asked by my
professor how I will manage that my fancy building can stand up, I
simply could say "Physics!"
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
*Raymond Chandler, depending on blood alcohol level, was a notable
exception. I don't think that even he ever knew who fired the shot that
killed Velma.
--
Chris
Green-Eyed Chris
2007-08-08 23:18:11 UTC
Permalink
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more light on the
futures of the characters as well - I hope you consider HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these interviews so we know
what happened when she should have put them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's remark
that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose ends are usually
neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall the author
of a children's series having to give interviews to try to explain only
lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But who am I to argue with
success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can be easily
explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from the... Magic!",
"How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with the Clo... Magic!" Hey, I
wish I could enter my Basic Structures class and when asked by my
professor how I will manage that my fancy building can stand up, I
simply could say "Physics!"
All things considered, here's your best chance at passing with magic:

Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open your blouse and
say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic structures standing up,
Dude!".

Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?

Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is proportional
to...?
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
*Raymond Chandler, depending on blood alcohol level, was a notable
exception. I don't think that even he ever knew who fired the shot that
killed Velma.
--
Chris
Monika
2007-08-08 23:27:46 UTC
Permalink
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more light on the
futures of the characters as well - I hope you consider HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these interviews so we know
what happened when she should have put them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's remark
that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose ends are usually
neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall the author
of a children's series having to give interviews to try to explain only
lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But who am I to argue with
success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can be easily
explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from the... Magic!",
"How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with the Clo... Magic!" Hey, I
wish I could enter my Basic Structures class and when asked by my
professor how I will manage that my fancy building can stand up, I
simply could say "Physics!"
Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open your blouse and
say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic structures standing up,
Dude!".
Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?
Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is proportional
to...?
The angle of the dangle is directly proportional to the heat of the meat,
but inversely proportional to the sag of the bag; all of which is in direct
relationship to the toll on the hole. *evil grin*
--
eliminate the Horcrux to reply
Dragon Rider
2007-08-09 00:31:47 UTC
Permalink
Post by Monika
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more light on the
futures of the characters as well - I hope you consider HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these interviews so we know
what happened when she should have put them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's remark
that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose ends are usually
neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall the author
of a children's series having to give interviews to try to explain only
lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But who am I to argue with
success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can be easily
explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from the... Magic!",
"How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with the Clo... Magic!" Hey, I
wish I could enter my Basic Structures class and when asked by my
professor how I will manage that my fancy building can stand up, I
simply could say "Physics!"
Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open your blouse and
say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic structures standing up,
Dude!".
Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?
Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is proportional
to...?
The angle of the dangle is directly proportional to the heat of the meat,
but inversely proportional to the sag of the bag; all of which is in direct
relationship to the toll on the hole. *evil grin*
LOL, seems whe have a new addition to the OT-but-sexy'n'fun threads!
Welcome!
Drusilla
2007-08-09 21:02:58 UTC
Permalink
Post by Dragon Rider
Post by Monika
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more light on the
futures of the characters as well - I hope you consider HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these interviews so we know
what happened when she should have put them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's remark
that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose ends are usually
neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall the author
of a children's series having to give interviews to try to explain only
lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But who am I to argue with
success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can be easily
explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from the... Magic!",
"How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with the Clo... Magic!" Hey, I
wish I could enter my Basic Structures class and when asked by my
professor how I will manage that my fancy building can stand up, I
simply could say "Physics!"
Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open your blouse and
say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic structures standing up,
Dude!".
Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?
Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is proportional
to...?
The angle of the dangle is directly proportional to the heat of the meat,
but inversely proportional to the sag of the bag; all of which is in direct
relationship to the toll on the hole. *evil grin*
LOL, seems whe have a new addition to the OT-but-sexy'n'fun threads!
Welcome!
Yeah! the more the better!
Drusilla
2007-08-09 20:40:34 UTC
Permalink
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more light on the
futures of the characters as well - I hope you consider HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these interviews so we know
what happened when she should have put them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's remark
that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose ends are usually
neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall the author
of a children's series having to give interviews to try to explain only
lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But who am I to argue with
success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can be easily
explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from the... Magic!",
"How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with the Clo... Magic!" Hey, I
wish I could enter my Basic Structures class and when asked by my
professor how I will manage that my fancy building can stand up, I
simply could say "Physics!"
Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open your blouse and
say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic structures standing up,
Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda biased
against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really don't have any
chance to pass that class.
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?
Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is proportional
to...?
:D
Ron Hunter
2007-08-09 23:26:10 UTC
Permalink
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show
up that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more light on
the futures of the characters as well - I hope you consider HER to
be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these interviews
so we know what happened when she should have put them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's remark
that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose ends are
usually neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall the
author of a children's series having to give interviews to try to
explain only lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But who am I
to argue with success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can be
easily explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from the...
Magic!", "How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with the Clo...
Magic!" Hey, I wish I could enter my Basic Structures class and when
asked by my professor how I will manage that my fancy building can
stand up, I simply could say "Physics!"
Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open your blouse
and say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic structures standing
up, Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda biased
against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really don't have any
chance to pass that class.
Why would the teacher's sexual orientation affect your ability to pass?
Seems to me that such things would be kept carefully OUT of the classroom.
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?
Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is proportional
to...?
:D
Nuki Mouse
2007-08-09 23:58:48 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book
unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show
up that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more light on
the futures of the characters as well - I hope you consider HER to
be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these interviews so
we know what happened when she should have put them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's remark
that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose ends are usually
neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall the author
of a children's series having to give interviews to try to explain
only lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But who am I to argue
with success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can be
easily explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from the...
Magic!", "How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with the Clo...
Magic!" Hey, I wish I could enter my Basic Structures class and when
asked by my professor how I will manage that my fancy building can
stand up, I simply could say "Physics!"
Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open your blouse and
say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic structures standing up,
Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda biased
against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really don't have any
chance to pass that class.
Why would the teacher's sexual orientation affect your ability to pass?
Seems to me that such things would be kept carefully OUT of the classroom.
Jeez...
Because flasing your tits at a gay man normally has no effect?

