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Posted: 20 years ago
Fans go Harry Potter mad

Last Modified: 15 Jul 2005
Source: ITN

Harry Potter mania has hit bookshops as fans around the world await the unveiling of the latest book which goes on sale at midnight.

The Half Blood Prince will reveal to fans young and old what happens next to the teenage wizard.

Author JK Rowling will unveil the sixth book at one minute past midnight at a special ceremony at Edinburgh Castle.


More than a thousand youngsters, aged eight to 14, will be the first in the world to hear the writer read an extract from the beginning of her novel.

The castle will be dramatically illuminated and fire-eaters, torch-throwers and jugglers will line the cobbled streets as the children proceed up the Royal Mile.

Last year, Rowling revealed she will kill off another character in the book and there has much speculation on who it could be.

The most likely candidates for the chop include Hagrid, Professor Dumbledore and Harry's Uncle Vernon.
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Posted: 20 years ago
Harry Potter: The wizard of sales
July 17, 2005

Reporter :Graham Davis

It's finally here, the opening of the coffers to count the revenue for the sixth volume in the Harry Potter series, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, in one of the biggest book launches in history. The publishers had threatened legal action if bookstores disclosed where the stocks of the new volumes were located ... and the British Columbian Supreme Court in Canada ordered 14 accidental buyers of the book to return it, and not to read it before its official release. Some critics have complained that all the hype has taken away from the magic of the book, but try telling that to kids around the world, who have been waiting since they finished reading volume 5 in the series. Launch parties are being held around Australia and the world, and aficionados of children's literature say the Potter phenomenon has given an enormous boost to kids' reading habits. Graham Davis reports on the hype behind Harry ...

More on this story will be available shortly
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Posted: 20 years ago
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
An updated look at the latest film adaptation.
The first few game adaptations of the popular Harry Potter books focused primarily on exploration and puzzle solving. For the third adaptation, based on the book and film Harry Potter and the Goblet of fire, is now a decidedly action-centered affair. We took the latest build for a spin during EA's Hot Summer Night event to deliver updated impressions.

Only three stages were available to play, but each one took us to a different locale from the film and offered very different play styles. The Goblet of Fire splits between 11 locations from the film, each of which boasts several missions and sub-missions. Like the book, the game follows Harry Potter as he and the Hogwartz School battle against two rival institutions for supremacy in the Tri-Wizard Tournament. This makes for a very different adventure than what fans may recall from earlier installments. And it's not just faster pacing due to action scenarios either, but the overall feel of the game (and we're guessing the movie) is a little darker.

The first scenario we played through took place at the beginning of the game, when Harry, Hermione and Ron face off against enemies who have invaded the Quidditch World Cup Camp Site. This specific stage helped demonstrate much of what differentiates Goblet of Fire from previous Potter games. First, there's a big emphasis on multiplayer. Two friends can now join at any point during a multiplayer stage (not every stage supports co-op) and command one of the characters. Having a trio of young wizards helps in many situations such as combat or to remove and obstruction.

In the Quidditch camp, for example, we needed to kill overgrown frogs with energy blasts from our magic wands. Having to extra characters helped make the task easier. Also, during several points in the stage, we encountered large boulders and fallen trees which blocked our path. Using the Wingardium Leviosa spell to lift objects only works on smaller objects when employed by a single wizard, but get three of them using the same spell on the same object garners impressive results. It's also pretty fun, not to mention cool looking, to pick up random stuff and hurl it toward enemies or chucking it randomly.

Apart from lifting obstructions, we also had to use the Carp Retractum spell and physically pull items with the controller's thumbstick to remove large branches or trees from our path. The game boasts 3 different types of spells, including: Jinx , Charm and Axia. Charm spells help you manipulate the environment. Jinx spells help you attack enemies. And the lone Axia spell summons an entity. We didn't get to see the summon spell in action, unfortunately, so we can't really elaborate on it. It also serves to note this opening level looked pretty good. It seemed as though multi-colored explosions rocked the screen every few seconds. There were also nice environmental touches scattered throughout.

Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire

We also played through two of the Tri-Wizard challenges. The first had us take to the skies and race through mountainous terrain while dodging a fiery dragon. This sequence played very much like an on-rails shooter, only there was no shooting. The only thing we needed to worry about was hitting falling debris or collapsing columns. Another sequence saw us dive into a lake and shoot underwater enemies using our magic wands. The controls for both these sequences were intuitive and very easy to pick up; thumbstick controlled movement while one button regulated acceleration.

And that's about all the new information we could gather from Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. There's a good chance we'll return with an in-depth look at the game closer to its release. Until then, stay tuned.
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Posted: 20 years ago

At witching hour, Harry Potter appears

Every month since she became one of five "junior booklovers" for Chapters/ Indigo, Hannah Drew, 15, of London has seen advance copies of books.

One book she didn't get in advance is Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince.

"That was the first question we asked."

Rules set out by author J.K. Rowling were designed to keep the book's plot a secret until its release at midnight.

Carolyn Young, marketing manager of the Book Store at Western, said retailers have been told they can't even break the seal on the shipping boxes until tomorrow.

But there have been at least three breaches: in Coquitlam, B.C., in Calgary and in New York State.

And security hasn't stopped rumours.

Drew said Harry Potter websites speculate Dumbledore will die and conjecture the prince could be anyone from Seamus Finnegan to Rubeus Hagrid, Peter Pettigrew or Crookshanks the cat.

Drew is in the land of Harry Potter on a family vacation as the book hits the shelves. She has tracked down a bookstore in London, England, where she can join a "queue party" on July 15 awaiting the midnight release.

She's been a fan since she was seven, when her aunt sent her a copy of the first book from the U.S.

"I took it to school and said, 'You have to read this book.' " Unfortunately, her friends didn't believe her until they started to hear the buzz from others.

Raincoast Books, which publishes Harry Potter in Canada, said 45 per cent of Canadian households have read at least one book in the series.

It said the core readers are nine to 12 years old. But 18 per cent are adults and 27 per cent of them are estimated to be over age 55.

Drew attributes the series' success to its touches of the ordinary in the midst of magic.

"I think it's got great characters," she said. "They're all really strong and very much like people you encounter in real life situations and the dialogue between them flows so wonderfully. It seems so typical of everyday life.

"The teenagers act like teenagers. Harry has angst moments when he has mood swings and nothing is going right for him and everyone is against him. And the boys are realizing girls are around for the first time."

Canada Post is also making special efforts to get the book out quickly to those who pre-ordered through websites.

Tom Dalby, communications manager in London, said it will make rare Saturday deliveries to anyone who ordered a copy through Chapters/Indigo or Amazon.

POTTER FOR PURCHASE

Stores can sell Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince at one minute past midnight. Some have planned activities: - Chapters, 86 Fanshawe Park Rd. N.: Starting at 10 p.m.; includes magician, Discovery Western, costume competition, trivia, prizes. - Chapters, 1017 Wellington Rd.: Starting at 9 p.m.; includes screening of three Harry Potter movies, costume contest, magic show, crafts, palm reading. - Oxford Books, 740 Richmond St.: Re-opens at 11:30 p.m.; includes draw for boxed set, giveaways, $10 coupon toward future purchases.




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Posted: 20 years ago
Bookstores brace for midnight release of J.K. Rowling's seventh book

