6914
12 May 12 at 10 am

Your Harry Potter experience in a word.

(via -obliviatee)

Dumbledore: Hey I've never met you
Petunia: ...
Dumbledore: And this is crazy
Dumbledore: Your sister died
Dumbledore: So here's her baby
Petunia: ...
 13896
06 May 12 at 11 am

maytheodds:

omg the dark lord knows my name oMG

(Source: remuslupn, via haleykrunk)

snape: EX
lockhart:
snape:
lockhart:
snape:
lockhart:
snape:
lockhart:
snape: PELLIARMUS.
 21147
05 May 12 at 1 pm

(Source: aradira, via mother-rucker)

Harry Potter Fandom: I wish I could go to Hogwarts!
Percy Jackson Fandom: I wish I could go to Camp Half-Blood!
Chronicles Of Narnia Fandom: I wish I could go to Narnia!
The Hunger Games Fandom: Never.
Divergent Fandom: I would like to live with Amity only because they pick apples and play the banjo.

The moment when Harry takes Draco's wand

J. K. Rowling: I said to Arthur, my American editor - we had an interesting conversation during the editing of seven - the moment when Harry takes Draco's wand, Arthur said, God, that's the moment when the ownership of the Elder wand is actually transferred? And I said, that's right. He said, shouldn't that be a bit more dramatic? And I said, no, not at all, the reverse. I said to Arthur, I think it really puts the elaborate, grandiose plans of Dumbledore and Voldemort in their place. That actually the history of the wizarding world hinged on two teenage boys wrestling with each other. They weren't even using magic. It became an ugly little corner tussle for the possession of wands. And I really liked that - that very human moment, as opposed to these two wizards who were twitching strings and manipulating and implanting information and husbanding information and guarding information, you know? Ultimately it just came down to that, a little scuffle and fistfight in the corner and pulling a wand away.
Melissa Anelli: It says a lot about the world at large, I think, about conflict in the world, it's these little things -
J. K. Rowing: And the difference one individual can make. Always, the difference one individual can make.