Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Messages - Mira

Pages: [1] 2 3 ... 459
1


  I actually think this book could be another Changes.  Just as Changes transformed Harry's world as we knew it, I think Twelve Months is about to change it again... Setting him up for the eventual BAT.  One hint that this is going to happen is supposedly we are going to find out in this book just what a star born is, does, and how will it affect Harry.  More importantly, why does Harry seem so different from the two known star borns we have met, Drakul and Listen..  Or is he different?  And if he isn't, how will Harrt handle that information?

2
DF Spoilers / Re: Twelve Months - What our you expecting from it?
« on: Yesterday at 02:28:18 PM »

   I don't know what to expect frankly.  Harry is grieving and from the few hints we do have from the short stories is suffering from depression, though maybe not on the level he was going through at the beginning of Summer Knight.  My prediction if you could call it that is, not just Harry, but both Lara and Molly will fight Mab on her plans for this marriage.  The real reasons why Mab wants it and their reasons for not wanting it, will make the story interesting.  It's a given that Eb will go postal upon hearing the news, but will he then step forward and attempt to do his Blackstaff duties?  Because I cannot imagine the White Council would be very happy upon hearing the news and if they really want to off Harry, they will try and get it done before he makes yet another powerful ally when he marries into the White Court.  And yes, I can see maybe two voices of sanity finally explaining to Harry what he is and what his birth means, those two voices belong to Rashid and Listens to Wind.

3
DF Spoilers / Re: Pyrofuego
« on: Yesterday at 01:58:23 AM »
Quote
And I never said anything about how he used it, so we're already going off topic here. I addressed why he couldn't.

  If he can no longer capture it, then he doesn't have it... ??? Nor will he have it.. :( So what exactly is the point of saying why he couldn't.. ???

Quote
dn't.
Yes, although reddit is a poor choice to back a claim. A 'man on fire' is not implied to be a happy person, no?
How exactly does the ability to capture a beam of sunshine in a hanky turn into a man on fire?  ???  Just because you can catch a couple of drops of rain in a glass that doesn't turn you into a water fall.... ::)
Quote
Losing someone you love, not by loss but by force of circumstances beyond your control. Yes, his happiness was gone, I haven't denied it. I supplied what replaced it see?

Maybe you think you replaced it, but with the loss of Susan Harry's happiness was kaput!  You see that's what is behind the ability to catch that old sunbeam.. Happiness is seems is a vital component, like trying to do a tracking spell without... Well, you get the point..
Quote
Seriously people... go look up double empathy an see if it's just you who's not grasping how the other communicates.. Because I'm reading just fine.
In fact, my ability to read into people is specifically what I bring to the table 👀
Really? :o ??? :-X

4
DF Spoilers / Re: Pyrofuego
« on: May 13, 2024, 10:50:01 PM »
Quote
So thanks for bringing in the extracurricular evidence to back my theory 🙃 Harry's fire aspect changed because of how he used it. Intentions, even subconscious ones, color the magic used after all. An fire is directly related to sunlight aspect because it's all a flavor of summer as confirmed by hiding his blasting rod.
Maybe ask what a metaphorical man on fire is if you lack understanding of the concept off rip? Like hey, I didn't know that's the metaphor you gathered from Soul of the fire, Braveheart and other examples where the injustice of loss calls even the most broken men to war. Passion eh?
Capturing sunshine in his hanky and then not being able to duplicate the feat had nothing to do with how he used the sunshine.

Checked Reddit according to it, Harry told Murphy that he could no longer capture sunshine in his hanky or I imagine in anything else, because one has to be truly happyto be able to.  From the time that he lost Susan for the reasons stated until he had told Murphy that, Harry had never been truly happy so he couldn't do that feat again.  Now perhaps if he had tried it for the short time he and Murphy were truly together, he might have, if he tried, but we will never know because as far as we know, he didn't try.... But it's possible he did, because you never know when Harry might need a little sunshine in a future book.

Quote
so, after Susan was changed, an he unleashed his passion and outrage, he couldn't do the hanky? 🤔  most auspiciously what i said...
 

Passion and outrage had nothing to do with it, Harry had all those things, along with true happiness when he captured that sunbeam. Harry truly loved Susan, that made him profoundly happy, truly happy, a truly happy person can catch a sunbeam, it is as simple as that.. When Harry lost Susan that feeling of true happiness left him, capturing a sunbeam became impossible.

