Subject: Mmmmmm
Author:
Posted on: 2014-02-17 03:43:00 UTC

Yeah. I mean, it's not satisfying that people like that get off lightly in fiction, but I think the choice to have that happen was the plot, rather than any attempt to excuse him.

My childhood before Harry Potter is basically Nancy Drew. :D Believe me, they've cornered the market on hokey: at eight or nine, once the plots started to become obvious (I'd only read several dozen of the things...) I decided I was good at solving mysteries and was going to become a great detective.

Yeah, Harry's angst-induced stupidity was a major plot breaker for me. I understand it better as an adult - high anxiety and repetetive trauma situations sap your IQ and decisionmaking process like nothing else, and Harry spent that year being tortured by Umbridge, having his brain invaded by Voldemort, learning occulmancy (which can't be great for the psychological health,) and worrying that Voldemort was going to show up any day and kill everyone he loved... all the while existing in a perverse reality full of authority figures who swore that he was crazy for thinking that Voldemort could ever return. Speaking from my later psychology research, it's that doublethink environment that messes with your memory.

See, Cullen always bored me. But I am also the odd variety of human that does not do attraction, so I don't give a Flaming Denethor about his sparkly posterior. I found the fact that they ate endangered predators ludicrous, and spent the entirety of Twilight hunting for the plot. :D (I located the plot in Eragon, which is why I stuck with it, because it was "okay" fantasy that would stand up to a round trip car ride.)

Yeah, Bellatrix actually terrifies me. Molly just getting rid of her for all posterity was one of the crowning moments of book seven for me. Shipping in HP fandom terrifies me as well, but for completely different reasons.

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