Now if he was really into SHE-MALES....

Nuki Mouse
--
"This is just my opinion, I maybe wrong" D. Miller
"Defend free speech! Read a banned book today!" unknown.
"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death
your right to say it," S. Tallentyre, summarizing Voltaire's views.
Welsh Dog
2007-08-10 01:39:12 UTC
Permalink
On Thu, 9 Aug 2007 19:58:48 -0400, "Nuki Mouse"
<snip>
Post by Nuki Mouse
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open your blouse and
say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic structures standing up,
Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda biased
against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really don't have any
chance to pass that class.
Why would the teacher's sexual orientation affect your ability to pass?
Seems to me that such things would be kept carefully OUT of the classroom.
Jeez...
Because flasing your tits at a gay man normally has no effect?
A friend of mine *swears* she only got a first because of the way she
opened her eyes wide and squirmed in her chair whenever her professor
looked her way. :)

Ahh... the good old days...

Welshdog
--
Australian Opinion http://australianopinion.com

News and views... for people like youse!!
Ron Hunter
2007-08-10 08:38:38 UTC
Permalink
Post by Welsh Dog
On Thu, 9 Aug 2007 19:58:48 -0400, "Nuki Mouse"
<snip>
Post by Nuki Mouse
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open your blouse and
say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic structures standing up,
Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda biased
against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really don't have any
chance to pass that class.
Why would the teacher's sexual orientation affect your ability to pass?
Seems to me that such things would be kept carefully OUT of the classroom.
Jeez...
Because flasing your tits at a gay man normally has no effect?
A friend of mine *swears* she only got a first because of the way she
opened her eyes wide and squirmed in her chair whenever her professor
looked her way. :)
Ahh... the good old days...
Welshdog
I guess that might get points for 'classroom participation'. Grin.
Brian Wakeling
2007-08-11 12:00:00 UTC
Permalink
Post by Nuki Mouse
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and
Juliet!) .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many
posts to scroll through! I found the endding of the last
book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have
had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each
other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of
improbable
plot devices, which have been known in other works. Why
did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series
has
been entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to
read a book deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings,
after
the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
(shamefully
omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and
how
Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship
survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to
show up that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and
then visit fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with
them.... Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more
light
on the futures of the characters as well - I hope you
consider
HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these
interviews so we know what happened when she should have put
them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's
remark that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose
ends are usually neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall the
author of a children's series having to give interviews to try
to explain only lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But
who am I to argue with success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can be
easily explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from
the... Magic!", "How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with
the Clo... Magic!" Hey, I wish I could enter my Basic Structures
class and when asked by my professor how I will manage that my
fancy building can stand up, I simply could say "Physics!"
All things considered, here's your best chance at passing with
magic: Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open
your
blouse and say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic
structures standing up, Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda
biased against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really
don't have any chance to pass that class.
Why would the teacher's sexual orientation affect your ability to
pass? Seems to me that such things would be kept carefully OUT of
the classroom.
Jeez...
Because flasing your tits at a gay man normally has no effect?
Apart from getting you charged with public indecency?
--
Brian Wakeling
Use brian at sabremeister dot me dot uk to reply
www.sabremeister.me.uk/index.html
www.livejournal.com/users/sabremeister
"Two wrongs don't make a right, but they make a good excuse."
- Thomas Szasz
Drusilla
2007-08-11 23:00:58 UTC
Permalink
Post by Brian Wakeling
Post by Nuki Mouse
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and
Juliet!) .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many
posts to scroll through! I found the endding of the last
book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have
had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each
other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of
improbable
plot devices, which have been known in other works. Why
did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series
has
been entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to
read a book deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived
happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings,
after
the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
(shamefully
omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and
how
Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be
susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to
show up that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and
then visit fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with
them.... Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more
light
on the futures of the characters as well - I hope you
consider
HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these
interviews so we know what happened when she should have put
them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's
remark that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose
ends are usually neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall the
author of a children's series having to give interviews to try
to explain only lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But
who am I to argue with success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can be
easily explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from
the... Magic!", "How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with
the Clo... Magic!" Hey, I wish I could enter my Basic Structures
class and when asked by my professor how I will manage that my
fancy building can stand up, I simply could say "Physics!"
All things considered, here's your best chance at passing with
magic: Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open
your
blouse and say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic
structures standing up, Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda
biased against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really
don't have any chance to pass that class.
Why would the teacher's sexual orientation affect your ability to
pass? Seems to me that such things would be kept carefully OUT of
the classroom.
Jeez...
Because flasing your tits at a gay man normally has no effect?
Apart from getting you charged with public indecency?
I was not doing it in middle of the street! The guy has an office, you
know?
Green-Eyed Chris
2007-08-12 00:21:31 UTC
Permalink
Post by Drusilla
Post by Brian Wakeling
Post by Nuki Mouse
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and
Juliet!) .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many
posts to scroll through! I found the endding of the last
book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have
had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each
other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of
improbable
plot devices, which have been known in other works. Why
did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series
has
been entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to
read a book deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts,
with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived
happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings,
after
the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
(shamefully
omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and
how
Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be
susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship
survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to
show up that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and
then visit fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with
them.... Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more
light
on the futures of the characters as well - I hope you
consider
HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these
interviews so we know what happened when she should have put
them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's
remark that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose
ends are usually neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall the
author of a children's series having to give interviews to try
to explain only lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But
who am I to argue with success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can be
easily explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from
the... Magic!", "How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with
the Clo... Magic!" Hey, I wish I could enter my Basic Structures
class and when asked by my professor how I will manage that my
fancy building can stand up, I simply could say "Physics!"
All things considered, here's your best chance at passing with
magic: Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open
your
blouse and say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic
structures standing up, Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda
biased against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really
don't have any chance to pass that class.
Why would the teacher's sexual orientation affect your ability to
pass? Seems to me that such things would be kept carefully OUT of
the classroom.
Jeez...
Because flasing your tits at a gay man normally has no effect?
Apart from getting you charged with public indecency?
I was not doing it in middle of the street! The guy has an office, you
know?
Dru, I'd be glad to rent an office...
--
Chris
Sabremeister Brian
2007-08-12 21:00:47 UTC
Permalink
Post by Drusilla
Post by Brian Wakeling
Post by Nuki Mouse
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably
now
the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and
Juliet!) .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many
posts to scroll through! I found the endding of the last
book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have
had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each
other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of
improbable
plot devices, which have been known in other works. Why
did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series
has
been entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to
read a book deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts,
with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived
happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings,
after
the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire
(shamefully
omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and
how
Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be
susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and
the
Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship
survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to
show up that address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and
then visit fanfiction.net, and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with
them.... Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more
light
on the futures of the characters as well - I hope you
consider
HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these
interviews so we know what happened when she should have put
them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's
remark that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose
ends are usually neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall the
author of a children's series having to give interviews to try
to explain only lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But
who am I to argue with success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can be
easily explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from
the... Magic!", "How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with
the Clo... Magic!" Hey, I wish I could enter my Basic
Structures
class and when asked by my professor how I will manage that my
fancy building can stand up, I simply could say "Physics!"
All things considered, here's your best chance at passing with
magic: Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open
your
blouse and say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic
structures standing up, Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda
biased against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really
don't have any chance to pass that class.
Why would the teacher's sexual orientation affect your ability to
pass? Seems to me that such things would be kept carefully OUT of
the classroom.
Jeez...
Because flasing your tits at a gay man normally has no effect?
Apart from getting you charged with public indecency?
I was not doing it in middle of the street! The guy has an office, you
know?
Public does not necessarily mean *in* public. He is a member of the
public, and if he didn't like what he saw, it would be a valid legal
option.
--
www.sabremeister.me.uk
www.livejournal.com/users/sabremeister/
Use brian at sabremeister dot me dot uk to reply
Literary threat #19:
They say the pen is mightier than the sword -
and I'm pretty handy with both, you know...
Monika
2007-08-10 01:34:23 UTC
Permalink
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by peter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
ever
Post by peter
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the
defeat
Post by peter
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be
susceptible
Post by peter
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more light on the
futures of the characters as well - I hope you consider HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these interviews so we know
what happened when she should have put them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's remark
that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose ends are usually
neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall the author
of a children's series having to give interviews to try to explain only
lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But who am I to argue with
success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can be easily
explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from the... Magic!",
"How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with the Clo... Magic!" Hey, I
wish I could enter my Basic Structures class and when asked by my
professor how I will manage that my fancy building can stand up, I
simply could say "Physics!"
Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open your blouse and
say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic structures standing up,
Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda biased
against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really don't have any
chance to pass that class.
Sure you do. It just changes from a bribe to a threat.
"Gimme at least a B or I'll flash the beaver next!"
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?
Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is proportional
to...?
:D
--
eliminate the Horcrux to reply
Green-Eyed Chris
2007-08-10 11:05:57 UTC
Permalink
Post by Monika
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by peter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
ever
Post by peter
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the
defeat
Post by peter
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be
susceptible
Post by peter
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more light on the
futures of the characters as well - I hope you consider HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these interviews so we know
what happened when she should have put them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's remark
that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose ends are usually
neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall the author
of a children's series having to give interviews to try to explain only
lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But who am I to argue with
success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can be easily
explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from the... Magic!",
"How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with the Clo... Magic!" Hey, I
wish I could enter my Basic Structures class and when asked by my
professor how I will manage that my fancy building can stand up, I
simply could say "Physics!"
Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open your blouse and
say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic structures standing up,
Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda biased
against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really don't have any
chance to pass that class.
Sure you do. It just changes from a bribe to a threat.
"Gimme at least a B or I'll flash the beaver next!"
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?
Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is proportional
to...?
:D
Actually, that's not bad advice. A friend of mine had a solid C in
philosophy and desperately needed a B to keep his pre-med average
looking good. He went to the professor with a bottle of good bourbon and
walked out of the office with a "B for bottle".
--
Chris
Drusilla
2007-08-10 21:12:08 UTC
Permalink
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Monika
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by peter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
ever
Post by peter
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the
defeat
Post by peter
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be
susceptible
Post by peter
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more light on the
futures of the characters as well - I hope you consider HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these interviews so we know
what happened when she should have put them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's remark
that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose ends are usually
neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall the author
of a children's series having to give interviews to try to explain only
lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But who am I to argue with
success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can be easily
explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from the... Magic!",
"How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with the Clo... Magic!" Hey, I
wish I could enter my Basic Structures class and when asked by my
professor how I will manage that my fancy building can stand up, I
simply could say "Physics!"
Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open your blouse and
say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic structures standing up,
Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda biased
against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really don't have any
chance to pass that class.
Sure you do. It just changes from a bribe to a threat.
"Gimme at least a B or I'll flash the beaver next!"
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?
Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is proportional
to...?
:D
Actually, that's not bad advice. A friend of mine had a solid C in
philosophy and desperately needed a B to keep his pre-med average
looking good. He went to the professor with a bottle of good bourbon and
walked out of the office with a "B for bottle".
LOL, that doesn't happen that much in my Faculty (Architecture) but it
does happens a lot in the Schools that are located in Downtown: Laws,
Administration, History, etc... But nothing will help me, that professor
really really doesn't like me at all.
Sue H
2007-08-10 21:29:58 UTC
Permalink
On Fri, 10 Aug 2007 16:12:08 -0500, Drusilla
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Monika
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by peter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily
ever
Post by peter
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the
defeat
Post by peter
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be
susceptible
Post by peter
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up
that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more light on the
futures of the characters as well - I hope you consider HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these interviews so we know
what happened when she should have put them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's remark
that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose ends are usually
neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall the author
of a children's series having to give interviews to try to explain only
lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But who am I to argue with
success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can be easily
explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from the... Magic!",
"How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with the Clo... Magic!" Hey, I
wish I could enter my Basic Structures class and when asked by my
professor how I will manage that my fancy building can stand up, I
simply could say "Physics!"
Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open your blouse and
say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic structures standing up,
Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda biased
against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really don't have any
chance to pass that class.
Sure you do. It just changes from a bribe to a threat.
"Gimme at least a B or I'll flash the beaver next!"
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?
Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is proportional
to...?
:D
Actually, that's not bad advice. A friend of mine had a solid C in
philosophy and desperately needed a B to keep his pre-med average
looking good. He went to the professor with a bottle of good bourbon and
walked out of the office with a "B for bottle".
LOL, that doesn't happen that much in my Faculty (Architecture) but it
does happens a lot in the Schools that are located in Downtown: Laws,
Administration, History, etc... But nothing will help me, that professor
really really doesn't like me at all.
My worst teacher in college was this unmoveable Humanities teacher. I
had a perfect GPA and my dad passed away. This humanities class which
was held one night a week. A test was every other week and each test
was like 20% of your grade. Anyway, I had to miss that entire week to
fly home and take care of all the stuff as my mother was in the
hospital. There was no way I could get the notes for that week as I
flew back the night of the test. I was told if I didn't take the
test, I'd get a 0. So I went in blindly and took the test (not even
bothering to stop home from the airport; I literally got there just as
the test was starting) which consisted of 80% of in class lecture and
showing slides and listening to opera etc. None of which I was there
for. I guess it was the other 20% of the book stuff that saved me I
don't know! I got a C- on the test (miracle) and ended up with a B for
