loki1001
loki1001
loki1001

I think that is the best answer, but they left it as subtext. The ambiguity really comes into play because Julia (in the scene) is convinced O.L.U. doesn't exist, even though we know she does. So Julia isn't a reliable narrator in that section of the book, which could mean lots of other things were going on that we

I hope they stick with the Chatwins they have. Even in the book series there were only two plot relevant Chatwins, and I believe some of them went unnamed.

I told my friend that if the series didn't end with Quinton and Eliot together, I'd be very upset (especially given what happens to all of Q's girlfriends).

There are six.Every book features a new Chatwin and an old one. So one and two were in book one, two and three in book two, three and four in book three, four and five in book four, and five and six in book five.

Except… O.L.U. did exist because she shows up in the book. So what exactly happened to summon Reynard when they set out to summon O.L.U. is still left ambiguous. Was the ritual crafted by Reynard to trick someone into summoning him? Did they make a mistake? Did he just muscle in on the ritual?

Also really dorky… his love of Taylor Swift.

Watching the show before I read the books I was rather surprised at how ambiguous it was what exactly happened when they summoned Reynard. In the show it is very, very clear he tricked them into summoning him. But in the book he just sort of shows up, and almost seems surprised it happened.

Yeah, he's pretty bland. But that's fairly intentional. He's a satire the fantasy hero protagonist. He's mopey and has an over inflated sense of his own importance, not a whole lot going on. In the books it is far more clear that the story he thinks is being told is not the actual story. His point of view is out of

It was quite the revelation when I realized Quidditch was literally designed so that every game would hinge upon Harry Potter. That's why the Golden Snitch is worth so many points, so that the non-Harry Potter players were essentially irrelevant.

He actually says stuff like that a lot. When they got into the Physical Kids clubhouse in episode three he said, "Phosphormancy, bitches!" while presenting Alice.

Well in the first book his sole role was getting Alice to the right place and the right time. In the second book he had a slightly more important role of going to the Underworld and then taking a punishment for someone else.

Well he has a horribly over-inflated opinion of his place and importance in the world (actually both of them). The books are basically a long, slow process of him learning life isn't like fantasy literature. He's actually much less of a whiny douche in the TV show, and much more likable.

They actually didn't even have the same number of Chatwins.

The fact that they can't bring Laurel back has been an ongoing plot point in Legends.

Actually the first half of the first season Laurel was great. She was fighting men in prison like a bad ass. Then they turned her into an emotional, wimpy alcoholic while at the same time introducing a better version of her in the form of Sarah. And honestly, the character never really recovered from the piles of shit

More or less.

Eliot does pay a lot of unnecessary attention to Quinton. And Quinton puts Eliot on a pedestal when they are in Brakebills, and more or less always wants to hang out with him. And then when they graduate as Eliot becomes ever more of an alcoholic it gives Q someone to take care of, while it gives Eliot someone to take

Which is why I was shocked that this wasn't treated as some sort of horrible betrayal by Barry of Oliver. Every single time Barry keeps a secret they make sure it explodes in his face for maximum dramatic impact. In fact, it's almost the only interpersonal conflict The Flash seems to know how to do, because it happens

Well the books are too thin to make a good TV show. Some of the books in A Song of Ice and Fire clock in at over 1,000 pages. And the first season based on the shortest book Game of Thrones had to make some stuff up in order to complete their running time.

They didn't say it explicitly. But Quinton answered the first question (out of order), Margot and Alice answered the second question (at the same time), and then Eliot reenacted a scene from Dirty Dancing. So the only person there who didn't do something for the knight was Penny, who was also the only person there not