New Chapter for Roses in December
Roses in December
kellychambliss29 Reviews | 10.0/10 (29 Ratings, 0 Likes, 1 Favorite )
As teacher and student, Professor McGonagall and Mr Longbottom understand their relationship very well. But what happens when they are forced to become Minerva and Neville? Set during the DH year.
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About kellychambliss
Author
kellychambliss
Member Since 2008 | 38 Stories | Favorited by 52 | 8 Reviews Written | 426 Review Responses
Teacher, editor, dyke, coffee and tea lover, amateur actor, leftist, book collector.
Fan of: McGonagall, Snape, Moody, Flitwick, Filch, all the older HP women.
4TPs: McGonagall/Hooch, McGonagall/Grubbly-Plank, McGonagall/Snape, McGonagall/Moody.
Reviews for Roses in December
Mulishness, determination, call it what you will, but I'm proud (and surprised) that Neville had the courage to speak as he did... and I'm glad that Minerva didn't tell him to leave and not come back. I don't know what will happen next, but I do believe that in years to come they will both look back on these moments as treasured memories.Beth
Response from kellychambliss (Author of Roses in December)
Thanks, Beth! I was proud of Neville, too -- we know from canon that he grows up a lot in DH, but we don't see enough of the process. I enjoyed exploring it here.~~Kelly
Had to happen I suppose, but leaves it open for whatever comes after the final battle and Neville leaving school. You never know...
Response from kellychambliss (Author of Roses in December)
That's true! I've actually been turning over ideas for a sequel. . . Thanks so much for reading and commenting.~Kelly
Well done! Just enough information to tell us how it happened without all the unnecessary details. I just hope they considered contraception, with witches supposedly being fertile for longer! :)
Response from kellychambliss (Author of Roses in December)
Thanks! It wasn't a scene that could stand too much explicit detail. Glad it worked for you.~~Kelly
Nothing wrong with a bit of mulishness. :)
Response from kellychambliss (Author of Roses in December)
Indeed! And I'm sure Augusta never called it "mulishness" when *she* was the one insisting on her own way /g/. Thanks for reading.~~Kelly