Author Topic: The Barabbas curse  (Read 14352 times)

Offline Mira

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Re: The Barabbas curse
« Reply #45 on: April 06, 2021, 10:48:15 PM »
I'm a fan or I wouldn't be here. And I'm vested in the characters or I wouldn't care.  And I've read thousands of other books.  I've also quit reading when it became intolerable.  I'm not quite there yet on Dresden.

As to the rest, these are story criticisms. Of course others disagree with me. But IMO not every women that Harry is involved with need to come to a bad end. Just once it would be nice to see a women kick him to the curb without having a blade drawn across her throat.

Murphy did that once, in Proven Guilty, told Dresden it wouldn't work out between them.. Susan actually did until their kid got kidnapped and in danger of becoming a sacrifice.  I can see Lara tell him he's good for a soup course, but he really isn't her cup of tea.  Actually Elaine kicked him to the curve, she wasn't into his mildew collection..  Dresden never really treated his women badly, but most of his women of their own free will made bad choices..  That really isn't Harry's fault.
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Murphy was killed to prop up Butters.

It may look that way, but that isn't what happened.  She made a really bad choice, injured fighting above her weight class, that is how she should have died.. Not the really pointless way she did die.. Then again, her choice, she could have stayed behind did her bit to protect those in the bar and survived.. Or not, but she could have gone down fighting.
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Susan was sacrificed for a child that serves no point in the series.

Remains to be seen, but hold it a minute, why are you denigrating her?  Little Maggie will grow into Margaret some day, then we will se how pointless or neutered she really is.
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There are no female characters that aren't f***ed up.

Really?  Elaine appears to have her act together, or at least the last time we saw her she did.  Martha Liberty, Ancient Mai, seem to have it together pretty well, as does Sarissa, and not to mention Molly and her mom Charity.. Lara isn't doing so badly either..

Offline groinkick

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Re: The Barabbas curse
« Reply #46 on: April 07, 2021, 06:07:15 AM »
I'm a fan or I wouldn't be here. And I'm vested in the characters or I wouldn't care.  And I've read thousands of other books.  I've also quit reading when it became intolerable.  I'm not quite there yet on Dresden.
Fair enough

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Just once it would be nice to see a women kick him to the curb without having a blade drawn across her throat.

Wait a second.  "Just once it would be nice to see a women kick him to the curb ".  Sounds like you have an issue with Dresden?  I mean the language you use is pretty incendiary..  So what's your problem with him?

Harry has been dumped, by Luccio, and she happens to still be alive. 

« Last Edit: April 07, 2021, 06:09:02 AM by groinkick »
Stole this from Reginald because it was so well put, and is true for me as well.

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Offline TheCuriousFan

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Re: The Barabbas curse
« Reply #47 on: April 07, 2021, 06:12:27 AM »
When you talk about torturing your readers don't be surprised if they talk in terms of punishment, although I doubt angry mobs are going to Colorado with torches and pitchforks.

One of the biggest complaints about the series is how Jim treats women.  Murphy was the only female character to make it this far.  Every female has been neutered or killed over the course of the series.  Susan was sacrificed for a child that serves no point in the series.  Murphy was killed to prop up Butters. Who also serves no purpose. There are no female characters that aren't f***ed up.  We have the inhumans, a vampire sex pot, a failed wizard, an nemfected drone and a body swapped Warden old lady in a young women's body.
Yep, he basically killed the deuteragonist of the series, of course people are going to be upset about that.
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Offline Mira

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Re: The Barabbas curse
« Reply #48 on: April 07, 2021, 11:46:06 AM »
Yep, he basically killed the deuteragonist of the series, of course people are going to be upset about that.

Was she?  How about Thomas? Mab? Several others I can name..

Offline forumghost

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Re: The Barabbas curse
« Reply #49 on: April 07, 2021, 12:09:44 PM »
Was she?  How about Thomas? Mab? Several others I can name..

She was absolutely the longest lasting and most impactful of Harry's long-term allies/supporting cast.

Thomas pops in and out of the series frequently, but he doesn't really do much beyond offer Harry some muscle most of the time. He has a important role in what, 3-4 of the books so far? And in one of those he was a macguffin that got captured by Shagnasty.

