by J.K. Rowling
Man. This book has generated tons of controvery among the Potter faithful, and while I'm not as outraged as some folks seem to be or as irritated as others, I'm not exactly jubilant, either, mainly because this book is not complete in and of itself, the way the others were. This book leaves us needing the next book to really understand what happened, and that annoys the hell out of me.
Don't believe the next book is necessary? Let's take a look. (spoilers ahoy)
OK.
WTF happened when Snape offed Dumbledore, I ask you? Seriously. There are, as I see it, two options:
Option the First: Snape really was a Death Eater at heart all along, a true follower of Voldemort.
This means that Snape has fooled everyone but Harry. That Dumbledore drastically misjudged him (and Dumbledore, for once, was so incredibly sure of himself about Snape that he would not hear any discussion about the subject at all).
It also follows that when Dumbledore said "Severus, please..." he was begging for his life. Now, admittedly, Dumbledore has a lot more to offer the world and is no doubt aware of that, but he clearly places a lot of value upon Harry and considers himself less important (and even less capable after drinking the potion, since he tells Harry he's not afraid because "I'm with you"). So... that seems unlikely.
For Option the First to work, we have to assume that Dumbledore was unbearably fallable. We know he's not perfect, but he is way damn close and it seems a bit late in the series for him to turn out to have this huge blind spot. What, were he and Snape lovers or something? What could possibly have made him so blind? Surely not his love of humanity - he was suspicious of Tom Riddle, who had done a lot less harm than pre-repentance Snape, even taking his youth into account.
Option the Second: Snape really is a good guy at bottom and was following Dumbledore's orders the whole time.
This means Snape has had Voldemort fooled all along, which is possible - Voldemort is kind of an idiot in some ways and routinely sows the seeds of his own destruction. This also means that Harry, who was right about everything else in this book, was wrong about Snape (as usual!). Since Harry is usually wrong about something, this makes sense.
For Option the Second to work, though, we have to assume Dumbledore was ... what, begging Snape to kill him? Why? That seems... weird. Granted, it had become clear that Draco wasn't up to the task and Snape was going to die if he didn't take over, but does Dumbledore really consider himself worth less than Snape? Sure, he likes the guy (so much so that he never really cracks down on him for the way he treats Harry in particular and Gryffindors in general), but sheesh.
No doubt I am simplifying things immensely and The Truth will turn out to be some blend of both. We never did hear what it was that made Dumbledore trust Snape (I think Harry is out of his mind to believe that it was merely Snape's guilt over having gotten a two people he didn't even like killed - yeah, he owed James his life, but COME ON! He hated the man), nor did we hear what would have followed that "please..." from the old wizard.
So... clearly we have to wait to find out what exactly was going on there. I really, really hope that Rowling pulls it off well because otherwise she has just pulled the rug out of all of us who believed her when she told us Snape was immensely courageous and really on the side of good back in books 4 and 5.
As far as the rest of the book goes, here's a quick breakdown:
Stuff I thought was lame:
I think that will do for now.
(book 22 in 2005)
by John Stevens
Just started this. It looks fantastic, though.
(book 21 in 2005)
Well, this was a really good biography of O-Sensei! Lots of interesting stuff, plus big sections on how Aikido works and whatnot.
by Morihei Ueshiba
Translated and edited by John Stevens
Also includes two essays by Stevens about Ueshiba.
This is a great, if brief, look at the foundations of Aikido philosophy. The essays examine Ueshiba-sensei's life and his martial teachings, and gave me a great deal of insight into the man. I am now reading Abundant Peace, Stevens' full-length biography of Ueshiba-sensei, and it looks to offer even more.
(book 20 in 2005)
by M.R. Sellars
This is the sequel to Harm None, and it's a decent book. There were a TON of typos and similar errors, but otherwise it was pretty good. Our hero, Rowan Gant, gets sucked into another investigation run by his cop friend, Ben. Last time a witch-gone-bad was killing people. This time it's a witch hunter trying to bring back the Inquisition.
Lots of page-turner action and gruesomeness. This is a thriller with little shame. Although I did want to smack Rowan sometimes for doing stupid things, he was acting in character and I really felt like I knew him.
Can't wait to read the next book!
(Book 19 in 2005. I am so behind!)