Harry's wards not only keep magic out, they keep magic in.
Do they? I don't remember that. Can you tell me where it says so (not doubting, just curious).
Their thresholds are almost certainly stronger than Harry's and keep a good deal out (married couple, owner).
Do thresholds stop the effects of hexing? (For that matter, do they stop the effects of spells a wizard throws while standing outside them?) It would make sense if they did, I suppose, but it never occurred to me before that they would do so.
They're old, so probably have older, hardier, less complicated technology.
Lightbulbs.
This was in reference to the idea that Murphy or Thomas would have it. If either of them had such a huge character change like taking up a coin, it would have to come up in the main stories. To date, the shorts have been largely self-contained, and while they might be referenced in the main books, you don't have to read them to understand the main story.
Someone grabbing a Denarian coin is way too big of a plot to put into a short.
Good point. It could be in a book, and then we could get a novella/longer short story from their perspective, then it could be resolved in another book.
What she picked up was one of the most benevolent powers in the 'verse. It's literally powered by faith and goodness and love and all the qualities that Murphy stands behind and values. And it didn't work out so well for her.
Yes. And she picked it up
knowing that she was likely to break it, and proceeded to do so in short order (not saying it was her fault, just saying that she knew and accepted the risks).
At least with a denarian coin, she would be the only one getting hurt (at least in the short term).
The idea that she's then going to turn to power that is explicitly, actively evil and exists primarily to harm innocent people assumes a level of stupidity that she just does not show.
I think the main issue here is that we have a fundamental disagreement on how bad an idea it is to pick up a denarian coin.
You think that it's a stupid, awful idea, full stop.
I think that it's a relatively good idea
in the short term, with the problem being that it doesn't
stay short term. The denarian coins offer both power and knowledge very quickly, offer a simple exit strategy, and you get to keep the knowledge that you've gained if you use that exit strategy. If you take it up for an hour, it's probably one of the best power sources out there; for a day, it's probably one of the best power sources out there; for a week, it's still all right; for a year, it's very problematical; for a century, it's one of the worst power sources out there. And I can very easily see someone saying "because I know how awful the denarians are, I'll definitely only use the coin for an hour," even though that's not actually going to work.
It's like advertising. Talk to a surprising majority of people, and they think that they are immune, even though they acknowledge its effects on others, and even though they have the information to know better.
It's probably better if I don't elaborate my thoughts on this point.
Fair enough.
I'm well aware that my interpretation of Murphy is founded on an interpretation of the text that I know is not what Jim intended.
by the very next book he appears to have made a complete recovery and is acting no different whatsoever than he had before the Skinwalker ever touched him.
Which is odd. Maybe what we should see is a short story from Thomas's perspective, set between Turn Coat and Changes.
That does not indicate that he's going to be willing to take up a coin.
It indicates that he can be pushed to it. I believe my original suggestion regarding Thomas was that he would take up a coin because he believed it was the only way to save Justine or their child.
Lasciel was still in the 'seduction' phase. Harry never contended with the actual Lasciel. He just contended with her advertising.
What she did do was offer him power that has its uses primarily in destruction (Hellfire) and made him an angrier person in general (i.e., more likely to kill someone with his emotionally-charged magic). That he didn't go full black-hat doesn't change what she was clearly steering him toward.
Good point. That said, I still don't think she'd try to push him toward hurting those he loves for at least a few years, if not for a few decades or a century. She has to be aware that it's relatively easy for Harry to be rid of her if he objects to what she's doing.
And I see no value in a plotline about one of his friends (whose head we don't see inside) fighting and losing. It would do nothing but a cheap, retconny "shock" and Jim is a better author than to overturn a character's entire plot and personality just for that.
It would play into the whole "who can I trust" theme that's been running through the last few books, and would be way better than the thing with Butters (at least in my opinion).
Frankly, they're bad guys. Among the worst bad guys. Lasting negative consequences for their plots are "city is wiped out" level things.
They don't have to be. They could be "Harry's friend takes up a coin for a couple books" or "St Mary's gets blown up" or something.
Because when Nicodemus wins, thousands of innocent people die horrible deaths.
