Where is the registry mentioned in the books? I'd like to read up on that and I'm blanking.
It's in Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, so depending on your definition of 'canon', that may be extra-canonical information.
He could have been let go when his secret was discovered or his frequent absences around the full moon might have been a factor also.
*nod*
Personally, I tend to put him in transient Muggle jobs like bartending, waiting tables, working retail for short stints where his absences wouldn't be noticed or he could switch shifts, and still make some money to eat with.
Alternately, members of his family are still alive and just eking out an existence, and he was living with them.
Can he only pass along lycanthropy if he bites someone while he's in his wolf form? Or would that work in human form as well? It would certainly make the sex precarious
According to FB, "When there is no full moon, the werewolf is as harmless as any other human."
You know, this book it mentions, "Hairy Snout, Human Heart," was published in 1975. I wonder if Remus is living off very small royalty checks... He could have been 16-17 or so then, and published anonymously with Dumbledore's help...
no subject
It's in Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, so depending on your definition of 'canon', that may be extra-canonical information.
He could have been let go when his secret was discovered or his frequent absences around the full moon might have been a factor also.
*nod*
Personally, I tend to put him in transient Muggle jobs like bartending, waiting tables, working retail for short stints where his absences wouldn't be noticed or he could switch shifts, and still make some money to eat with.
Alternately, members of his family are still alive and just eking out an existence, and he was living with them.
Can he only pass along lycanthropy if he bites someone while he's in his wolf form? Or would that work in human form as well? It would certainly make the sex precarious
According to FB, "When there is no full moon, the werewolf is as harmless as any other human."
You know, this book it mentions, "Hairy Snout, Human Heart," was published in 1975. I wonder if Remus is living off very small royalty checks... He could have been 16-17 or so then, and published anonymously with Dumbledore's help...