July 15, 2005

Even an Avada Kedavra Curse wouldn't be powerful enough to keep the muggles away from the book stores tonight. If that first sentence made any sense to you then you may be among the legions of devoted readers hoping to crack the latest offering in the Harry Potter series. Beginning at midnight tonight, book retailers are expecting a flood of fans who can't get enough of the adventures of this bespectacled, half-blooded boy wonder. J.K. Rowling's much-anticipated seventh book in the series, "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince," officially goes on sale at 12:01 a.m. Saturday. Many book stores will be open late tonight in preparation for the invasion of "Potheads." Not to be mistaken with people who habitually smoke exotic herbs, these Potheads are just wild about Harry Potter. "Pandemonium," is how John Bodnar, the general manager at Borders Books in Highland, expects Friday to be. He should know. He was at the store two years ago when the last Harry Potter book was released, "Order of the Phoenix." The crowd was "elbow to elbow" that day and Bodnar estimates they moved more than 2,000 copies of that book over the weekend. Retailers expect even more sales this time. "It's going to be a long day," Bodnar said. Becky Ashcraft, spokeswoman for the Barnes & Noble Booksellers in Valparaiso, will also be burning the midnight oil. Like Borders, Barnes & Noble will hold a "Harry Potter Midnight Magic Party" that will involve games and readings from the book. Tori Schroeder, 15, who attends Valparaiso High School, plans to show up in costume at tonight at Barnes & Noble to get her book. She admits she and her friends are "obsessed" when it comes to Harry Potter. "I'm so excited, I can't wait to get my copy," Schroeder said. On Aug. 3, Barnes & Noble will feature Emerson Spartz, the LaPorte native who is expected to interview Rowling this weekend. Spartz plans to talk about his rare privilege of being one of the few people to get a personal interview from the reclusive author. Spartz, 18, who started a Harry Potter Web site six years ago, was one of only two people Rowling invited for a face-to-face the day her book is released Saturday. Rowling personally contacted Spartz by phone in May and offered to fly him out to her home in Scotland for an muggle-to-muggle time. He left Wednesday and is expected to interview her Saturday between 3 and 4 p.m. Scotland time. He is expected to publish his interview with the author Monday on his Web site: www.mugglenet.com. Spartz plans to read his copy of the new Harry Potter novel within the first few hours he gets it. It's the least he can do, Spartz says, because he's going to interview the author that same day. Though excited to meet his favorite author, Spartz said earlier this week he was a little disappointed he would only have to a few hours to read the new book. Since Spartz is a speed reader, he said he plans to zip through it before the interview that afternoon "I don't think (Rowling) is expecting me to read it, but I plan to surprise her," he said. Spartz would rather take more time to ingest the book, but he said he'll "take a bullet for the fans." Spartz said the author chose him and Melissa Anelli, editorial director the Web site www.the-leaky-cauldron.org, because of their vast knowledge of the series. Many of the questions he plans to ask Rowling were contributed by visitors to Spartz' Web site. He said he received 4,000 questions. Spartz has a question that he is really looking forward to asking the author. He wants to know why in the third book Lord Voldemort, when he came to kill Harry Potter as a baby, offered to spare Potter's mother's life if she would just "stand aside." "Why didn't he just kill her immediately like he did Harry Potter's father? I've always wondered if there was something behind that," Spartz said. His opportunity to meet the author has given Spartz a good deal of fame, too. He said he has received daily calls from journalists since Rowling invited him for the interview. Though the attention has been fun, Spartz admits he's overwhelmed by answering all the prying questions.

"I'm almost a little bit jaded," he said.

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Posted: 20 years ago

Who's Afraid of J.K. Rowling?

The best-selling author of all time has virtually stopped talking to the press. Is the creator of Harry Potter thumbing her nose at the media circus, or giving the middle finger to the masses?

stole ideas from another author
This time, Rowling stays above the media fray

As J.K. Rowling prepares to unleash the sixth book in her stupendously successful Harry Potter series, she is communicating to the public through only one venue: her official website.

This weekend, as millions of copies are sold, the only reporters she will be talking to are a group of 70 specially selected children. They will read the book at a Harry Potter slumber party in Edinburgh Castle attended by the author and then quiz her at a one-hour press conference the next morning.

Upon the book's release, she will do a total of two interviews with the U.S. press: one on broadcast (NBC's The Today Show), and one in print (Time Magazine).

Is J.K. Rowling cleverly thumbing her nose at the media circus, or using her status to remain aloof from the masses? And why has she virtually stopped granting interviews, deigning only to answer the questions of a group of teenagers?

No other currently publishing writer could get away with this sort of behavior. No other writer could decline to send advance copies to reviewers -- and even threaten to sue bookstores that sold advance copies. No other writer could afford to shun the public eye. These days, authors are out there publicizing their books as much as actors publicize their movies, or musicians publicize their albums.