5
DF Spoilers / Re: Pyrofuego
« on: May 13, 2024, 02:24:12 PM »
come to thunk it, that might be why he couldn't do the pocket full of sunshine after that specifically. He closed his aspect of happy light fire when he opened the floodgates of the metaphorical Man on Fire.

 Harry states I believe that after Susan was half turned and went away that he was never able to capture sunshine in a hanky again. 
 It has more to do with his own emotional state, which though he is more at peace now, the unhappiness remains, than any floodgates he opened. 

6
DF Spoilers / Re: Pyrofuego
« on: May 09, 2024, 05:16:05 PM »
Quote
Honestly, I'm inclined to think not:  I think being Starborn is an Outsider-specific thing (and possibly a general ability to (eventually) overcome any/all mental domination)... but not a universal/overall powerup (I think   all.  that.  power.   is just Harry the Brute).  But the Rampires AFAIK never showed any Outsider-ish resistance to other WC wizards' magic (though that whole "Lords of Outer Night" is certainly evocative of some sort of relation to "Outsiders"), so I wouldn't expect the Starborn thing to give them any advantage.

I think there are hints in White Night, basically in what Lash tells Harry, page 363

Quote
"There was a complex confluence of events, of energies, of circumstances that would have given a child born under them the potential to wield power over Outsiders."

Harry goes on to say that Outsiders are all but immune to magic, and even a team of the most powerful wizards on the planet can barely slow them down.  Lash counters that Harry defeated one at the age of sixteen.

Then on the next page 364 Lash tells him;
Quote
"Listen," Lasciel said, giving my head a little shake. "You have the potential to hold great power over them.  You may be able to escape the power now held over you."

Basically the huge advantage that Outsiders have over humans and other creatures is their ability to put a mental whammy on them.  It screws everything up, including the massive power that say a wizard like Eb can throw around.  The main power Harry got as a star born in my opinion,  is that the Outsider mental whammy has no effect on him.. Or if it does, he has the ability to fight it off and turn around and attack the Outsider. It isn't about physical power levels or special spells, but Harry's mental toughness.. Yet another clue, what is Harry always talking about and taking pride in?  His will, he believes he can take on the baddest asses on the planet because his will enables him to do it.  Think about when he defeated HWWB when he was sixteen, it wasn't because of some spell he wielded or his raw power.  He defeated him because he withstood HWWB's efforts to scare and intimidate him.  That's not to say that Harry wasn't a very frightened kid, but he wasn't paralyzed by that fear.  Harry taunted him back, actually frustrating HWWB, then when he got to the gas pumps, Harry blew them up and HWWB along with them.

7
DF Spoilers / Re: Pyrofuego
« on: May 07, 2024, 05:47:52 AM »
Did this redditor cite his source, or provide an exact quote?
Because you can make any claim you want online...

Jim says that in Twelve Months, we will learn that Harry's starborn powers tap into a deep-Nevernever realm called Equestria, and he will summon a steed named Tirek Rainbow Lord to ride into battle, who will trounce Mab's unicorn.

Prove me wrong!
 ;D
Cool.... 8)  I hope it is a tall horse, with Harry's long legs we don't want to see his heels dragging on the ground! ::)

8
DF Spoilers / Re: Toot toot says he remembers....
« on: May 01, 2024, 11:45:11 AM »
 I found the quote from Storm Front, page 65 hardback... The context is Harry has trapped Toot in a circle and Toot threatens if he doesn't turn him loose he will tell the Queen, presumably Mab, but at that point he could have been working for Titania.  Harry says he isn't afraid, Toot says he should at least pretend to be.. Then Harry replies that he doesn't have the time to be afraid.  That's when Toot goes into his tirade about time and people living now..  So here is what is said;
page 65 Storm Front
Quote
"Time,time," Toot complained.  "Is that all you mortals can ever think about?  Everyone's complaining about time!  The whole city rushes left and right screaming about being late and honking horns! You people used to have it right, you know."
I bore the lecture with good nature.  Toot could never keep his mind on the same subject long enough to be really trying in any case.
"Why, I remember the folk who lived here before you pale, wheesy guys came in,  And they never complained about ulcers or--" Toot's eyes wandered to the bread and honey again and glinted.

