amanuensis1: (Default)
amanuensis1 ([personal profile] amanuensis1) wrote2005-09-29 07:10 am
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HBP thoughts three months later.

What will my reaction be to Half-Blood Prince after the last book?

I still feel like the series peaked at OotP for me. Every volume has felt better than the last except for this last one--I'm still wigged that anyone, Rowling included, believes that Snape's motives are ambiguous, justifying leaving Harry in suspense at the conclusion of this book. I found Harry and Dumbledore's pensieve jaunts puzzlingly expository, and was waiting--am still waiting--to find out what was going on during those. Tom Riddle's history could have been related in two pages; what the heck happened in those pensieve jaunts that made them so crucial? I want there to have been more motivation on Dumbledore's part than exposition, or the idea that Harry had to see those moments for himself to gain understanding of Voldemort and of himself. It's not enough.

I loved the main plot of the book, the main plot being the Half-Blood Prince. Did I know who it was? Hell, no. The concept that "Prince" was a last name never crossed my mind--even when Hermione brought it up I couldn't see how that fit in. I didn't get it until I saw the chapter title "Flight of the Prince."

But I still believed that Slughorn gave him that book deliberately. Bah.

Will the last book draw it all back together for me? Will those unanswered questions finally fall into place? Or will I be happier admitting that HBP was the weak moment in the series for me and let it be?

[identity profile] slinkhard.livejournal.com 2005-09-29 05:24 pm (UTC)(link)
Patrick O'Brian was another one whose manuscripts apparently never felt a red pencil once he started hitting the New York Times best-seller list.

And of course, Stephen King, whose latest books out-bloat even Rowling's.

[identity profile] catherinecookmn.livejournal.com 2005-09-29 05:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah. Sometimes I wonder if the invention of the personal computer was a good thing; it made it far too easy to achieve typing speeds allowing for the creation of thousand-page books in the time a typewriter-bound user would take to create books half that size.