Mab? Barely even in the story until post-changes, and even though she steals the show when "on-screen" she's mostly acting in the background as Harry's new asshole boss (because lets face it- the problems that Harry has to deal with are mostly beneath her Pay-Grade)

You could maybe make an argument for Molly I guess, but I feel like her presence in the series has also been largely diminished even before Cold Days as well.

Really at this point the only member of Harry's regular allies that's still hanging around is Butters, which is really rather upsetting because he's easily the worst of them.

Hopefully we'll feel more of a presence from some of the old cast in the upcoming books, but I really don't think so- Murphy is dead, Molly is busy being a Faerie Queen, Thomas is frozen in Carbonite for at least the next couple books.

So yeah, even though I personally feel that Murphy's end was a pretty logical fit for her character given the way her arc has gone, I can see why people are sad she's leaving, even if I'm not one of them.
« Last Edit: April 07, 2021, 12:12:22 PM by forumghost »

Offline morriswalters

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Re: The Barabbas curse
« Reply #50 on: April 07, 2021, 01:18:53 PM »
Wait a second.  "Just once it would be nice to see a women kick him to the curb ".  Sounds like you have an issue with Dresden?  I mean the language you use is pretty incendiary..  So what's your problem with him?
Harry is a character in a book.  I have no issue with "him". I have issues with Jim's writing.
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Harry has been dumped, by Luccio, and she happens to still be alive.
She was raped by proxy. She was the victim but the saving grace was that Harry wasn't the one who set it up. Can you think of another way to think about it?


Offline Mira

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Re: The Barabbas curse
« Reply #51 on: April 07, 2021, 01:43:31 PM »
Harry is a character in a book.  I have no issue with "him". I have issues with Jim's writing.She was raped by proxy. She was the victim but the saving grace was that Harry wasn't the one who set it up. Can you think of another way to think about it?

Her body was taken over, true, but I don't think you could call it rape by proxy.  Or you can, but it has nothing to do with the fact that she was a woman.  Same with Murphy, yes, after she took up with Harry she ended up dead, but not because she was a woman or that Jim is treating women badly.. Murphy ended up dead because she put herself out there, taking the risks that goes with that.  Yes, she still died in a stupid way, but as a woman she wasn't degraded in any way.  Same with Susan, there were flaws in her character like all of us, her main problem was there was a part of her that wouldn't accept as truth, what she was covering.  So when Harry warned her that vampires were no fictional joke and could eat her, she accused him of being over protective because she was a woman.  So in her ambition to further her career to get that story, she put herself out there, and paid the price.  It could easily have happened to a man..  In the end, her death was a heck of a lot more heroic than that of Murphy, because she willingly sacrificed herself for her child.  At least it wasn't senseless.

Offline morriswalters

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Re: The Barabbas curse
« Reply #52 on: April 07, 2021, 03:53:44 PM »
@Mira
These are story choices.  I understand what he did. But I'm questioning how his values and mine align in terms of what he does with his characters. Perhaps this is the wrong venue for the criticism I'm making, so I'll put it to bed.

Offline Mira

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Re: The Barabbas curse
« Reply #53 on: April 07, 2021, 06:19:48 PM »
@Mira
These are story choices.  I understand what he did. But I'm questioning how his values and mine align in terms of what he does with his characters. Perhaps this is the wrong venue for the criticism I'm making, so I'll put it to bed.

It could be that it is the wrong place.   I am not sure what you are objecting to, the women in the series are all strong women.  We know that it is dangerous to be around Harry, especially if one either goes to his aid or wants a piece of the action.  Males have died or been crippled coming to Harry's aid for one of his causes, why should women be any different?  Murphy surely never asked to be treated different, in point of fact she resented in Battle Ground being told to stay out of the fight because she wasn't up to it.  These days in real life in the military and in policing women are on equal footing with men in most cases, this puts them in harm's way, they get hurt, and sometimes they die.   Jim doesn't treat his "strong female" characters any different, as a female, I welcome it.