From the above I think it is pretty safe to assume that Toot was ranting about modern times and the people who live in modern times.. He was also talking about the Native Peoples that lived on the continent before Europeans arrived.  Though when you think about it, it doesn't matter if Toot was talking about ancient Celts of Europe or Native Peoples of the American Continent, he was referring to modern people verses ancient.  I think it was a throw away rant in a lot of ways, but it also gives us some insight into who Toot is.  In other words he might be tiny, but by his own lights he isn't stupid and should never be underestimated.  This in many ways sets the tone between Harry and the Wee Folk, Harry understands and respects those facts about them, thus is able to work with them and gain their loyalty where others have not.

9
DF Spoilers / Re: Bonnea goes from zero to sixty
« on: April 29, 2024, 01:35:43 PM »


  I think of Bonnie as a child prodigy, while her intellect might get her into MIT at the age of six, her experience and maturity levels are still that of a six year old.  Bob is the only thing "close" to what she is physically that she can relate to, but Bob isn't the best role modal.  Harry is going to have to do a lot of out of the box thinking on this one I think.  Also at this point we don't know if Bonnie has any physical limitations, as in it is said that Uriel could take out a whole galaxy if he wanted to, but won't because of the rules set down for angels.  Bonnie's mom was one of the angels that rebelled against those rules..

10
DF Spoilers / Re: Carlos and Chandler's mentors
« on: April 25, 2024, 12:01:36 PM »
I  think that Uriel  out-Mab'ed Mab, here......  However if Harry opts for what comes next he will be judged as we all will when we face Judgement.
 Here is what Uriel says; same page 454 Ghost Story... You will remember that Harry did choose what comes next, though since he really wasn't all dead, he never went on to what comes next.


Here's the thing: "What Comes Next" is entirely informed by -- quoting Uriel -- "the consequences for all that you have done while alive.  When judged, what you have done will be taken into account."

It wasn't Harry's time; he wasn't dead.  So his "what comes next" was just more opportunities to perform the actions upon which he would be judged, i.e. the very foundations of (and effectively thus part of)  Harry's "... part involving words like forever, eternity, and judgement."

Uriel told Harry the precise truth.
It just didn't mean what Harry thought it did.

Uriel did tell Harry the truth, whether Harry thought he was going to his Judgement or not..  Uriel told Harry he'd be judged on what he did in his life..  No warning in that, since it isn't Uriel's place to judge Harry one way or the other.  Now Harry can take stock in his own life and decide for himself if he needs to atone for some things, improve on others, or did the right thing.. All this has an effect on how he will live his future life, it all comes down to free will.. As a human being Harry has free will to do as he wishes, however when the Day comes, he will be judged for the bad as well as the good he did in his life.

Quote
My apologies, I was confused. I conflated the conversation Harry has with Jack Murphy with the conversation Harry has with Uriel. Captain Murphy says "with your record, son, you could just as easily find yourself on a south bound train."

But I do think Uriel does warn Harry. He says "you cannot escape the consequences of your choices." That's a pretty big warning to me.

I am not sure I agree though that Harry didn't face What Comes Next. That was what came next, for Harry. At least at that point. There'll be another Next at some point, unless Harry achieves immortality (and even then it's not assured).

Captain Murphy's statement was ambiguous in my opinion.. "you could just as easily find.."  In other words morality can get complicated, you can do the right thing morally but the consequences from that act could be very bad..  So do you go to Heaven for doing the right thing?  Or to hell because doing the right thing in that case had a lot of bad consequences?   

Uriel was merely speaking the truth, no one can escape the consequences of their choices.. There was no judgement in that, Harry has free will to do as he pleases, no warning that he needs to shape up because he is on a slippery slope, but he does have to keep in mind one day he will be judged.  Also "consequences" doesn't mean just bad ones, there are also good consequences as Uriel points out to Harry in "The Warrior," where some of Harry's seemingly minor choices made without a second thought had very good consequences for those involved..  All choices have consequences, good and bad upon which Harry will one day be judged and have to answer for.

Just a personal opinion but this reader will really be disappointed if somehow Harry becomes an immortal.. 

11
DF Spoilers / Re: Carlos and Chandler's mentors
« on: April 24, 2024, 06:27:24 PM »
Quote
I don't think he was judging. I think he can see which way the river is flowing though, and he commented on it. A warning to Harry. Don't forget, Harry's did go "On" and low and behold went to the person he had sold himself to. A big part of the whole exercise was to warn Harry that he was on a slippery path.