the class and ended up missing a perfect GPA for first 3+
years of college by that ONE class. Because he was uncaring and
would not let anyone make anything up... no matter what. Now that's a
nasty man.
Brian Wakeling
2007-08-11 12:00:55 UTC
Permalink
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Monika
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably
now
the kids have read it it's the parents' turn. So -
spoiler alert (and also passing references to Lord of the
Rings and Romeo and Juliet!) .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many
posts to scroll through! I found the endding of the last
book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would
have
had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
each
other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of
improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?.
Indeed, the whole series has been entralling, and any
writer who has kids queuing up to read a book deserves
praise. The plot moved too quickly from the battle of
Hogwarts,
with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived
happily ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of
the Rings, after the defeat of Sauron we move the the
Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted from the film)
which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's
experiences must have similarly affected him, and having
watched him grow up I want to know how he coped
afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible to post
traumatic stress disorder. And, yes, I would have liked
to read how Hogwarts and the
Ministry were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's
relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning
to
show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with
them.... Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more
light on the futures of the characters as well - I hope you
consider HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these
interviews so we know
what happened when she should have put them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's
remark that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose
ends are usually neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall
the
author of a children's series having to give interviews to try
to explain only lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But
who am I to argue with success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can
be easily explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from
the... Magic!", "How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with
the Clo... Magic!" Hey, I wish I could enter my Basic
Structures
class and when asked by my professor how I will manage that my
fancy building can stand up, I simply could say "Physics!"
All things considered, here's your best chance at passing with
magic: Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open
your
blouse and say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic
structures standing up, Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda
biased against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really
don't have any chance to pass that class.
Sure you do. It just changes from a bribe to a threat.
"Gimme at least a B or I'll flash the beaver next!"
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?
Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is
proportional to...?
D
Actually, that's not bad advice. A friend of mine had a solid C in
philosophy and desperately needed a B to keep his pre-med average
looking good. He went to the professor with a bottle of good
bourbon
and walked out of the office with a "B for bottle".
And if the exam board find out about the bribery, the entire year's
results could be declared null and void.
Post by Drusilla
LOL, that doesn't happen that much in my Faculty (Architecture) but it
does happens a lot in the Schools that are located in Downtown: Laws,
Administration, History, etc... But nothing will help me, that
professor really really doesn't like me at all.
If you have reason to suspect that the only reason you're going to
fail is because the teacher doesn't like you, I suggest you bring the
matter to the attention of the college authorities.
--
Brian Wakeling
Use brian at sabremeister dot me dot uk to reply
www.sabremeister.me.uk/index.html
www.livejournal.com/users/sabremeister
"What's wrong with dropping out? To me, that is the whole point - to
remove oneself from an environment that is spiritually and
intellectually unfulfilling."
- William S Burroughs
Drusilla
2007-08-11 23:01:47 UTC
Permalink
Post by Brian Wakeling
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Monika
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably
now
the kids have read it it's the parents' turn. So -
spoiler alert (and also passing references to Lord of the
Rings and Romeo and Juliet!) .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many
posts to scroll through! I found the endding of the last
book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would
have
had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
each
other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of
improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?.
Indeed, the whole series has been entralling, and any
writer who has kids queuing up to read a book deserves
praise. The plot moved too quickly from the battle of
Hogwarts,
with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived
happily ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of
the Rings, after the defeat of Sauron we move the the
Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted from the film)
which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's
experiences must have similarly affected him, and having
watched him grow up I want to know how he coped
afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible to post
traumatic stress disorder. And, yes, I would have liked
to read how Hogwarts and the
Ministry were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's
relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning
to
show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with
them.... Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more
light on the futures of the characters as well - I hope you
consider HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these
interviews so we know
what happened when she should have put them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's
remark that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose
ends are usually neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall
the
author of a children's series having to give interviews to try
to explain only lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But
who am I to argue with success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can
be easily explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from
the... Magic!", "How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with
the Clo... Magic!" Hey, I wish I could enter my Basic
Structures
class and when asked by my professor how I will manage that my
fancy building can stand up, I simply could say "Physics!"
All things considered, here's your best chance at passing with
magic: Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open
your
blouse and say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic
structures standing up, Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda
biased against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really
don't have any chance to pass that class.
Sure you do. It just changes from a bribe to a threat.
"Gimme at least a B or I'll flash the beaver next!"
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?
Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is
proportional to...?
D
Actually, that's not bad advice. A friend of mine had a solid C in
philosophy and desperately needed a B to keep his pre-med average
looking good. He went to the professor with a bottle of good
bourbon
and walked out of the office with a "B for bottle".
And if the exam board find out about the bribery, the entire year's
results could be declared null and void.
Post by Drusilla
LOL, that doesn't happen that much in my Faculty (Architecture) but it
does happens a lot in the Schools that are located in Downtown: Laws,
Administration, History, etc... But nothing will help me, that
professor really really doesn't like me at all.
If you have reason to suspect that the only reason you're going to
fail is because the teacher doesn't like you, I suggest you bring the
matter to the attention of the college authorities.
Some of us tried already, but the only result was that he still being
unfair. And apparently he and the Dean are good friends.
Green-Eyed Chris
2007-08-12 00:21:02 UTC
Permalink
Post by Drusilla
Post by Brian Wakeling
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Monika
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably
now
the kids have read it it's the parents' turn. So -
spoiler alert (and also passing references to Lord of the
Rings and Romeo and Juliet!) .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many
posts to scroll through! I found the endding of the last
book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would
have
had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
each
other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of
improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?.
Indeed, the whole series has been entralling, and any
writer who has kids queuing up to read a book deserves
praise. The plot moved too quickly from the battle of
Hogwarts,
with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived
happily ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of
the Rings, after the defeat of Sauron we move the the
Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted from the film)
which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's
experiences must have similarly affected him, and having
watched him grow up I want to know how he coped
afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible to post
traumatic stress disorder. And, yes, I would have liked
to read how Hogwarts and the
Ministry were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's
relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning
to
show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with
them.... Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more
light on the futures of the characters as well - I hope you
consider HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these
interviews so we know
what happened when she should have put them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's
remark that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose
ends are usually neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall
the
author of a children's series having to give interviews to try
to explain only lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But
who am I to argue with success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can
be easily explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from
the... Magic!", "How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with
the Clo... Magic!" Hey, I wish I could enter my Basic
Structures
class and when asked by my professor how I will manage that my
fancy building can stand up, I simply could say "Physics!"
All things considered, here's your best chance at passing with
magic: Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open
your
blouse and say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic
structures standing up, Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda
biased against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really
don't have any chance to pass that class.
Sure you do. It just changes from a bribe to a threat.
"Gimme at least a B or I'll flash the beaver next!"
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?
Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is
proportional to...?
D
Actually, that's not bad advice. A friend of mine had a solid C in
philosophy and desperately needed a B to keep his pre-med average
looking good. He went to the professor with a bottle of good
bourbon
and walked out of the office with a "B for bottle".
And if the exam board find out about the bribery, the entire year's
