Shamus Writes
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Trapped within my own mind
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24 Aug 07 A Less Charming Harry Potter

Brandon Sanderson has read the final Harry Potter installment.  He had, in part, this to say about it:

Initial thoughts: I liked it, as I’ve liked all of the other HP books.  However, it lacked the charm of the books that occurred inside of Hogwarts. (Source: Brandon Sanderson)

That, for me, was probably the main thing about the last book that I disliked about it.  I missed the uniqueness of Hogwarts and the interactions with the students and the teachers.  It made sense that something near the end would have to take place away from the school, since Harry had to explore his roots in order to understand better how to defeat Voldemort.  It just would have been nice to spend a little more time at the school.  I didn’t really expect much of the story to take place there, though, since the conclusion to Book 6 made it pretty clear that Harry didn’t intend to go back for his last year. 

I’d still love to see some sequels to the series to fill in the years between Voldemort’s demise and the epilogue.  Whether Rowling decides to break her word and actually write such books, however, remains to be seen.

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09 Aug 07 Pottered

The Harry Potter discussion continues apace – albeit at a bit of a slow pace.  Go check it out and add your two cents!

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28 Jul 07 Harry Potter Discussion

If anyone’s interested, I’ve set up a board on my discussion forum specifically for talking about the last book in the Harry Potter series.  I’d love to banter it around a bit with others who have it and compare notes.  I know most people really liked the book and the way it ended, but I also know of a few who didn’t.  So, please feel free to head over there and start a new discussion thread or add to the conversation starters I’ve already put in place there.  I’d love to chat some Harry Potter with you. 

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22 Jul 07 Delivery Woes

Well, I’m a little bummed because I was eagerly anticipating being able to get my hands on the final installment of Harry Potter today and ravenously devouring it whole before nightfall.  Unfortunately, due to a little problem with delivery (i.e. the UPS guy not leaving the package on the porch the way they usually do when there’s no answer at the door), I now have to wait until Monday to read it.  This isn’t really that big of a deal – unlike some people, I know how to delay gratification – but I was kind of looking forward to sinking my teeth into the book a little sooner than that.  So, in the meantime, no spoilers, please, from those of who who’ve already read it

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21 Jul 07 Deathly Hallowed

I can’t wait to get my own copy of Deathly Hallows.  It’s going to be difficult and annoying trying to avoid spoilers of the book until I do.  I think it’s really quite rude and aggravating when people who are able to rush out and grab the book and read it immediately then proceed to post as many spoilers as they can within hours of the book’s release.  It makes it much harder for those of us who wish to find out what happens on our own to keep the ending a surprise.  At least, though, all the spoilers I’ve noticed have had the spoiler warning in the title so I’ve been able to skip right past. 

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20 Jul 07 Potter Queue-up

Not surprisingly, there are folks at various bookstores around the country who are already standing in line for the seventh and final Harry Potter novel.  Personally, I think this is kind of ridiculous.  I know I’ve been as eager to find out how it ends as the next HP fanboy (or girl), but it’s never occurred to me that it might be a good idea to stand in line for hours ahead of time to lay my hands on a copy of the book.  For one thing, I’ve got much better things to do with my time.  For another, I think I can delay personal gratification long enough to walk in at some point after the book hits shelves and buy my own copy.  Besides, it’s not like any of these bookstores haven’t anticipated this book’s release and won’t have more than enough copies on hand to meet the demand for it.  Just seems kind of silly to be that darn impatient.  It does say something about Rowling’s writing, though, that her fans are that eager to find out how it ends.

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01 Feb 07 In Which We See Whether Harry Lives or Dies

The final installment of the Harry Potter series, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, is set to be released on July 21st.  This is music to my ears, especially considering that I wasn’t expecting it until next summer.  Rowling says that two more characters will die in this one.  You won’t find any predictions from here as to which ones, though.  Rowling has been deliberately tight-lipped about it, refusing even to provide hints as to whether Harry himself will survive his trial with Voldemort.  But the cast of characters she has created is broad, so there is hope yet that not only Harry, but Ron and Hermione, as well, may yet live to tell the tale.

And now we wait.  The end is near.  Who will die?  And who will triumph?

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27 Sep 06 Order of the Phoenix

Comingsoon.net has posted up 5 pictures from the upcoming fifth film in the Harry Potter series, due to hit theatres on July 13, 2007.  I’ve been wondering how they were going to go about portraying the toad-like aspect of Dolores Umbridge.  Turns out, they’re not even going to try, which is, to me, quite disappointing.  It would have made her much easier to hate if they had been able to make her up to look short, squatty, and amphibian.  Just one of the many departures from the book that I am sure HP fans the world over will have to deal with.