But then again, no other writer can sell 50,000 books an hour. (Less than 1 percent of published books sell more than 50,000 copies -- ever.) And no other writer can call herself "the wealthiest female author in the world."

The volumes in the Harry Potter series are some of the few books that don't need publicity to keep selling -- others that come to mind are the dictionary, the almanac and the Bible. And Harry is still a largely unexplained phenomenon. Every fan has her or his own reasons for loving him. As an avid reader of the series, I am actually emotionally attached to the little underdog; he represents true goodness, and I feel it deeply when his fellow students don't trust him, or when a new teacher treats him unjustly. I'm also hooked on Rowling's knack for creating mysteries at the beginning of a book and then coming to a surprising, yet completely believable, revelation at the end.

As many facts as I can churn out about Harry, I know very few about Rowling. She, like Harry, surmounted great obstacles: she was a divorced single mother on welfare living in an unheated apartment when she wrote the first book. She also briefly worked for Amnesty International doing research into human rights abuses in French-speaking parts of Africa, so she has spent some time fighting the good fight. But there are precious few personal facts about her out there.

Artists today are personally connected to their output: Beautiful, leggy young things sell movies, music, and even books. But Rowling no longer shills for her own product. She doesn't seem to think information about her private life is germane to the experience of the books. She prefers a quiet lifestyle tucked away in Edinburgh, Scotland with her husband and three children.

True, she no longer has to shill for her own product. But most authors, even if they achieved her level of prominence, would still want the fame. They'd still have glitzy, star-studded book parties that cost half the amount of international aid to Sudan. They'd hobnob with other literati elite like Sonny Mehta and John Grisham. They might still guard Harry's future secrets closely, but they'd have no trouble talking ad nauseum about their childhoods, their political views, and their diet/workout regimens.

Rowling has said she doesn't enjoy appearing before the media, and has been critical of it in the past; at one point early on, when she was still doing interviews, she said she never expected to spend so much time talking to journalists. In a recent book, she included an officious reporter named Rita Skeeter who hounds Harry and maliciously publishes false rumors about him.

Though she denies the obvious comparison, it's hard not to draw a parallel: Rowling has often had to fend off rumors, such as the one that existed for years until it was disproven in court, that she stole ideas from another author. On her website, she devotes a whole section to debunking any rumors fans might hear; recently, she denied one that said she was posting messages on fansites.

Whatever the reason for Rowling's virtual press boycott, the children's event planned for this weekend shows that she still wants to communicate with her fans -- but only directly, and only answering questions that she wants to be asked.

As an avid Harry Potter reader, I don't know if it would add to or detract from the books if I knew more about her. But, even though I'd love to interview her, and I'd love to hear from her someday about why she shuns public life, I admire her reticence. There is still something that separates writers from other celebrities: the ability to lead a relatively anonymous life, no matter how many books you have in print. And as J.D. Salinger, the most famously reclusive writer, said, "A writer's feelings of anonymity-obscurity are the second most valuable property on loan to him."

