[personal profile] rj_anderson
I've started my preliminary re-read of HP canon, so to have it all fairly fresh in my mind by the time Book V comes out, and I'm reading more attentively this time than ever before. A few things I observed while reading PS/SS:
  • Dumbledore's Chocolate Frog card credits him with a love of ten-pin bowling and chamber music. Rather Muggle interests, to be sure (and can't you just see Dumbledore at a bowling alley, with his beard flying out behind him as he sends the ball hurtling down the lane? Hee!). I wonder if Dumbledore was Muggleborn?

  • Snape not only sounds like Alan Rickman, he moves like Alan Rickman. When he's sneaking off to the forbidden forest to meet Quirrell, Harry immediately recognizes him by his "prowling gait". Woo. That being said, however, Snape is hardly attractive in this book. Too much yelling and running about in an undignified manner.

  • From what I can see in this book (including the Mirror of Erised chapter), Ron is truly not greedy, nor ambitious, nor jealous of Harry's status as the hero. He just wants to do something that sets him apart from his brothers -- they're the competition he's desperate to beat. And that's perfectly natural for the youngest son of a large family. Even Dumbledore puts that interpretation on it, and doesn't seem to think Ron's desire to escape his brothers' shadow is an inherently evil thing.

  • Ginny gets a surprising amount of attention in this book considering she's not even old enough to go to Hogwarts yet. Just in case you missed her at King's Cross at the beginning of the school year, she's back again at the end, and our attention is deliberately drawn to her both times. One might almost be tempted to think her significant for some reason. :)

  • Hagrid doesn't hesitate to speak ill of authority figures he doesn't respect (like Fudge), but he really seems to trust and respect Snape, and defends him every time the Trio says anything critical. I wonder what Hagrid knows that makes him so confident of Snape's integrity and good judgment?

  • Any accusations that Harry goes about breaking rules with impunity in this book are unfounded, IMO. The dragon incident was all about helping and protecting Hagrid -- and even at that Harry gets caught and suffers the consequences and feels terrible about it. Every other time Harry does something really radical on his own (like going after the Stone), it's only because he's already tried to get a teacher or other authority figure involved and they've refused to listen or help. I was actually surprised to see, this time around, how much time JKR devotes in the book to carefully explaining why Harry has to do what he does, and that he's been forced into it after exhausting the other possibilities. It's not Harry's rule-breaking that gets rewarded in the end; it's his courage and perseverance in doing the right thing at great risk to himself (including the risk of being expelled from Hogwarts, the only happy place he's ever known).
  • There were all sorts of other things too, but like an idiot I didn't write them down. I'm going to have to start making notes to remind myself...

    Date: 2003-05-23 07:29 am (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] dr-c.livejournal.com
    Interesting observation about Hagrid and Snape. It's possible that Hagrid may only have known what we do now (post-GoF) about Snape, but that he's confident in Dumbledore's word that Snape has renounced his past. The same confidence might not apply to other Hogwarts teachers, as Dumbledore probably doesn't always do the same level of background checking (indeed, in Lockhart's case I'm sure Dumbledore knew full well he was hiring a fraud).

    I also notice that at one point in PS, Harry suspects that Snape can read minds. To some extent this may just be the ordinary suspicion that kids have about smart adults that don't like them, but still, it will be interesting to see exactly what abilities Snape has beyond the ordinary.

    And yes, of course I quite agree with your observation about Harry's rule-breaking. As I commented a while ago (on your blog, I think?), when Harry steps out of line for private pleasure (as with the PoA trip to Hogsmeade), it usually comes back to haunt him. It's when he does it for the good of all that JKR justifies him in it.

    Date: 2003-05-23 09:02 am (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] firelocks.livejournal.com
    I've just got four words.

    BRING. ON. THE. GINNY.

    Date: 2003-05-23 09:34 am (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] bluemoon02.livejournal.com
    Awwwwwww....I thought canon!Snape was sexy...Bless, he can't be graceful all the time!...hehe

    I reckon Hagrid protects Snape cos he has a secret crush on him ;)

    Date: 2003-05-23 10:42 am (UTC)
    ymfaery: animated Avengers movie logo (hakkai)
    From: [personal profile] ymfaery
    The truly ironic thing about the Stone, though, is that Harry didn't need to save it. As others have pointed out, when Harry got to the chamber with the Mirror, he found Quirrell staring at the Mirror sans stone. If Harry hadn't gone, and Dumbledore had gotten to the chamber, he'd also have found Quirrell staring at the mirror sans stone. That's probably why McGonagall brushed off his concerns about someone going after the Stone--as deputy headmistress she knew how Dumbledore enchanted the Mirror to be the final test. Harry's actions actually endangered the Stone and came close to reviving Voldemort.

    Tenpins and chamber music

    Date: 2003-05-24 05:02 pm (UTC)
    From: (Anonymous)
    Those don't seem like overly muggle-ish interests to me. Didn't the magical mountain people in Rip Van Winkle bowl? I guess that was ninepines, come to think of it, but still...

    And as for chamber music, I wish I could find another muggle who enjoyed it! :-)

    Re: Tenpins and chamber music

    Date: 2003-05-24 05:45 pm (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] rj-anderson.livejournal.com
    Well, from all we've seen of the wizarding world, it has its own ideas about games and hobbies which are often quite different from the traditional ones. I suppose Dumbledore might be interested in some special magical form of ten-pin bowling, but if so, one would think there'd be some indication of the magical element (as in other canonical wizarding diversions such as "wizard chess", "Exploding Snap", and so on).

    Annotated HP

    Date: 2003-05-26 12:25 pm (UTC)
    From: (Anonymous)
    I was in Wallyworld yesterday and saw a (slightly) cheaper paperback of SS and thought briefly about purchasing it and starting my own annotations. Since I share my copies with (currently) four other readers in the household, my notations might not be appreciated.

    My hubby is confident that there will one day be an annotated HP set. I'm less certain. I don't think I've ever seen an annotated LoTR set.

    Kizmet

    micknan@cannet.com

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