results could be declared null and void.
Post by Drusilla
LOL, that doesn't happen that much in my Faculty (Architecture) but it
does happens a lot in the Schools that are located in Downtown: Laws,
Administration, History, etc... But nothing will help me, that
professor really really doesn't like me at all.
If you have reason to suspect that the only reason you're going to
fail is because the teacher doesn't like you, I suggest you bring the
matter to the attention of the college authorities.
Some of us tried already, but the only result was that he still being
unfair. And apparently he and the Dean are good friends.
It can be complicated, but most faculties accept credit earned for
equivalent courses taken at other schools. Perhaps there is a suitable
correspondence course on the www from another university.
--
Chris
Drusilla
2007-08-12 00:23:32 UTC
Permalink
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Brian Wakeling
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Monika
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably
now
the kids have read it it's the parents' turn. So -
spoiler alert (and also passing references to Lord of the
Rings and Romeo and Juliet!) .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many
posts to scroll through! I found the endding of the last
book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would
have
had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
each
other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of
improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to Mantua?.
Indeed, the whole series has been entralling, and any
writer who has kids queuing up to read a book deserves
praise. The plot moved too quickly from the battle of
Hogwarts,
with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived
happily ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of
the Rings, after the defeat of Sauron we move the the
Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted from the film)
which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's
experiences must have similarly affected him, and having
watched him grow up I want to know how he coped
afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible to post
traumatic stress disorder. And, yes, I would have liked
to read how Hogwarts and the
Ministry were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's
relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning
to
show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with
them.... Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more
light on the futures of the characters as well - I hope you
consider HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these
interviews so we know
what happened when she should have put them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's
remark that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose
ends are usually neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall
the
author of a children's series having to give interviews to try
to explain only lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But
who am I to argue with success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can
be easily explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from
the... Magic!", "How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with
the Clo... Magic!" Hey, I wish I could enter my Basic
Structures
class and when asked by my professor how I will manage that my
fancy building can stand up, I simply could say "Physics!"
All things considered, here's your best chance at passing with
magic: Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open
your
blouse and say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic
structures standing up, Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda
biased against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really
don't have any chance to pass that class.
Sure you do. It just changes from a bribe to a threat.
"Gimme at least a B or I'll flash the beaver next!"
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?
Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is
proportional to...?
D
Actually, that's not bad advice. A friend of mine had a solid C in
philosophy and desperately needed a B to keep his pre-med average
looking good. He went to the professor with a bottle of good
bourbon
and walked out of the office with a "B for bottle".
And if the exam board find out about the bribery, the entire year's
results could be declared null and void.
Post by Drusilla
LOL, that doesn't happen that much in my Faculty (Architecture) but it
does happens a lot in the Schools that are located in Downtown: Laws,
Administration, History, etc... But nothing will help me, that
professor really really doesn't like me at all.
If you have reason to suspect that the only reason you're going to
fail is because the teacher doesn't like you, I suggest you bring the
matter to the attention of the college authorities.
Some of us tried already, but the only result was that he still being
unfair. And apparently he and the Dean are good friends.
It can be complicated, but most faculties accept credit earned for
equivalent courses taken at other schools. Perhaps there is a suitable
correspondence course on the www from another university.
Sure! I've already passed Maths in another College. But as I am a
Returning Student in this one and not a first year, they wont' accept my
credits :( The only think I don't like about this U is that Bureaucracy
puts millions obstacles for students. I am not the only one who have
credits in other Universities, I have a classmate that cames from the
Physics Schools but he still have to take the class., due to millions
reasons.
Sabremeister Brian
2007-08-12 21:02:00 UTC
Permalink
Post by Drusilla
Post by Brian Wakeling
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Monika
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
"BubblyBabs"
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably
now
the kids have read it it's the parents' turn. So -
spoiler alert (and also passing references to Lord of the
Rings and Romeo and Juliet!) .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many
posts to scroll through! I found the endding of the last
book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would
have
had Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to
each
other, and Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the
Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of
improbable plot devices, which have been known in other
works. Why did Juliet not escape with Romeo to
Mantua?.
Indeed, the whole series has been entralling, and any
writer who has kids queuing up to read a book deserves
praise. The plot moved too quickly from the battle of
Hogwarts,
with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived
happily ever after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of
the Rings, after the defeat of Sauron we move the the
Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted from the film)
which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's
experiences must have similarly affected him, and
having
watched him grow up I want to know how he coped
afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible to post
traumatic stress disorder. And, yes, I would have liked
to read how Hogwarts and the
Ministry were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's
relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning
to
show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with
them.... Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more
light on the futures of the characters as well - I hope you
consider HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these
interviews so we know
what happened when she should have put them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's
remark that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose
ends are usually neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall
the
author of a children's series having to give interviews to try
to explain only lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But
who am I to argue with success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can
be easily explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from
the... Magic!", "How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with
the Clo... Magic!" Hey, I wish I could enter my Basic
Structures
class and when asked by my professor how I will manage that my
fancy building can stand up, I simply could say "Physics!"
All things considered, here's your best chance at passing with
magic: Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open
your
blouse and say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic
structures standing up, Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda
biased against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really
don't have any chance to pass that class.
Sure you do. It just changes from a bribe to a threat.
"Gimme at least a B or I'll flash the beaver next!"
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?
Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is
proportional to...?
D
Actually, that's not bad advice. A friend of mine had a solid C in
philosophy and desperately needed a B to keep his pre-med average
looking good. He went to the professor with a bottle of good
bourbon
and walked out of the office with a "B for bottle".
And if the exam board find out about the bribery, the entire year's
results could be declared null and void.
Post by Drusilla
LOL, that doesn't happen that much in my Faculty (Architecture)
but
it
does happens a lot in the Schools that are located in Downtown: Laws,
Administration, History, etc... But nothing will help me, that
professor really really doesn't like me at all.
If you have reason to suspect that the only reason you're going to
fail is because the teacher doesn't like you, I suggest you bring the
matter to the attention of the college authorities.
Some of us tried already, but the only result was that he still being
unfair. And apparently he and the Dean are good friends.
Take it to the regional exam board or state education department then?
--
www.sabremeister.me.uk
www.livejournal.com/users/sabremeister/
Use brian at sabremeister dot me dot uk to reply
"Don't be irreplaceable - if you can't be replaced, you can't be
promoted."
Green-Eyed Chris
2007-08-10 11:05:52 UTC
Permalink
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Thom-Madura
Post by BubblyBabs
Post by Ron Hunter
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
There are a LOT of fanfiction stories that are beginning to show up that
address these issues. Wait a few weeks, and then visit
fanfiction.net,
and pick the ones you like.
But they aren't "cannon" and therefore I don't bother with them....
Babs
JKR has had numerous interviews where she has given more light on the
futures of the characters as well - I hope you consider HER to be cannon.
But of course... Ridiculous she has to give all these interviews so we know
what happened when she should have put them in the book...
Perhaps I am not the only one who put too much stock in JKR's remark
that she loved a good whodunnit. In this genre, loose ends are usually
neatly rejoined at the end.*
JKR was obviously going for something else. I cannot recall the author
of a children's series having to give interviews to try to explain only
lilttle parts of what he/she had written. But who am I to argue with
success?
OTOH, she writes about a gender in which almost everything can be easily
explained with "Magic!". "How the Sword appeared from the... Magic!",
"How Dumbledore could see Harry if he was with the Clo... Magic!" Hey, I
wish I could enter my Basic Structures class and when asked by my
professor how I will manage that my fancy building can stand up, I
simply could say "Physics!"
Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open your blouse and
say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic structures standing up,
Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda biased
against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really don't have any
chance to pass that class.
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?
Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is proportional
to...?
:D
Dang! I hadn't thought of that possibility. :S is right!