Okay, I found the passage in Ghost Story and I don't think Uriel was warning Harry of anything except reminding him that in the end he will be judged on his choices in life.  He also gives Harry a choice of working for him in the In-Between..
page 454 Ghost Story

Quote
"When you say what comes next, what do you mean exactly?"
  "The part involving words like forever, eternity, and judgement."
 "Oh," I said.  "What Comes Next."
  "Exactly."
Then Harry asks what happens if he accepts Uriel's job offer to work for him?  This is where you are perhaps a bit confused.  Uriel isn't warning Harry of anything, all he is telling him is he will be judged on how he has lived his life up until on and the choices he has made.  How he has lived his life up until that moment is totally up to Harry to judge, not Uriel.  However if Harry opts for what comes next he will be judged as we all will when we face Judgement.
 Here is what Uriel says; same page 454 Ghost Story
Quote
"So I can stay Between," I said quietly.  "Or I can go get on that train,"
"If you do," Uriel said, his eyes intent and serious, "then you accept the consequences for all that you have done while alive.  When judged, what you have done will be taken into account.  Your fate, ultimately, will be determined by your actions in life."
"You're saying that if I don't work for you, I'll just have to accept what comes?"
"I am saying that you cannot escape the consequences of your choices," he said.

No warning of him being on a slippery slope..  No judgement on Uriel's part, just the truth, that if Harry chose what comes next at that moment, he'd have to answer for what he did and chose in life up until that point.  It's up to Harry to chose if he wants to face it at that time or not... You will remember that Harry did choose what comes next, though since he really wasn't all dead, he never went on to what comes next.

12
DF Spoilers / Re: Carlos and Chandler's mentors
« on: April 23, 2024, 01:08:59 PM »
Quote
I more meant Heaven - which while we don't know for a fact exists in the Dresden Files (Uriel was exceptionally tight lipped on the subject) - I think it is heavily implied to exist. Uriel wasn't so sure Harry would end up there either, when Harry last flirted with death. I wonder where Harry is on the scale now.

I remember that passage from Ghost Story, and Uriel didn't say one way or the other, though Uriel is an archangel, it isn't his place or job to judge Harry or anyone else.
Quote
Not all people in the world do actually hold that as a central idea. Many places do not have the luxury of the kind of freedom we enjoy. Some places and societies even believe that they prefer a lessening of one's personal freedoms for the "greater good" of their society. I am sure you can work out which places those are. But even in countries like the US, not everyone holds liberty as highly as others. Hence all the politics. But Harry does hold liberty highly, higher than most. He might not be Ron Swanson (if you have ever seen Parks and Rec) and not believe in no government etc but I would say he is less likely to allow himself to be governed than ever before. I will concede that he seems to have more respect for mortal governments than supernatural ones...which is highly interesting.

I haven't seen Parks and Rec, but Harry does allow himself to be governed, as Winter Knight, he is governed by Mab.. Yes, he wiggles as much as he can with in her rules and the rules that govern the Winter Court, but he respects them and obeys most of them.
Quote
I mean, it's hard to say. Depending on your definition of corruption - is it simply corrupted by its own political power, or has black magic corrupted their purpose etc. At one point, Harry thought that the White Council was so corrupt and infiltrated by the theoretical Black Council, that he needed to help create a Grey Council (whatever happened to them, by the way, haven't heard a peep from them in 5 books). Ebenezar constantly would chastise Harry for suggesting there should be no White Council, even suggested that it might be worth Harry's life for suggesting such a thing in days gone by. I think the question becomes does Harry think the current White Council is too corrupt to exist?

It isn't a simple problem of the White Council being infiltrated by the likes of the Black Council.. Harry wants to reform, not to abolish the White Council.  I don't ever remember where Harry was arguing with Eb that there should be no White Council.  However there is a bit of a problem when a large percentage of future wizards lose their heads because they make mistakes when their talent awakes and the fear that they may go warlock.. And then there are those that do go warlock because there aren't enough wizards to take them under their wing.. You see the problem here, wizards live a long time, but new blood is needed, and the rules that worked great six hundred or so years ago might not work quite as well in the 21st Century.
Quote
Oooh, I am not sure I agree with that. One of the clearest parts of the series is about how much individual choices matter. Harry has chosen his path, no one walked it for him. The consequences of it are on him. Earlier in the series he chose to be a loner, but these days it's worse than that. He made deals with vampires and faeries and other monsters, he pushed against the White Council's restrictions and even got himself in political fights with them, he has lied and pushed away many of his former allies in order to "save" them but also to protect himself, and he has done a LOT of questionable stuff that without context doesn't look great from the outside (and even with context some of which still is pretty questionable). Most of all, he has gathered a hell of a lot of personal and political power in a very short amount of time. That's the sort of thing that scares people. It's not for nothing that Mab loves Harry's rise to power.

