Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
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Remembering 9/11, with HP?
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I agree, but the genre of fantasy does tend to have more transparently "mythological" themes, that during times of great stress can be psychologically beneficial in a way that comedy or romance (as uplifting as they may be) are not.

What? Agreement?
Has the flame war ended and rational discussion commenced?
Shurely shome mishtake Mish Moneypenny...
Pop!
Tongue out of cheek...

Also the Twilight Saga, Vampire Academy, and House of Night.
Definitley more modern than m..."
That's why we're constantly disagreeing. Your opinion of "good fantasy," is Twilight? My opinion of Twilight is just as negative as your opinion of Harry Potter.
I hope you keep an open mind and try Tolkein again in a few years. It sounds like you're really into YA right now, which is fine. You never know, when you start to branch out Tolkein might be the thing for you.
@ Old-Barbossa - AGREED.

Stop that...less agreement please.
Oh, I know: I thought LOTR was a pile of pants. 1 star max.
Ah, now I'm just messing.
My opinion doesn't matter.
I do get a bit nippy though when folk evangelically demand that I like something because they do, and imply that all other opinions (opinions mind) are wrong.
Read anything that works for you.

Stop that...less agreement please.
Oh, I know: I thought LOTR was a pile of pants. 1 star max.
Ah, now I'm just messing.
My opinion doesn't ma..."
I personally am not a big fan of Classic literature, I keep trying it and just dont like it. I don't discourage people from reading it. I also only like certain biography books but some people may not like the same ones I do.


Bad people coming back and back...
No matter how many terrorists they lose, those terrorists always regenerate. It's really sad. "
It seems fairly obvious from this that you neither understand the principles of witchcraft (which is a far cry from Satanism), nor how far removed Harry Potter is from actual Wicca or paganism. If you do in fact understand the difference, then you are indeed making a very far leap from one to the other.



9/11 was not an act of war by any definition. It was purely..."
Goran, (don't know if you're going to reads this but.. anyway...) it doesn't matter what caused 9/11. It's the lives that were lost that mattered. I understand that 9/11 may not have been the most disasterous event in the world. But the numbers don't matter. It wouldn't have mattered if only 100 people had died. People died. People, not any different from you or I or anyone else. It's awful that you trivialized the loss of human life to argue a point. No, I have never seen real war or a real terror attack, but we're talking about life. I can never imagine having a person I know die and die because of another person. Human life is human life.
Sorry, (People who aren't Goran) to bring this point up again.

I wasn't implying that you were saying any such thing. I was merely trying to point out that these so called "connections" appear to be based on a very poor understanding of not only witchcraft, but the book itself. Obviously you are entitled to believe what you want, and to make whatever connections make sense to you. But they seem awfully bizarre and random to me (perhaps it's just me, though, so maybe I'm the one who's looped.
Johnna: I think the point that Goran was trying to make was that for those of us that aren't American, the events of 9/11 really don't matter. I think about 24 Canadians died, and that's probably a bigger percentage of our population than the number of Americans, but in the grand scheme of things, the rest of the world doesn't really care. It was awful, (and probably even more awful if it was the American government who was responsible), but comparatively, it was pretty insignificant EXCEPT to those people who were directly impacted, and perhaps to the USA as a whole. Certainly it was a large enough event to impact the entire country. It just didn't impact the rest of the world in the same way (if at all), and the continued discussion about how it was an earth changing event is an insult to people who are faced with much larger losses on a daily basis. This isn't to say that the lives lost didn't/don't matter, nor to minimize the trauma and terror that these acts created, and I certainly would never imply that Americans (and certainly not the individual families) should get over it. I also don't think it's fair to say that Goran (or anyone) was trivializing human life as it's fairly difficult to read anyone's intentions in a forum such as this. I imagine he was as frustrated as the rest of us who are barraged by 9/11 speak, and merely trying to make certain individuals see the point he was trying to make.
Edit: PerhapsI shouldn't try to speak for other people, though.





9/11 was not an act of war by any definition..."
Thank you! Finally somebody!

I do agree with Tim that being aggressive and apearing to lack compassion in this venue is probably not the best way to get your point across. But that does not mean it isn't a point that shouldn't be made.

I don't recall saying anything to the contrary. Of course you are entitled to your opinion, as is Goran, and myself. Your statement that we can think what we want - while at the same time telling whomever that their/our opinions are attacks agains the US and to please stop it - but that many people would beg to differ is a non-argument. I'm sure many Americans would beg to differ, but on a global scale, Americans are in the minority.

All of this is non-argument because it has nothing to with the thread. Do you feel as is HP helped you through 9/11? End of story.
Like I wrote in previous posts, I believe that HP came at a time where people needed something to grasp, a tangible example of hope and optimism. I certainly became engrossed in HP at the time and have followed it to its end this summer, with the final release of Part II. Whether Rowling intended to or not, there are things that happen in life that are just eerily harmonious and for me, at least, HP was one of them.

I wouldn't mind a bit. But considering that every sin..."
Oh, really. That's what Jews say about the Torah, and the Muslims say about the Quran. Please don't say things like that. It's just plain mean.
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Without getting all Joseph Campbell about it, the fact that a great evil can be overcome by an unlikely hero is a key theme in myth also. It gives hope amongst other things.