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Posted: 20 years ago
OUT TO LUNCH
JK Rowling: From rags to riches
Deborah Haynes
Fri, 15 Jul 2005 In a rags-to-riches story worthy of Harry Potter himself, British author JK Rowling has become as famous and mystical as the teenage wizard she introduced to the world almost a decade ago. Potty for Harry Potter? Visit our special site... Joanne Kathleen Rowling (39) is the force behind the record-breaking Potter series, with her sixth and penultimate book, 'Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince', poised to become the fastest selling book in history. Her previous five novels about Potter's adventures at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry and his struggle against evil Lord Voldemort have enchanted young and old alike, selling more than 250 million copies worldwide and being translated into more than 60 languages. Three films based on the series were also instant smashes, with a fourth, 'Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire', due for release in November. Penniless single mother It's all a long way from when the author was a penniless single mother in the Scottish capital Edinburgh, struggling to make ends meet. Despite her celebrity status, however, Rowling chooses to shy away from the spotlight. As a girl, she grew up with her younger sister Di near Bristol, western England, and Chepstow in Wales. Their father was an engineer, their late mother was half-French, half-Scottish. In her own words she was "a swotty little git in National Health spectacles", yet was voted head girl at her local school. At university, Rowling studied French and went on to hold a series of jobs, including working for the human rights agency Amnesty International. Inspired to write book in 1990 It was in 1990, waiting on a delayed train, that she was inspired to write Harry Potter. Writing had been something Rowling had done since the age of six. It took her five years to complete the first book, 'Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone', and another two before it was published in 1997. By that time she had been through the emotional mill. Her mother died aged 45 of multiple sclerosis. Rowling moved to Portugal to teach English, married a local journalist and had a daughter, Jessica. But the marriage fell apart and she moved to a small flat in Edinburgh. She would walk the street pushing Jessica in a buggy until she was asleep, then sit in a nearby cafe writing furiously until her daughter woke up. Living on benefits "I had no intention, no desire, to remain on benefits," she recalled in one of her rare interviews. "It's the most soul-destroying thing. "I don't want to dramatise but there were nights when, though Jessica ate, I didn't." Much of book written in caf The impoverished Rowling spent much of her time scribbling her book by hand at Nicolson's Cafe — in the south of the city and, possibly coincidentally, near to a street called Potterow — which has since been converted into a Chinese restaurant called the Buffet King. "We did not realise this place had such a famous reputation when we bought it two years ago," said the current manager Eddie Ng. "This place used to be owned by J.K. Rowling's brother-in-law. She did not have any money at the time so she came in here every day to eat, drink coffee and write," he said, pointing to a small table by a window where the author would have sat. It overlooks a cobbled street and an unremarkable row of grey, stone shops and houses. Despite the hardship, Rowling knew she had the talent and eventually it paid off. Success Her first book was a runaway success. The second confirmed her reputation. After the third, 'Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban', she had become a literary legend and enjoyed record sales with the fourth and the fifth, 'Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix'. Many of the characters are based on people she grew up with. Harry's swotty school friend Hermione, she has said, is herself. The name Potter comes from a friend with whom she played at witches and wizards as a child. Rowling's novels have now been translated into more than 50 languages, making her richer than Britain's Queen Elizabeth II. Dreams of obscurity With millions of people across the globe singing her praises, however, Rowling treasures her privacy and hopes that, when all seven books are published, she will "fade back into blissful obscurity".

At the end of 2001, she remarried in a secret Scottish ceremony. Her husband is a doctor, Neil Murray, and she gave birth to David, her second child, in March 2003.

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Posted: 20 years ago
The tale of Harry Potter's record-breaking run

LONDON (Reuters) - "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince," J.K. Rowling's sixth book about the fictional boy wizard Harry Potter, went on sale on Saturday.

Here are some key facts about the Harry Potter series:

* The previous five books are: "Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone" (1997), "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets" (1998), "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban" (1999), "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire" (2000), and "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix" (2003). The first book is called "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" in the United States.

* Around 275 million copies of Harry Potter books have been sold worldwide in 62 languages ranging from Gujarati to Ancient Greek. The fifth book made publishing history by selling five million copies within 24 hours of its publication in 2003.

* The first three books have been turned into movies which have grossed $2.64 billion worldwide, according to Hollywood tracking firm Box Office Mojo. The fourth movie, "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire," is due in 2005, and "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix" will hit theaters in 2007. Actor Daniel Radcliffe, now aged 15, stars as Harry Potter.

* Critics of the books say they have spawned an appetite for witchcraft and the occult. Some churches around the world greeted them with ceremonial book-burnings and angry sermons. "Harry Potter is the devil and he is destroying people," New Mexico Christian church pastor Jack Brock told his congregation in 2001. "Behind that innocent face is the power of satanic darkness."

* Rowling was a single mother struggling to make ends meet when she wrote the first Potter book. After the publication of the fifth Harry Potter book and the success of the movie franchise, Forbes magazine in 2004 estimated Rowling's wealth at $1 billion and said she was one of only five self-made female billionaires and the first billion-dollar author.