Oh, and Harry gets a haircut.  It doesn’t really suit him.

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01 Dec 05 What Is Easy

Now is the time that we must choose between what is right, and what is easy. 
~Albus Dumbledore

This quote from the movie Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire is a variation on a quote from the book itself, and it carries a valuable lesson that can be applied to the Christian walk (though that was almost certainly not Rowling’s intent).  This statement by the Headmaster of Hogwarts begs the question, Why is ‘right’ so hard and evil so easy?  And the answer, at least from a Christian perspective is simple—because evil appeals to our fallen and sinful nature.  It has always been, and always will be, easier to go with the flow than against it.  And when the flow goes the way of doing what is wrong, most of us are content to simply drift along with a lackadaisical disinterest.

Fortunately, God grants more grace through the person of His Son and the working of His Spirit.  He gives light where there is none and opens the eyes of those who would believe.  As such His children are then able to be light to a dark world on His behalf, standing against the tide, sometimes at great cost, to do what is right and just and holy in the eyes of a powerful, loving, and righteous God.  It’s not always easy to do what is right, particularly when the allure of what is easy is oh-so-tempting.  Yet, the most satisfying times are when the surge races past and we find that we are standing fast on the Rock, safe and sound when all others have given in to their own sinful whims.  We’re not perfect, of course, but it is most rewarding when we find we have stood the test and faced the trials and come out the other side victorious.

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28 Nov 05 Goblet of Fire, Tungsten T5, and Empyrion I

The Goblet of FireHarry Potter and the Goblet of Fire

How do you condense a 734 page book into a 2.5-hour movie?  The answer is that you don’t.  Goblet was an exercise in thumbnail moviemaking.  Each scene was little more than a visual sketch of each chapter in the book, jerking through the plot with all the grace of a wounded bird in flight.  Each episode in the movie was clipped, transitions between abrupt.  It was very obvious that the point was to get to the final graveyard scene, where more time and energy were spent on development and detail.

That said, I did enjoy the movie.  It was interesting to see where the shortcuts were that made up for the lack of detail everywhere else.  Character and relationship development were made more obvious, dropping subtlety in favor of the conspicuous to develop the storyline.  The challenges were well-done, even if everything else was a bit shallow or gaudy.  Most of the important parts of the story were brought out, and the things that were dropped or ignored were ultimately the bits that have no real effect on the final outcome of the story. 


Tungsten T5 from Palm Tungsten T5

I recently purchased a Tungsten T5 from Palm.  I probably wouldn’t have had I not received a bit of cash as a gift for the completion of my Master’s degree.  Prior to owning the T5, my PDA had been the original Palm model—the M100, a monochromatic, 2 MB dinosaur that finally failed several months back.  The upgrade from the M100 to the T5 was extreme, and I was exceptionally pleased the moment I got the battery charged and the device fired up. 

The T5 has a color screen, optional Portrait or Landscape viewing, a new version of Graffiti®, and Documents To Go®.  It plays mp3s and video, and you can create, carry, and move documents from your Palm to any PC with a USB port.  The ability to add storage and functionality to your Palm via memory cards is another powerful feature.

The only problem I have had with my Palm is that Windows does not always recognize it when you plug into the USB port to perform a HotSync®.  It has been very problematic, and as yet I still have no solution to the problem.  But my T5 has been a workhorse already.  Add the infrared keyboard, and I have the ability to write whatever whenever and wherever the urge strikes.


The Search for FierraEmpyrion I: The Search for Fierra

Stephen R. Lawhead’s Empyrion saga is science fiction with a Christian perspective.  Orion Treet is sent on a mission to a colony world and, along with his companions, is quickly thrust into a world of mystery and intrigue.  His mission requires him to seek out a lost colony of humans before the rigors of barren Empyrion can claim his life and those of his companions.

The Search for Fierra is the tale of a man on a journey, one that is as much spiritual as it is physical.  His trek and transformation across the desert is symbolic of the rebirth of the Christian faith, and his discovery of a utopian culture of love is a glimpse of what the future could be for those who follow the Infinite Father.  The story is strong, though perhaps a bit clichéd at times, and the characterizations are, for the most part, believable.  Fierra is the first of two books and ends with a cliffhanger as Treet heads back to the cesspool of Dome to find a way to prevent the inevitable war that will destroy Fierra utterly.  Treet, in essence, becomes a missionary of hope to a dark, dying land slowly being undone by its own selfishness and lack of vision.

Fierra is a good read—a little less than engaging at times, but the plot drives forward to the promise of an explosive confrontation with the leaders of Dome.

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