Offline morriswalters

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Re: The Barabbas curse
« Reply #54 on: April 07, 2021, 07:58:42 PM »
You are welcome to your opinion.  Since everybody is tired of this I've put a spoiler on my response.
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Offline BrainFireBob

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Re: The Barabbas curse
« Reply #55 on: April 07, 2021, 09:29:10 PM »
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Offline LaraBeck

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Re: The Barabbas curse
« Reply #56 on: April 07, 2021, 10:04:41 PM »
Hello.. *has heard discussion of Karrin Murphy and just has to show up* As someone who likes Murph very very much, I just want to add my two cents here because seems like an interesting discussion.

My interpretation, anyway, of the things that have happened regarding Murph.

First, to not ignore completely the OP..

Who recently annoyed Nicodemus and whose death would cause Harry a lot of pain? Murphy. I think Nicodemus sent the Barrabus curse to kill Murphy, and the curse used Rudolph's poor trigger discipline as a weapon. When Harry finds this out, he will go berserk and hunt Nicodemus down.

I dunno about the curse idea, I mean, it's interesting, who knows, but I don't see clues about how that would work exactly or why Nicodemus would go after Murphy with that in order to make Harry suffer when he already sort of did? I mean, in Dresden's interpretation of events anyway:

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Peace Talks, Ch 5:
“I remembered her scream when Nicodemus had kicked in her knee. The ugly, wet crunching sound when he’d calmly forced her arm out of its socket, tearing apart her rotator and hyperextending her elbow at the same time. He’d done it deliberately, inflicted as much damage, as much pain, as he could.”

Like, if Nicodemus wanted to use an inevitable curse to hurt someone close to Harry to make him hurt, maybe he would use it against Maggie.

That being said, I'm not entirely convinced that Murphy's death was entirely "an accident", and maybe it is wishful thinking and wanting to give more meaning to what happens to a favorite character, I'll admit that. But Butcher can be pretty tricky, and the fact that he's said he's planned this death for at least 10 years and that after Changes he could finally get to do the fun stuff, makes me believe that maybe the story is gonna get wild and maybe we'll start seeing all sorts of thing we were not expecting, and that might not be a bad thing, not even for the characters that, at first, seem to have been "wronged".

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Interview for Dragoncon 2020
Now we'll move onto that elephant in the room. Regarding that event that occurs at the halfway point of Battle Ground, how long have you been planning that and how much hatemail have you received since? I'm joking about the last part.

Oh um, I've been planning that one for about fifteen years so I'd been looking forward to that. I only decided on it for sure about ten years ago but I've been toying with it for about fifteen so.

...

What I really thought about it was "what's the /worst/ way for Murphy to die?" Not like the most painful or the most dramatic but the one that would be the worst for the people who loved and supported her. What is going to make the reader suffer the most to read and so it's like she can't die in battle she has to die and it's got to be to this weasel, she can't be taken straight-up because it's not who her character is but to be killed by this weasel sort of by accident almost, you know death by incompetence seems to be even worse *unintelligible*. I had a lot of fun planning that out and I know there's a lot of people who are really angry at me and to them I can say "well keep reading we'll see what happens"

Right because it is the Dresdenverse after all right so...

Yeah there's a lot of stuff going on there so who knows?

I mean, Murphy's death is tragic, yes, definitely (I cried my eyes out). But I think saying that it didn't mean anything or that it was a disservice to the character or the fans is a bit rushed, though I do understand the frustration of some people about it, I think we all would be a bit hurt if (when in the Dresdenverse) bad stuff happen to our favorites; I remember how angry some people were when Molly got turned into the Winter Lady. Now, personally, I never liked Molly, not one bit, but I think the change has actually been good for her role in the overall story, I feel like she has more agency now, and I like her as a character better now.

And I know, Murphy is dead, technically. Not the same. But also, that's kinda all we know about it so far.

The thing about her being a Einherjar now, Butcher kind created his own rule didn't he? As far as I know there's nothing about a memory rule in Norse mythology about this. Einherjar train and feast and prepare for Ragnarok. But now Jim created a new rule here, we don't know all about how it works yet, and honestly, we don't really even know what exactly was Dresden going to ask here:

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Battle Ground, Ch 36:
“I nodded. Then after a while, I said, “If she’s an Einherjar, now . . .”
Gard shook her head. “Not until the memory of her has faded from the minds of those who knew her. That is the limit not even the Allfather may cross.”