Harry has never chosen to be a loner, he isn't a social butterfly, but he never was a loner.. He has always had friends, Michael for one.. There have always been those who have sacrificed themselves not just for his causes, but for him because of their love for
him. 
Quote
Are you sure about that? His disdain for the White Council is fairly evident. He refused to attend regular Council meetings, barely visits HQ in Edinburgh (to the point that only Rashid, the most mysterious wizard, visited less), refused for the longest time to learn proper Latin or wear a formal robe (he literally wore a dirty bath robe - if that isn't disrespectful I don't know what is), argued publicly with the Merlin and actually beat him politically, refused for the longest time to be a Warden (openly hated them until he was forced to be one), and after "dying" ended up with a powerful new role in a shady group (the Winter Court) and refused to tell the White Council what was going on until Rashid did it for him.
Just because he doesn't attend the White Council's meetings doesn't mean he has no respect for them.  Yeah, he didn't wear the proper robe to the meeting once but his good robe was covered in puke, blood, or cat poop I cannot remember which... That was also at a time when Harry was suffering clearly from severe depression his person and apartment reflected that.  Learning any language takes time, Harry didn't know the White Council existed until he was arrested by them and they nearly took his head. He never finished high school though he did eventually get his GED.. He was still of high school age when he went to live with Eb.. Eb could have made him finish high school and take Latin, but he didn't.  His argument with the Merlin was out of respect for the very rules of the White Council, and it was under those very rules he was able to save Molly.. If he had no faith in those rules he wouldn't have advised her to surrender to the Wardens in the first place..  Harry was under the Doom for years, and after many on the Council didn't want him, it was only out of nessesity that Luccio drafted him.
Quote
But really, who is Harry to decide what the rules of the White Council (or any form of government) should be? What has he done in his life to show that he should be trusted with good governance and is an expert on such things? I don't think you want the human wrecking ball deciding on public policy.

He isn't deciding what the rules of the White Council should be, but he does question whether or not they are all that they could be.    Governments of any form are not perfect, sometimes bad laws are made, ineffective laws are made, some laws that worked great a hundred years ago, no longer apply now, the smarter governments recognize this and evolve.. Actually what has happened in Harry's life and what he has seen has made him very expert in these things, he nearly was a victim. 
Quote
As above, I think Harry has done plenty to isolate himself. That's what Ebenezar was warning him about. Yes, the White Council is its own worst enemy. Yes, Harry has been pushed and manipulated and yes, their were plenty of extenuating circumstances to the things Harry has done. But. Harry's distrust and fear of the White Council and some of his own allies has kept them in the dark, and that is why they don't know why he is doing what he is doing. He might even be right to keep them in the dark - but that's the choice he made, and the consequences are on him.
He isn't the only one, Rashid is another who has isolated himself from the Council, but he has years of experience on how to do it without alienation of the Council.  However that isolation is a two way street, the Council's own prejudice against Harry because of who his mother was has gone a long way to isolate Harry.
Quote
Harry is highly logical at times, but he is also incredibly emotional. Look at what he has done when emotional. He even knows and admits how little he is in control during those moments. Even so, logic alone won't be enough to stop him being manipulated. It's too late - he already has been manipulated. He is already outside the Council and prepared to fight them. It's a power keg scenario. Do you really think Harry Dresden, paragon of self-control, will hold back when the White Council does something harsh and unfair like try and arrest him for trumped up charges or perhaps attack those he loves? What if they arrest or kill friends of his? What if they took Maggie away? Harry would burn them to the ground. He's done it before. He's way stronger now, far more dangerous.
And should he?  Really? Who was in control in Peace Talks, Eb or Harry?  Who understood from the beginning that he didn't have a chance toe to toe with Eb and figured out a way around it? 

13
DF Spoilers / Re: Mister leaving
« on: April 20, 2024, 10:36:25 AM »
I'm pretty sure Jim has stated that Mister is just a cat (the Malk theory has come up before, including (I think) during some sort of Q&A or AMA).

Obviously, Jim could have been lying... or can just change his mind.

Agreed...