Him winning is an objectively horrible thing. He literally has the three most powerful weapons on the planet dedicated to stopping him and his plans specifically because his plans are so bad for the world and for free will.
Nicodemus is an utterly horrible person who thrives on murder, torture and every other sin you can name. He literally gains power by taking innocent people and destroying them.
I don't know how else I can get this idea across, but Nicodemus winning is utterly abhorrent to peace, life and freedom. Him winning is a terrible thing.
And him not winning ever makes him a
bad villain.I don't mind if he wins off-screen.
I don't mind if he only wins in a small thing.
I don't mind if his win is reversed in a couple of books.
I don't mind if his win is in a short story set before the series.
But let him win
something or he's just not threatening.
Compare him to the Red Court. The Red Court are clearly evil. However, they still get:
1) to inflict permanent damage on one of Harry's allies that causes lasting consequences
2) to have several off-screen victories
3) including at least one victory that is supposed to be devastating.
Because Mab isn't really a villain in this series?
She's not set up to be a villain. But see below regarding what I think of her.
I mean, you might as well say, "Every time the Red Skull has a plan, I can be sure he'll lose." Villains lose. That's kind of a major cornerstone of fiction as a whole. That's how the plot works. The hero wins and the villains lose. Especially if the villains' goal in the first place is, "Murder millions of people across the U.S., after torturing a good man to death."
I prefer fiction where the bad guys win occasionally. Not often, but occasionally.
What damage is that? They failed to get away with Georgia and the other people Murphy rescued. The people they have gotten away with are, by your own argument, "meaningless," so I don't see how you can call that a win.
Please address that point -- how can you say that the girl Harry failed to save is meaningless despite happening on-screen, while also touting the people that the Fomor got away with offscreen as a major victory? I thought things that happened to anyone besides the named characters didn't count.
Gladly. I consider the deaths of minor characters to be meaningful for the span of time in which they impact either recurring characters or the world.
The girl who died in Proven Guilty impacted Harry for the length of a scene, and the world not at all.
The people who the Fomor have been murdering/kidnapping have impacted lots of recurring characters through the course of at least three books: Ghost Story through Skin Game, and the world for just as long.
There you go, then. There's your win. I don't see any need to have him gleefully causing the slaughter and destruction of thousands of lives and getting away with it onscreen, and I do not understand how it would benefit the series.
I'm reasonably certain that the twitter feeds aren't canon, and I've said that I would be happy with seeing something like this referenced in the books.
Let's take their active plans and actions so far:
In one corner, we have Mab:
In Summer Knight, she's trying to clear her name for a murder she didn't commit, and avert an apocalyptic war. In the end, she aids the White Council by allowing them to use the Ways. In Dead Beat, she directly aids Harry by giving him information about the Erlking. In Proven Guilty, it's murkier, but she seems to have tacitly approved Harry saving Molly if that wink is any indication. In Small Favor, she's working to stop Nicodemus from subverting the Archive. In Changes, she helps Harry rescue his daughter. Then she keeps Harry alive through Ghost Story. Then in Cold Days, her actions are to stop Nemesis. Finally, in Skin Game, she is trying to keep holy artifacts out of Nicodemus's hands and punish him for his transgressions.
Now, let's look at Nicodemus:
In Death Masks, he mercilessly slaughters the Churchmice, tortures Harry, tries to murder Harry, and does murder Shiro, one of the nicest, goodest people in the series, for the purpose of perverting a holy artifact and causing a plague that will kill thousands. In his next appearance, he kidnaps a 12-year-old girl and has his people imprison and torture -- and possibly rape -- her in order to break her will and force her into servitude to a Fallen Angel. In his last appearance so far, he fully intends to murder Harry, breaks the Sword of Faith, cripples Murphy, then tries to murder half a dozen innocent children while forcing their mother to watch.
So, going purely by what we see them do on screen, you really think Mab is as bad as Nicodemus?
Yes, I do. Mab:
1) enjoys torturing people, even people who haven't done anything to her
2) is completely fine with murdering everyone if it furthers her goals
3) thinks it is completely acceptable to take millions of children and use them as child soldiers
4) corrupts those who work for her into being worse people
That seems pretty much the same "evil" level as Nicodemus to me. The fact that we see less of it on screen than we do from Nicodemus doesn't change that.