Was he going to ask if he could see her? Or if she could come back? we don't know because we don't see him asking the full question. Though it is fair to interpret that what he was going to ask was if she'd be coming back to Midgard.

My point is, we haven't really seen the fallout of this death yet. We saw a few days after, when the dust wasn't even settled on things, and a very brief and specific moment in time and theme with the christmas story. And keep in mind that in the christmas story Dresden sounds still torn about things, that's not nothing.

But overall, I don't think we have seen enough to pass judgement on Karrin Murphy's death being without both personal meaning/consequence to Harry or cosmical meaning/consequence in the DV universe.

I think we need to see the next couple of books first.

Now, going further with some things other people have said...

Remember how when Harry was cut by Butter's and there was the smell of sulfur?  What if Nicodemus did this as a way to try and make Harry go dark side?  That if Harry gets angry enough, and has enough hate, the connection between him, and Lasciel could be restored?  Maybe the point of Murphy's death was an attempt to make Harry go all the way bad?

That's interesting, and I think there might a point here, I mean, look at this, after the fight with Eb and Harry saying that he was out of control:

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Peace Talks, Ch 32:
“What if …” I swallowed. “What if that’s me, one day? What if that’s what I’m like?”
“There’s a difference between you and him,” Murph said.
“Yeah?”
She moved a bit, leaned down, and kissed my forehead. “Yeah. You’ve got me.”
And … something little and warm kindled in my heart. It didn’t stop the pain. Oh God, did it not stop the pain.
But it told me the pain wouldn’t be there forever.”

And what Harry says to Karrin in a moment during one of the battles, when his banner manifests...

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Battle Ground, Ch 17:
“I hate that you’re here with me,” I said.
“I know.”
“And I’m glad that you’re here with me.”
“I know.”
I held her against me for a moment and whispered, “I’m scared. What’s happening inside me. Stay close. Please.”
Her hand clenched my wrist, fiercely, for a beat. “I’m here.”

And I don't think she was being like superconfident, that she was all powerful and able to keep Harry in check or to keep up with all that was going on, I think it was just about her saying "I'm gonna be here with you, and I'm gonna support you in any way I can". Those were really nice moments that they had in these later books, and very important imo for the characters.

Karrin made some really stupid decisions throughout the series, Dresden did too, but I dunno, for me that's kinda the fun in reading this story, characters mess up and then they also do good things and they do incredible things that we don't normally see in real life. I never liked Karrin because she was the human in the series, because the way I see it, this is fiction and none of these characters are really ordinary humans. Her being, according to Dresden words, so good in a fight and with incredible detective skills and all that, maybe it wasn't realistic, but then Michael's style of faith isn't either. You don't find many people in real life (or in DV universe for that matter) with Murphy's tactical skill or Michael's type of unwavering faith, so yeah, imo, they are not really ordinary humans. So, it was about the personality, I liked her personality and I could relate to some things about her, and I think throughout the series we've seen her do good things and bad things, and that's what makes her an interesting character (and woman if you wanna get specific about it) in the Dresdenverse.

Now granted, it is true that since Changes, book after book, whatever mistake she made and whatever good she did, either way, the consequences for her have been bad. As in she'd had bad thing after bad thing happening to her. Until now when she's getting her deserved "rest" according to Gard. Which is fitting, but also maybe serves a purpose storywise. God, maybe Murph needed to be away from Harry for once, for her own good. ¯_(ツ)_/¯ Sometimes you have to fall hard to become something else, hopefully better.

Dresden's been through something similar too in a way, and if anything, I would say that he sorta maybe a little bit failed her. Dresden's had a lot going on for him in the recent years, and obviously he needed to sort out his things, but in the process, at moments, it kinda felt like he sorta left his friends, and especially Murphy, sorta drifting away on their own. His friends were there for him, I dunno how much he really was there for them. And no, they're not his responsibility, as Michael pointed out in Skin Game, but Harry hasn't been able to return the favor, seems like. I think that's part of what Michael and Harry talked about at the end in Battle Ground.