Here's what you do:

Go to your local joke shop. They have coins with nails on them. Buy one
and nail it to the classroom floor near the teacher's desk. When he is
bent over trying to pick it up, take a well greased Nimbus 2000 or
Firebolt and...

you pass!!!
--
Chris
DaveD
2007-08-12 10:42:21 UTC
Permalink
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open your blouse and
say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic structures standing up,
Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda biased
against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really don't have any
chance to pass that class.
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?
Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is proportional
to...?
:D
Dang! I hadn't thought of that possibility. :S is right!
Go to your local joke shop. They have coins with nails on them. Buy one
and nail it to the classroom floor near the teacher's desk. When he is
bent over trying to pick it up, take a well greased Nimbus 2000 or
Firebolt and...
you pass!!!
--
Chris
Isn't that how broomsticks were first associated with magic? That they used
to be "ridden" by witches with them facing the other way and the handle
lubed with various mind-altering drugs? At least, that's how it's presented
in World's End by Mark Chadbourn (excellent gothic horror/fantasy if rather
bloodthirsty - even more deaths than in DH!) Just watch out for splinters -
ouch!!

DaveD
Welsh Dog
2007-08-12 10:50:59 UTC
Permalink
On Sun, 12 Aug 2007 10:42:21 GMT, "DaveD"
Post by DaveD
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open your blouse and
say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic structures standing up,
Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda biased
against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really don't have any
chance to pass that class.
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?
Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is proportional
to...?
:D
Dang! I hadn't thought of that possibility. :S is right!
Go to your local joke shop. They have coins with nails on them. Buy one
and nail it to the classroom floor near the teacher's desk. When he is
bent over trying to pick it up, take a well greased Nimbus 2000 or
Firebolt and...
you pass!!!
--
Chris
Isn't that how broomsticks were first associated with magic? That they used
to be "ridden" by witches with them facing the other way and the handle
lubed with various mind-altering drugs? At least, that's how it's presented
in World's End by Mark Chadbourn (excellent gothic horror/fantasy if rather
bloodthirsty - even more deaths than in DH!) Just watch out for splinters -
ouch!!
Has it **really** never occurred to you just *why* the broomstick was
used by witches... ??