* "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince" picks up the story of Harry Potter's sixth year at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry as his evil foe Lord Voldemort's "power and followers are increasing day by day." Rowling has said the sixth book is the penultimate book in the wizard saga.

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Posted: 20 years ago

Entertainment News
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
Time is GMT + 8 hours
Posted: 16 July 2005 0713 hrs

"Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince" hits the bookstores


EDINBURGH : "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince," the sixth and penultimate book in the boy wizard series, went on sale across the world at 2301 GMT and looks set to become the fastest selling book ever.

To mark the moment, multi-millionaire author J. K. Rowling began reading from chapter six of the long-awaited novel to a select group of children at a private party in Edinburgh Castle, Scotland, which has been transformed into Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry for the occasion.

The blonde-haired author greeted her fans with a "hello" before sitting down in an arm chair to read.

At the same time, thousands of book stores across Britain and beyond opened their doors to queues of eager fans, many dressed up as their favourite character from the bespectacled Potter himself to evil Lord Voldemort.

A copy was sold just shortly after midnight at a store in London, an AFP correspondent said.

Excitement surrounding the launch reached fever pitch.

Some 2,000 fans, many dressed up as their favourite character from Potter's adventures, and a host of magical characters -- including dragons, blue ladies and flame throwers -- counted down the final minutes until the launch at one minute past midnight here (2301 GMT).

Rumours that Rowling kills off a key character in the book have generated even more interest that usual in the launch, and a record-breaking 10 million copies are expected to be sold within the first 24 hours.

British firm Bloomsbury will publish Potter's latest adventures at Hogwarts in Britain, South Africa, New Zealand, Australia, Canada, Hong Kong and Singapore, while US publisher Scholastic will serve a record 10.8 million copies up to the United States at midnight local time.

English-language versions of the book will also be available in other countries on the big day, with translated manuscripts due out in a few months.

In Asia, launch parties are planned and long queues expected at stores, which were opening Saturday morning to coincide with Britain's midnight release.

Preceding the launch here, fans erupted in cheers when Rowling, 39, drew up outside the castle in a dark car, stepped out and waved.

"Excited, I am excited," Rowling, 39, dressed in a black dress and black jacket, told a group of reporters as she was ushered along a red carpet, stretching to the castle.

"There are a lot of answers in this book," she said, above the noise of the crowd, packed into chairs and behind barriers.

"I can't wait for everyone to read it," she said, adding that she had left a copy of the book with her daughter.

"When I left her she was laughing at something," Rowling added.

Smiling broadly, Rowling spoke to some of the children, signing copies of early Potter books lovingly held in their hands before she walked into the castle.

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Secrecy behind selling Harry Potter

Saturday, 16 July 2005

Presenter: Allison Jess

Researcher: Kerri-Lee Harding

The latest Harry Potter book is likely to be just as popular on the big screen

The sixth Harry Potter book "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince", went on sale Saturday morning July 16th at one minute past nine in Australian Eastern Standard Time.

The book goes on sale in the exact same moment world wide. Not a minute earlier and not a second late. As in the past, strict rules were in place for book sellers.

Judith Doughty is co-owner of a book store based in Albury in southern NSW. It was an exciting day for her. "We have been counting down for the last one hundred sleeps. It is very exciting.. and to stop and think that at one minute past nine every bookstore across the world will sell the book.. it's a mammoth effort."

Prior to putting the latest instalment of Harry Potter on the shelves, the books were put aside, not to be touched. Judith jokes that she had to be quite strong in not sneaking an early look, but admits there was a temptation.

For selling the book all booksellers had to comply with the publishers demands "we have had to sign an agreement with the publisher that we won't divulge any information.. and that we keep the boxes secure until one minute past nine."

Judith says if you don't follow the rules book sellers "could face a hefty legal challenge".

Judith says people from all ages are buying the book. "I have been surprised. There has been a lot of young people around nineteen and in their early twenties who have pre-purchased the book. I think that is because Harry has been part of their childhood".


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