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Battle Ground, Ch 36:
“Do you know why I wanted Murph to stay out of the fight?” I asked.
“Because you’d given up on her,” Michael said.”
“No, it was because I’d given up on . . . Oh, yes.” I cleared my throat. “On some level, I had written her off. I knew I was going to be out there without her watching my back.”
Die alone, whispered a voice in my memory.
“She didn’t agree with your assessment,” Michael noted.
“No,” I said quietly. “She had, you know. Hope. Faith. That what she was doing was right and necessary and worth it.”

Now, back to the idea of how Murphy's death could be important to tip Harry to the bad side, it sorta fits. Whatever we feel about her actions being good or bad (overall from our outside and personal perspective), ultimately, she was willing to be around Harry for whatever happened, and I think that was kinda the point. Sometimes, getting people to stick around you is in itself a big deal. It certainly is for Dresden, by his own admission.

And it seems that in the books people that got to know Murphy and Dresden knew that about them. So it would make a lot of sense, if someone tried to meddle here in an attempt to push Harry, and getting Murph out of the chessboard was that, another piece in the game to turn Harry into whatever it is he's supposed to turn into.

Yeah, I won't be surprised if the next books don't do as well. I know that the person introduced me to the series is done because of the way Jim wrote the Winter Mantle and Murph getting fridged. What he liked about the series isn't there so why keep going?

I dunno about how the books will do, if it will really impact the sales. But I've heard the sentiment of many fans that say they are done with the series for those reasons. Maybe not so publicly though, because I think that in the past few years there's been a lot of sentiments against Murphy in public forums, so many people that I know that like the character decided to stay away, but in private conversations, yeah, I've heard about that. Some people were really torn up about it, and I get it.

For me it kinda happened in the opposite, you know? We haven't read the next book, we don't know what happens next for Harry, how he's gonna be dealing with this or if Murphy is indeed gone for good for the whole series, until the BAT or if she'll be back in a couple of books more (I'd bet for the later honestly). So, for me, now more than ever I want the next book, I'm really looking forward to Twelve Months. Something that I hadn't felt since waiting for Ghost Story. I mean, I was sorta out of the series, because nothing was a good as pre-Changes, and the waiting time was too long, and the payoff of Dresden's return didn't completely satisfy yet, so I was out, zero excitement and was planning on reading Peace Talks only maybe eventually if I had the time, until a fellow fan texted me "dude.. he did it, he killed Murph". So, after that, I do am sorta excited again for the series. The only thing that would sorta put me out of the expectation is if it takes too long again (more than 1 and half years). I'm happy to pay Butcher's son tuition and insurance and all that, but I can't do that if it takes too long.

Now, if we get the next couple of books and Murphy shows up like some sort of far away, distant unimportant thought, I would say then that some people were right and there was a disservice done to the character and the fans, but so far, the story is not over yet.
« Last Edit: April 07, 2021, 10:50:04 PM by LaraBeck »

Offline morriswalters

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Re: The Barabbas curse
« Reply #57 on: April 07, 2021, 11:05:06 PM »
@BrainFireBob
Why does everyone keep telling me the series isn't about Murphy?
@LaraBeck
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I know there's a lot of people who are really angry at me and to them I can say "well keep reading we'll see what happens"
Well, no, at least not on a paying basis. I can afford to buy any book he writes(I own the latest two plus the audiobooks), but I don't subsidize writing which makes me cringe.  Or at least maybe makes me cringe.  I'm undecided. In any case that's what libraries are for.

He telegraphed what's coming.  Harry or maybe Harry prime are going to Hulk out at some point. He taken Harry to the Hulk alter at least twice to date.  First over mommy issues and lastly over Murphy's murder.  And has spent a lot of time talking about anger management issues as far back as Summer Knight. Think Shiva...Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds!

Offline LaraBeck

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Re: The Barabbas curse
« Reply #58 on: April 07, 2021, 11:15:14 PM »
When you talk about torturing your readers don't be surprised if they talk in terms of punishment, although I doubt angry mobs are going to Colorado with torches and pitchforks.

Oh, this is interesting too. There is something about the language being used by him and other fans, like I get it, some people hate Murphy and they have every right to, and to talk about her the way the want and feel.

And the few comments that we got from Jim about this subject sorta felt a bit like too I dunno if it's the right word, flippant about it, about torturing Dresden fans and Murphy fans, and I take it as a joke, which is what I think it is, most likely.

