An alternate ending: Quirrell taking over Harry as a final host, Quirrell admitting to his true identity: being Monroe more so than Voldemort, and to staging his own death, also tying up a few loose ends.
Probably my last prose contribution, judging by the reception. I did have an hour to kill, so I thought why not contribute the above speculation in a more interesting format.
What did you find so anticlimactic? Maybe the “Boy-Who-Will-Live-Forever” is easy to accidentally skip over, the last line is a reference to a poem and a chapter ending of Sanderson’s The Way of Kings.
Probably my last prose contribution, judging by the reception.
Speaking as one individual, it’s not that I dislike what you’ve written, or do not find it interesting in its own right.
It’s just that I come here, to a discussion and analysis thread, for information-dense texts which present their ideas clearly and concisely, because I find they give me the most value relative to time spent reading. Accordingly, when I see here a long prose text which is written to prioritise quality of narrative over efficiency of communication, I skim it quickly or not at all, and move on to other posts. They will contain a similar amount of value, but take a tiny fraction of the time to read and comprehend.
Also, I speculate that some people will think it inappropriate for you to “showcase” your own writing in a thread meant for discussion of someone else’s work, though I realise that’s not your intention.
I, for one, liked it. I’m not sure here is where it belongs (though I couldn’t say where else it does).
Seems pretty well-written and reasonably plausible; I like being reminded that Voldemort winning is a real possibility, and this seems like a way he might do so.
It seems weird for Harry to actually be disinterested in “all that signaling stuff”. He says he is to Draco in Chapter 24 (in nearly the same words), but this is because he wants Draco to try to plot against him.
Well, Harry probably was on the certain fora on the (early) internet too much and got annoyed at the high signalling-to-((object level) information) ratio. He did. Harry, I mean.
An alternate ending: Quirrell taking over Harry as a final host, Quirrell admitting to his true identity: being Monroe more so than Voldemort, and to staging his own death, also tying up a few loose ends.
Probably my last prose contribution, judging by the reception. I did have an hour to kill, so I thought why not contribute the above speculation in a more interesting format.
What did you find so anticlimactic? Maybe the “Boy-Who-Will-Live-Forever” is easy to accidentally skip over, the last line is a reference to a poem and a chapter ending of Sanderson’s The Way of Kings.
Speaking as one individual, it’s not that I dislike what you’ve written, or do not find it interesting in its own right.
It’s just that I come here, to a discussion and analysis thread, for information-dense texts which present their ideas clearly and concisely, because I find they give me the most value relative to time spent reading. Accordingly, when I see here a long prose text which is written to prioritise quality of narrative over efficiency of communication, I skim it quickly or not at all, and move on to other posts. They will contain a similar amount of value, but take a tiny fraction of the time to read and comprehend.
Also, I speculate that some people will think it inappropriate for you to “showcase” your own writing in a thread meant for discussion of someone else’s work, though I realise that’s not your intention.
I, for one, liked it. I’m not sure here is where it belongs (though I couldn’t say where else it does).
Seems pretty well-written and reasonably plausible; I like being reminded that Voldemort winning is a real possibility, and this seems like a way he might do so.
Maybe on ff.net as a one-shot spinoff?
“Commentfic” is a thing, after all.
It seems weird for Harry to actually be disinterested in “all that signaling stuff”. He says he is to Draco in Chapter 24 (in nearly the same words), but this is because he wants Draco to try to plot against him.
Well, Harry probably was on the certain fora on the (early) internet too much and got annoyed at the high signalling-to-((object level) information) ratio. He did. Harry, I mean.