14
DF Spoilers / Re: Carlos and Chandler's mentors
« on: April 19, 2024, 04:37:56 PM »
Quote
I mean, unless Harry becomes immortal...which has been hinted at. But I think Harry might go the Vadderung model if he does, rather than the Mab one. Something a bit more flexible. That said, after everything Harry has been through I think it would almost cruel to have to live more in the mortal plane (whether he is immortal or otherwise). Harry deserves to find peace and be with his family again.
  If Harry dies, it will be at the end I hope surrounded by his children and grandchildren.  I don't want to see Harry made into some kind of immortal of any stripe.  He does deserve peace, and after it is over, if he is surrounded by friends and family, he will have it.
Quote
Well, it's just a philosophical position. Which doesn't mean he follows every tenet of it. But he does surely hold the central tenet of liberty (the freedom from oppressive restrictions imposed by an authority on one's life) is a core value of his. So, even if he isn't a Libertarian in the sense of a political movement (and I was a bit unclear on that, I apologise) he is a follower of the philosophy.

It doesn't make him a libertarian, it just makes him an ordinary human who wishes to havethe freedom to mostly live his life as he sees fit.  That's no different from the rest of us, and most of us understand there are still laws we all have to abide by or there would be anarchy.  Harry understands that also.

Quote
But I am not suggesting he believes the world would be better without the White Council, yet. I do think he thinks the world is better off without a corrupt one, though. Which I think it could be argued the current one, is.

I don't think anyone disagrees with that except maybe some of the old fossilized wizards, however having said that I don't think for the most part that the White Council is corrupt so much as it needs to be reformed and updated to fit better into the 21st  Century.
Quote
As Ebenezar has pointed out, Harry is being isolated. By his own choice, to a degree. But also by his new allies like Mab. From Harry's perspective, he is making the best choices he can. But that doesn't mean he isn't being isolated.
However that isn't an isolation of choice on Harry's part.. That kind of isolation isn't the same as choosing to be a loner.
Quote
Ultimately though, Harry himself admits openly his distrust and disdain for authority. Every single book has had him clash with some sort of authority. I would even go so far to say it's a core part of his character - to clash with authority. He has improved a lot since the early days, is a bit wiser about how he goes about it and understands the issues better now. But he doesn't want to rule anyone, because he himself doesn't wish to be ruled.
Again, I disagree, Harry has reason to distrust authority, but that isn't the same as having a disdain for authority.  His clashes with authority in most of the books is about what the rules should be and living by those rules, not about disregarding the rules. 
Quote
Something else to consider. If the White Council had an enemy or group of enemies out there, who wanted to remove them, who found them inconvenient - one of the best and oldest tricks to do it is divide and conquer. Now, what enemy might the White Council have? A shadowy organisation with links to eldritch demon gods...? If, say, that organisation knew of a powerful, rebellious wizard and knew that by isolating him and playing into his fears and pressuring him it might send him on a collision course with the White Council, how might they go about that?

Well, that is a technique as old as when mankind first began to organize into groups.  In this case it isn't Harry doing the isolation, the White Council is it's own worst enemy.  The enemy plays upon the White Council's own fossilized view of the world, not much Harry can do about that.  He has clashed with the White Council at Molly's trial, and Rashid has foretold that he will clash with them again... However that doesn't mean that it is a bad thing if he does.
Quote
Would they just tell him to attack the White Council, make some offer for power that he wouldn't take? Or would they turn his allies against him? Misconstrue his actions and best intentions to look as bad as possible? Create an environment of fear and distrust in order to push people to act in certain ways, say, kicking a White Council hero off the team? Target his friends and family in order to get him to act rashly? Perhaps even put years of work into him just to get him to the moment he might act?

Except I cannot see Harry doing that, nor does the series point to that happening in my opinion.  Harry is too logical a being, that's part of his makeup as a good private detective.

15
DF Spoilers / Re: Carlos and Chandler's mentors
« on: April 18, 2024, 06:24:31 PM »
Agreed it easier said than done.
Even without the doom over their heads( I doubt Harry would retain it of wizards willing to rehab young kids who are potential warlocks) he would still have difficulty finding wizards willing to play babysitter for a potential warlock. Dark magic is addictive. Helping someone kick an addiction is hard and most people ain't suited for the job even if willing which most people aren't.

  Most likely it is that addictive aspect of Black magic is why if the apprentice under the Doom slides into warlockhood, the assumption is that it has to have happened to the master as well.

Pages: [1] 2 3 ... 459