bubz :D
the last laugh
rhysenn has an excellent review, found at her livejournal.
i've picked out a few parts that i either found interesting or agreed with:
snape:
draco malfoy:
Harry/Draco (yes, i'm into slash):
i've picked out a few parts that i either found interesting or agreed with:
snape:
Okay, I don't know about everyone else but I'm getting a little bit tired of this, He's good! No, he's a spy, but for the good side, only that the bad side think's so too, and he's being all sneaky and weird so he's REALLY bad, since he was anyway, except that he's also good, and MUST BE because Dumbledore says so, except that surely he's bad, but actually he's GOOD.
I don't quite understand why quite a few people are so upset and think that killing Dumbledore is last-nail-in-the-coffin proof that Snape is bad. I think that the second chapter, when Narcissa visits Snape, it's so obvious in its effort to show that Snape is REALLY working for Voldemort that it's thus equally obvious he's REALLY not.
I think that Snape has been working for Dumbledore all along. Probably Dumbledore knew that Snape was the one who carried the (conveniently inaccurate) prophecy to Voldemort that eventually led to his downfall; and like Harry, Dumbledore had made Snape swear to do what he tells him, without question, without hesitation. Probably the order from Dumbledore had always been, simply, to do what he had to do to bring Voldemort down, and they had discussed a worst-case scenario which had played itself out there and then, and Dumbledore had said that Snape was to kill him if he had to. Which explains the pleading, because so much that they'd worked for and built up (Snape's guise as a REALLY-Death-Eater-but-actually-not) hinged on this defining moment. And probably the "hatred and revulsion etched on his [Snape's] face" was because he loathed himself for doing what he needed to do.
That being said, however, I think it will be ballsy of JKR to go with the flow of Snape being truly bad, pretending to be good. Now that makes Snape an even better villain than Voldemort, doesn't it? But all signs indicate that the obviousness with which SNAPE-IS-BAD is being shoved in our faces means it's really the opposite.
I wonder about the Unbreakable Vow, though, and why Snape was so ready to take it. I don't believe it has anything to do with him killing Dumbledore - it's not as if he were protecting Draco by that - but I think it comes into play in the final book. The fact that he so readily agrees to help Narcissa on a private basis is also intriguing - whichever side he eventually figures to be on, this favour is out of line, even if he was with Voldemort. What does he owe the Malfoys, to undertake such a great responsibility, and what is the nature of the Unbreakable Vow?
draco malfoy:
My second favourite character, finally getting some canon fleshing out. As I said before it's nothing compared to what fandom has done for Draco's character but it's great to see it as part of canon. For one, I really like the dark path that Draco is treading (or being forced to tread) - I'd have liked a little more ambiguity about his motivations, or for this to be a smokescreen for more complex intentions, but at the same time the possibility for redemption and lots of angst is great.
I also like that he cries. I really like this, and the description "Draco Malfoy was standing with his back to the door, his hands clutching either side of the sink, his white-blond head bowed" - it just brings out the vulnerability and catches him in such a private moment that I almost felt like we were intruding too much, and it was so good to see Malfoy something other than smirking and sneering.
Harry/Draco (yes, i'm into slash):
Apart from the oft-quoted references to "Harry was becoming obsessed with Malfoy" and the line "I need to see what Draco Malfoy is doing inside you" (which cracked me up), there was so much to love about the new fodder we have for this pairing. For once we see Harry not always winning with Draco - in the train compartment, when Malfoy senses Harry and kicks his ass. I like that scene because it's everything H/D is in canon, where we as slashers extrapolate from as the base; as what they are where we begin, and change as we go along.
My favourite H/D line is:
"Harry realised, with a shock so huge that it seemed to root him to the spot, that Malfoy was crying - actually crying - tears streaming down his pale face into the grimy basin" - Chapter 24.
it just really hit me hard in the pit of my stomach, and there was just so much H/D going on there that I can't begin to describe it. We're looking at it from Harry's POV, and it's almost as if Harry has honestly let himself believe that Malfoy is stronger than he really is.