Welshdog
--
Australian Opinion http://australianopinion.com

News and views... for people like youse!!
DaveD
2007-08-12 12:29:10 UTC
Permalink
Post by Welsh Dog
On Sun, 12 Aug 2007 10:42:21 GMT, "DaveD"
Post by DaveD
Isn't that how broomsticks were first associated with magic? That they used
to be "ridden" by witches with them facing the other way and the handle
lubed with various mind-altering drugs? At least, that's how it's presented
in World's End by Mark Chadbourn (excellent gothic horror/fantasy if rather
bloodthirsty - even more deaths than in DH!) Just watch out for splinters -
ouch!!
Has it **really** never occurred to you just *why* the broomstick was
used by witches... ??
Welshdog
I'm gay for goodness' sake - such things *never* occur to me unless someone
points them out! Hell, I never even noticed 7of9's chest in Star Trek:
Voyager till someone mentioned it lol!!

Now if broomsticks had stereotypically been associated with (male) wizards
instead of female witches, I'm probably have caught on sooner :)

DaveD
Sabremeister Brian
2007-08-12 21:04:05 UTC
Permalink
Post by DaveD
Post by Welsh Dog
On Sun, 12 Aug 2007 10:42:21 GMT, "DaveD"
Post by DaveD
Isn't that how broomsticks were first associated with magic? That they used
to be "ridden" by witches with them facing the other way and the
handle lubed with various mind-altering drugs? At least, that's
how
it's presented
in World's End by Mark Chadbourn (excellent gothic horror/fantasy
if
rather
bloodthirsty - even more deaths than in DH!) Just watch out for splinters -
ouch!!
Has it **really** never occurred to you just *why* the broomstick was
used by witches... ??
There's also things like maypoles to consider.
Post by DaveD
I'm gay for goodness' sake - such things *never* occur to me unless
someone points them out! Hell, I never even noticed 7of9's chest in
Star Trek: Voyager till someone mentioned it lol!!
Now if broomsticks had stereotypically been associated with (male)
wizards instead of female witches, I'm probably have caught on
sooner
:)
Wizards have staffs.
With knobs on the end.
--
www.sabremeister.me.uk
www.livejournal.com/users/sabremeister/
Use brian at sabremeister dot me dot uk to reply
"Money is better than poverty, if only for financial reasons."
- Woody Allen
DaveD
2007-08-13 22:24:24 UTC
Permalink
Post by Sabremeister Brian
Post by DaveD
Post by Welsh Dog
On Sun, 12 Aug 2007 10:42:21 GMT, "DaveD"
Post by DaveD
Isn't that how broomsticks were first associated with magic? That they used
to be "ridden" by witches with them facing the other way and the
handle lubed with various mind-altering drugs? At least, that's how
it's presented
in World's End by Mark Chadbourn (excellent gothic horror/fantasy if rather
bloodthirsty - even more deaths than in DH!) Just watch out for splinters -
ouch!!
Has it **really** never occurred to you just *why* the broomstick was
used by witches... ??
There's also things like maypoles to consider.
Now that one I caught *without* it being pointed out :)
Post by Sabremeister Brian
Post by DaveD
I'm gay for goodness' sake - such things *never* occur to me unless
someone points them out! Hell, I never even noticed 7of9's chest in
Star Trek: Voyager till someone mentioned it lol!!
Now if broomsticks had stereotypically been associated with (male)
wizards instead of female witches, I'm probably have caught on sooner
:)
Wizards have staffs.
With knobs on the end.
Indeed...

DaveD
Ron Hunter
2007-08-12 15:23:44 UTC
Permalink
Post by Welsh Dog
On Sun, 12 Aug 2007 10:42:21 GMT, "DaveD"
Post by DaveD
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open your blouse and
say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic structures standing up,
Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda biased
against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really don't have any
chance to pass that class.
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?
Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is proportional
to...?
:D
Dang! I hadn't thought of that possibility. :S is right!
Go to your local joke shop. They have coins with nails on them. Buy one
and nail it to the classroom floor near the teacher's desk. When he is
bent over trying to pick it up, take a well greased Nimbus 2000 or
Firebolt and...
you pass!!!
--
Chris
Isn't that how broomsticks were first associated with magic? That they used
to be "ridden" by witches with them facing the other way and the handle
lubed with various mind-altering drugs? At least, that's how it's presented
in World's End by Mark Chadbourn (excellent gothic horror/fantasy if rather
bloodthirsty - even more deaths than in DH!) Just watch out for splinters -
ouch!!
Has it **really** never occurred to you just *why* the broomstick was
used by witches... ??
Welshdog
Well, you know, if you get ON a broomstick, you have to get OFF as well.
So that would probably make them rather popular with the witches....
Green-Eyed Chris
2007-08-12 12:58:03 UTC
Permalink
Post by DaveD
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open your blouse and
say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic structures standing up,
Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda biased
against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really don't have any
chance to pass that class.
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?
Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is proportional
to...?
:D
Dang! I hadn't thought of that possibility. :S is right!
Go to your local joke shop. They have coins with nails on them. Buy one
and nail it to the classroom floor near the teacher's desk. When he is
bent over trying to pick it up, take a well greased Nimbus 2000 or
Firebolt and...
you pass!!!
--
Chris
Isn't that how broomsticks were first associated with magic? That they used
to be "ridden" by witches with them facing the other way and the handle
lubed with various mind-altering drugs? At least, that's how it's presented
in World's End by Mark Chadbourn (excellent gothic horror/fantasy if rather
bloodthirsty - even more deaths than in DH!) Just watch out for splinters -
ouch!!
Thinking of the splintering aspect, it occurs to me that perhaps it was
Ginny who suggested that Hermione give Harry that Broomstick Servicing
Kit for his 13th birthday to keep his Firebolt ~a clean machine; very
clean~.
--
Chris
Ron Hunter
2007-08-12 15:25:35 UTC
Permalink
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by DaveD
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by Drusilla
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
Stand up straight, arch your back, focus his eyes, open your blouse and
say "Same way that I keep _these_ fancy basic structures standing up,
Dude!".
I was very likely to try for a class where the Professor is kinda biased
against me, until I was told he was gay :S. Now I really don't have any
chance to pass that class.
Post by Green-Eyed Chris
Didn't I always tell you physics was easy?
Now let's prepare for statics. The angle of the dangle is proportional
to...?
:D
Dang! I hadn't thought of that possibility. :S is right!
Go to your local joke shop. They have coins with nails on them. Buy one
and nail it to the classroom floor near the teacher's desk. When he is
bent over trying to pick it up, take a well greased Nimbus 2000 or
Firebolt and...
you pass!!!
--
Chris
Isn't that how broomsticks were first associated with magic? That they used
to be "ridden" by witches with them facing the other way and the handle
lubed with various mind-altering drugs? At least, that's how it's presented
in World's End by Mark Chadbourn (excellent gothic horror/fantasy if rather
bloodthirsty - even more deaths than in DH!) Just watch out for splinters -
ouch!!
Thinking of the splintering aspect, it occurs to me that perhaps it was
Ginny who suggested that Hermione give Harry that Broomstick Servicing
Kit for his 13th birthday to keep his Firebolt ~a clean machine; very
clean~.
--
Chris
Hummm. Wonder if a 'wand polishing kit' would include a subscription to
"PlayWizard".