"Some evidence" here meaning what, besides his own word, which is about as untrustworthy as you can get?
His reactions, which have several times betrayed information that is detrimental to him.
More pragmatic and less squeamish, I think is a better descriptor.
Mab would certainly agree. But then, I think Nicodemus would describe his attempts to corrupt people the same way.
We've seen it implied several times that one can get out of the Fae mantles, so there is an exit strategy there, too.
Yes, but we haven't seen it, so we don't know what it is.
As for the state of the soul, I hardly see that as an "advantage" considering what it does to your soul. Just having it doesn't matter much when it's a blackened, condemned thing that makes you enjoy slaughtering innocent people.
Because your soul can be redeemed so long as you actually still have it.
"Had a had" in what respect?
Doesn't give specifics. The RPG is
really into saying the minimum possible so that people can make up their own ideas. All the RPG states outright is that the Winter Knight is actively a member of the revolution, and that the White Council thinks that Mab is involved somehow.
She's a faerie and doesn't take well to people ignoring hospitality rules. Nicodemus would have just killed everyone just to take the castle or something in it, probably.
So it's fine when Mab does awful stuff, but not when Nicodemus does so?
Because she needs him as a weapon, not because she gains power through those deaths.
And she
doesn't gain power by having Harry as a weapon?
Also, the people she's had Harry kill are one of the aforementioned serial-rapists and an enemy agent.
Also known as "a helpless, broken man" and "a brainwashed victim." And I believe my point was that she was corrupting Harry, and Harry certainly reads as being corrupted by choosing to kill Slate, and as resisting corruption ("for now") by refusing to kill that goon.
I'm not clear on how that makes Mab worse than Nicodemus? That she's impressed a faerie was able to increase her power? I'm going to need more details on this one to understand it.
My point was the "dark and evil" bit, and that Mab was impressed that she was corrupting others' good intentions to get it.
Yes. And from what I've seen, her means have not reached the point where her ends do not matter.
So your belief is that the ends justify the means up until a certain cutoff point, and then they stop? Where is this cutoff point, exactly?
Certainly, Mab is not nice. She is ruthless and wants her agents not to be squeamish about little things like killing.
Well, that's certainly true.
But she is also capable of kindness and understanding,
I'm reasonably certain that Nicodemus is
capable of kindness and understanding as well--he just doesn't choose to direct those traits in the direction of the protagonist. (Actually, when do we ever see Mab being kind and understanding? I feel like we have, but I can't remember a single incident outside of Cold Case, where I feel that it can be lumped under the same kind of manipulation that Lasciel's shadow directs towards Harry.)
and has done more to help Harry
What's that got to do with anything? She uses Harry as a tool, and helps Harry when it suits that purpose. Nicodemus would be happy to have the same relationship with Harry--Harry just chose a different path.
and protect the world than the opposite.
Nicodemus, however, is an evil monster whose idea of a good time is wiping out a third of Europe, then kidnapping a 12-year-old girl and torturing her until she breaks.
We don't actually know that Nicodemus kills people just for fun. We know that he enjoys it, but we also know that Mab enjoys such things as well.
We know that Nicodemus tortures and kills people for power, but we don't know what he wants that power for.
We know that Nicodemus kidnapped and tortured a child for the purpose of recruiting her. We know that Mab takes and hurts millions of children for the purposes of recruiting them.
We know that Harry could have been frenemies with Nicodemus in place of Mab--meaning there's some things that he could agree to work with Nicodemus on, since otherwise he and Lasciel could just go do their own thing.
We know that Nicodemus has indicated, through both words and involuntary reactions, that he is anti-Outsider.
There is a case to be made that Nicodemus is trying to stop the world from being destroyed by Outsiders, just as Mab is.
And then tries to murder six more children and force their mother to watch purely out of spite that he lost.
I'm reasonably certain that Nicodemus was actually having a mental breakdown here. Otherwise he would at least have been more sensible.