My largest problem with the Dark Lord == Death theory is that it doesn’t really square with Quirrelmort being another super-rationalist and Eliezer’s First Law of Fanfiction (You can’t make Frodo a Jedi unless you give Sauron the Death Star). Either Quirrelmort is a henchman or personification of Death, which is unlikely considering he is afraid of dying and the dementor try to frighten him in the Humanism arch. Or Quirrelmort is not the Sauron of this story but will help Harry to defeat the main bad guy Death. This could be a really cool ending, but I doubt that it would fit in the remaining arch.
Or Quirrelmort is not the Sauron of this story but will help Harry to defeat the main bad guy Death. This could be a really cool ending, but I doubt that it would fit in the remaining arch.
Read Eliezer’s short story “The Sword of Good”. I half-expect a “The ‘good’ wizard is only playing the role and really isn’t helping make the world be a better place, while the ‘evil’ wizard is actually the righteous one”.
At this point, I think “Quirrel is secretly good, he just acts evil for his own amusement/cynicism” simply isn’t layered enough for that to really be what’s behind the mask. After all, it’s what he shows to Harry.
My largest problem with the Dark Lord == Death theory is that it doesn’t really square with Quirrelmort being another super-rationalist and Eliezer’s First Law of Fanfiction (You can’t make Frodo a Jedi unless you give Sauron the Death Star). Either Quirrelmort is a henchman or personification of Death, which is unlikely considering he is afraid of dying and the dementor try to frighten him in the Humanism arch. Or Quirrelmort is not the Sauron of this story but will help Harry to defeat the main bad guy Death. This could be a really cool ending, but I doubt that it would fit in the remaining arch.
I don’t know, I think turning Sauron into death is comparable to giving Sauron the Death Star (i.e. your ‘Quirrelmort is not Sauron’ interpretation).
Read Eliezer’s short story “The Sword of Good”. I half-expect a “The ‘good’ wizard is only playing the role and really isn’t helping make the world be a better place, while the ‘evil’ wizard is actually the righteous one”.
At this point, I think “Quirrel is secretly good, he just acts evil for his own amusement/cynicism” simply isn’t layered enough for that to really be what’s behind the mask. After all, it’s what he shows to Harry.
I’ve read it but didn’t consider the possibility of a twist like that here as well.