But yeah, it's like, don't be surprised if you get the same kind of sorta agressive response, you know?

But I also, if I remember right, this is the first time that we get a death in the series of a character that has been historically, this important right? So, obviously, makes sense that there's a knee jerk reaction to it.

She was absolutely the longest lasting and most impactful of Harry's long-term allies/supporting cast.
...

Hopefully we'll feel more of a presence from some of the old cast in the upcoming books, but I really don't think so- Murphy is dead, Molly is busy being a Faerie Queen, Thomas is frozen in Carbonite for at least the next couple books.

This is something I am sorta worried about. I don't mind the series taking us to new places, but at times it kinda feels like Butcher is maybe too enthusiastic about shiny new toys (characters)? Like we had some pretty interesting ones already that could start being developed more instead of introducing new ones that sorta serve the same or similar purpose.

I'm actually sad for the treatment of Thomas for example, in most books he's supposedly playing some important part, he gets kidnapped and f**ked over. Progressively worse until Peace Talks. I think there's probably more that can be done with him too. I hope it happens, I am a little worried though.

Same with the introduction of Goodman Gray, I think it was an ok character, but the super assassin thing was already being played by Kincaid. Like, imo, Gray wasn't that much cooler that he merited his own story before we got Kincaid's. Or more from Sanya for example. We got three stories from Molly's POV, and I'm glad, because we see the development of this character and I wish we could see more from those people  that are already in the story. So, I am a bit worried about the direction of the series, though I am curious as hell.
« Last Edit: April 07, 2021, 11:44:14 PM by LaraBeck »

Offline LaraBeck

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Re: The Barabbas curse
« Reply #59 on: April 07, 2021, 11:36:38 PM »
@BrainFireBob
Why does everyone keep telling me the series isn't about Murphy?
@LaraBeckWell, no, at least not on a paying basis. I can afford to buy any book he writes(I own the latest two plus the audiobooks), but I don't subsidize writing which makes me cringe.  Or at least maybe makes me cringe.  I'm undecided. In any case that's what libraries are for.

I think it's perfectly fair to be on the fence about buying or not the next books. Saying "well keep reading we'll see what happens" it's the sort of flippant tone that I was referring to in a previous post. I dunno if it is because there's been no cons and thus not a lot of opportunity for fans to ask more interesting questions with all that went on in 2020, but I feel like in previous times we got more invested or interesting answers and comments from Butcher. We certainly got very little on Murphy's death, maybe it's because there's been not many opportunities, and for what I've talked to with people, many Murphy fans have pulled back, so they didn't show up to the few opportunities there were to ask? I dunno, I don't follow the gatherings/cons scene much. But I try to read the transcripts available.

He telegraphed what's coming.  Harry or maybe Harry prime are going to Hulk out at some point. He taken Harry to the Hulk alter at least twice to date.  First over mommy issues and lastly over Murphy's murder.  And has spent a lot of time talking about anger management issues as far back as Summer Knight. Think Shiva...Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds!

Now that's very interesting, I agree that it's probably going to come out at some point, and maybe that's the whole thing, that that's partly what "someone or something" was trying to do and so decided to kill Murphy to accelerate the process of Harry turning to the dark side, like someone else suggested here previously?

I would sorta not want it to be about that exclusively though. Like, Murphy was a pretty extraordinary human being and despite her many mistakes, she did tried to do the good that she could, and given that there's some sort of alliance going on between the White God (or at least Uriel, but I doubt he operates without His consent, because God) and Odin, I wonder if this move, Murphy's death and subsequent move to Einherjar status (according to Gard, I do take that still with a grain of salt, until I *see* it), could be more about Murphy herself as opposed to a sort of instrument or aid in Dresden's path. If we believe that the White God moves, though in mysterious ways, in precise ways in the Dresdenverse (or that's what it seems in the books), he could be setting up a player (Murphy) in place for whatever is coming next. And I would wish that if that were the case, it wasn't about Dresden's development, but about the greater picture and her own character development. I don't mean in a way that would detract from Dresden's central part in the story, because of course it's the Dresden Files, but it could be more a collaboration after Murphy regaining her own agency.
« Last Edit: April 08, 2021, 03:34:13 AM by LaraBeck »