Everyone lift your feet, it's getting DEEP!
Nuki Mouse
2007-08-03 13:01:19 UTC
Permalink
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
While I agree that a much longer, more detailed epilogue would have been
better, this "...and they all lived happily ever after..." takes place
NINETEEN years later!

That is a awful lot of time that could be just fully of angst, stress,
remorse, deaths, murders, new evils, the scouring of the Ministry.... Plus
the ending is just "All is well," the shit could hit the fan at 19 years + 1
day.
Post by peter
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt,
Probably in the same way they were built the first time.
Post by peter
and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's celebrity.
You mean like before Harry killed LV, when he was just a no-body?
[Those last 2 comments were meant as jokes....]

Nuki Mouse
--
"This is just my opinion, I maybe wrong" D. Miller
"Defend free speech! Read a banned book today!" unknown.
"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death
your right to say it," S. Tallentyre, summarizing Voltaire's views.
Monika
2007-08-03 18:52:48 UTC
Permalink
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
I couldn't agree with you more! The book ends with all the subtlety and
suddeness of a train wreck! I'm still really shocked that Jo, of all people,
didn't understand the need for a cathartic chapter or two at the end of a
long, epic saga like this to really bring closure to the story. Its something
that's been in every great literary work since the Iliad. Surely, fielding
all those questions, from all those fans over the years must have given her
some clue as to just how involved her fans really are with her story.

When I turned the page to read the final chapter & saw it began "Nineteen
Years Later", I was shocked. I actually checked the page numbers to
make sure there hadn't been a horrible mistake at the printer's, and a
chapter got left out of the book somehow. I even went on line and verified
the page count to be sure. As I read the seven pathetic pages that
comprised the Epilogue, I felt hurt, betrayed! Was this all the closure Jo
thought the books deserved? Is this all the summing up & winding down
she thought her fans were entitled to? Did she think we bought 15 million
copies of her book in the first 24 hours because we cared so little about
the story? Why did she do this to us? How could she let it happen? We,
her fans, literally made her a Billionare because we enjoyed her stories
so much, and this is our thanks?

As I said in another thread, I'm still looking for closure, but what happens
to the characters is now a distant second to the answers I'm currently
seeking. I now wish to know how a writer, of her proven ability, could
fail so horribly with the final and most important book! I really feel she owes
us all an explanation, and an apology!
--
eliminate the Horcrux to reply
Toon
2007-08-04 09:37:22 UTC
Permalink
Post by peter
I still see people on the tube reading HP7, presumably now the kids
have read it it's the parents' turn. So - spoiler alert (and also
passing references to Lord of the Rings and Romeo and Juliet!)
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This may mave been said before - there are just too many posts to
scroll through! I found the endding of the last book unsatisfactory.
No, not because it didn't end as I predicted. I would have had
Hermione and Ron good friends, but not married to each other, and
Hermione taking over the Daily Prophet or the Quibbler and turning it
into a quality broadsheet. Nor was it because of improbable plot
devices, which have been known in other works. Why did Juliet not
escape with Romeo to Mantua?. Indeed, the whole series has been
entralling, and any writer who has kids queuing up to read a book
deserves praise.
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
But Harry isn't one of them. He's survived too much abuse as a kid.
Plus, he had his friends and Ginny's love.
Post by peter
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Love. Besides, his celebrity tended to be way sided by all that
hatred people always had of him. That's propaganda for you.
Frodo Baggins
2007-08-10 23:53:49 UTC
Permalink
Post by peter
The plot moved too quickly from the battle of Hogwarts, with many of
the secondary characters slain, to "...and they all lived happily ever
after". Life isn't like that. In Lord of the Rings, after the defeat
of Sauron we move the the Scouring of the Shire (shamefully omitted
from the film) which shows the prevasiveness of evil and how Frodo is
too deeply scarred to return to a normal life. Harry's experiences
must have similarly affected him, and having watched him grow up I
want to know how he coped afterwards. Even wizards may be susceptible
to post traumatic stress disorder.
Unlike Frodo (ahem!) at Bilbo's, Harry never had a "normal life" at
Dursley's, certainly living under a staircase (getting Dog Biscuts as
gifts et al) till you are 11 years of age at your foster parents
cannot be normal by any standards. I can see Harry as this open eyed
child coping with adulthood and life ahead with much wonder and open
mindedness after his traumatic experiences. In fact I can see Harry
coping pretty well both as a parent and as a human being. Only one
aspect would he have found wanting - the lack of the ever present
danger in the previous seven years.
Post by peter
And, yes, I would have liked to read how Hogwarts and the Ministry
were rebuilt, and how Harry and Ginny's relationship survived Harry's
celebrity.
Peter
True. The book could well have had a more graceful ending. Somehow,
the book - unlike LotR - was almost always narrated from Harry's point
of view. This curtailed the writing which would have been required for
a set of "winding up" chapters for a less abrupt end.
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