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Posted: 20 years ago

No Potter Books Available in Spanish Yet


By HILLEL ITALIE
AP National Writer


NEW YORK -- Check out the front window of Manhattan's Libreria Lectorum, one of the nation's largest Spanish-language bookstores, and you'll see a witch's hat and a handful of copies of "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince" -- in English.

While millions have already finished the sixth book in J.K. Rowling's fantasy series, fans hoping to read it in other languages will have to wait. Translating a 672-page book is a long process, made longer by the strict security imposed on "Half-Blood Prince" by Rowling and her publishers: Translators didn't get to see the book until it officially came out, July 16.



"The Spanish publisher (Salamandra Editorial, based in Barcelona) is just getting started and told us that the translation will probably be ready in the spring of 2006," says Marjorie Samper, product manager of Lectorum Publications, a Spanish-language book distributor that oversees the Lectorum store and is in turn owned by Scholastic, Inc., Rowling's U.S. publisher.

The Potter books are enormously popular throughout the world and have been translated into dozens of languages, with German and Japanese editions doing especially well. But Neil Blair, a representative from Rowling's literary agency, said that the first translations of any kind for "Half-Blood Prince" -- German and Mandarin so far -- aren't expected until the fall.

Lectorum officials say customers are frequently calling and visiting the store with requests for the Spanish "Half-Blood Prince." Samper said she expects a comparable level of interest to the previous Potter book, "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix," which had a first printing of more than 50,000, a number as high as for such popular Spanish-language authors as Isabel Allende and Jorge Ramos.

"A lot of customers are asking about it. I have a waiting list of 80-90 people," says Miguel Salvat, marketing director for the Miami-based Libreria Universal. "Obviously, people would be happier if we had the book, but they don't get upset. They understand there's nothing we can do about it.

With the Hispanic population topping 35 million in the United States, the book industry is well aware of the Spanish-language market, by far the biggest non-English market in the country. Random House, Inc., Harper Collins and Simon & Schuster are among the publishers with Spanish-language imprints; the superstore chains Barnes & Noble, Inc., and Borders Group have expanded their Spanish offerings.

"We've consistently seen double-digit growth for the last number of years," says Randi Sonenshein, Border's category manager for books in Spanish. She said demand was high both for books originally published in Spanish, such as the novels of Gabriel Garcia Marquez, and for books in translation, such as "Da Vinci Code" author Dan Brown's works.

But getting translations into stores is often frustrating -- sometimes hurried, sometimes slow. A number of factors can interfere: delays in getting the manuscript to translators; the intricacies of translation, especially for literary fiction; and a reluctance even to commit to a Spanish edition until the English work has proved successful.

"With 'Harry Potter,' you don't have to decide whether the book will succeed in Spanish, but for some books, you wonder how big the market will be," says Milena Alberti, director of Spanish-language publishing at Vintage Espanol, a Random House imprint.

"We just acquired (Carlos Eire's) 'Waiting for Snow in Havana' and we'll publish it in the fall. It won a National Book Award (in 2003) and was kind of a surprise success. That's something we couldn't have known before the book came out."

Even an early commitment to a Spanish edition doesn't guarantee timely publication. Manuscripts often change in the editing process, making publishers reluctant to commission a translation until they're sure the English text is finished. For one book, Maria Amparo Escandon's "Gonzalez & Daughter Trucking Co.," the author translated the novel herself and it still came out two months after the English edition.

If the expected audience is big, publishers will hurry the Spanish version. The translation of former President Clinton's "My Life" came out within a few weeks of the English edition, which itself was accelerated for an early summer release. This fall, Alfred A. Knopf and Vintage Espanol will publish simultaneous editions of Dr. Andrew Weil's "Healthy Aging."

"The idea of integrated medicine is something that is appealing to Hispanics," Alberti says. "We really expedited this book. It's like when you order a new passport. It can take two months, but if you work a little extra, it can be done in one month."

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Posted: 20 years ago
Harry Potter gold for Amazon

Jul 28 2005

Western Mail

ONLINE retailer Amazon said yesterday that the latest instalment in the adventures of schoolboy wizard Harry Potter had smashed all its records for deliveries.

Its UK arm dispatched more than 400,000 copies of Harry Potter And The Half-Blood Prince on the day of its release, representing more than a quarter of the 1.5 million orders from fans of JK Rowling's creation around the world.

This global demand beat the record of more than 1.3 million advance orders for Harry Potter And The Order Of The Phoenix - the fifth book in the series.

Amazon gave more details on the performance of the Harry Potter novel as it revealed net sales rose by 26% to $US1.75bn (1bn) in the second quarter, although the figure was slightly flattered by positive currency swings.

More than half its revenues are generated in the United States, with $739m (425.5m) coming from its operations elsewhere in the world, including the UK.

But its net income fell to $52m (29.9m) in the quarter from $76m a year (43.8m) earlier after its Amazon Prime discount shipping offer proved costly.

Ryan Regan, Amazon's acting managing director in the UK, said, "

We had dedi-cated space in our warehouse and worked very closely with our partners at the Royal Mail."

Laid end to end, the number of new Harry Potter novels delivered in the UK on the first day of its release would stretch 65 miles

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Posted: 20 years ago
Harry Potter and the Pot of Gold Does the rainbow end on your bookshelves? Speculators search for the golden editions of Harry Potter. By Rick Kleffel While the world busies itself putting pots of gold in the pockets of the publishers of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, as well as those of deserving author J. K. Rowling, readers and fans may themselves be sitting on a pot of gold and not even know it. We all know that reading Harry Potter is the best reward. The sense of community shared among his fans is enormous. The legions of readers that these books are creating will last for decades. And not surprisingly, the value of the earliest editions is giving the Santa Cruz County real estate market a run for its money. Who knew back in July of 1997, when Bloomsbury Books in England first published Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, that author J. K. Rowling and her creation would soon become household words? Metro Santa Cruz spoke with Internet bookseller Tim Miller of Flatsigned.com about Harry Potter and the pots of gold awaiting those who managed to buy one of the valuable editions. "Bloomsbury printed 1,000 copies of the first edition in the U.K.," Miller told us. "Of those, 500 went to libraries, and were read so many times that they were literally destroyed. Only 500 copies were sold in bookstores. Those U.K. first editions of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone will sell for between $20,000 and $40,000." Over the years most but not all of these copies have been identified and signed. "I still come across people who buy a book for 50 cents at a swap meet that turns out to be worth $10,000," Miller explained. But Ted Smart, a U.K. publisher, obtained permission to print his own versions of the first book, and the versions he printed are so close to the original that the differences come down to the font size and style on the copyright page. "Unless you know what you're buying, you need to consult an expert," warns Miller. In the United States, the first printing of the retitled Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone by Scholastic Books was between 10,000 and 20,000 copies. Half of those went to the libraries. The rest were sold in bookstores to readers who never knew that they were buying one of the most valuable books they would ever own. With a cover price tag of $15.95, those first American editions are now worth $3,000 to $4,000. But beware of signed copies. "Ninety percent of the Rowling signatures out there in books are fakes," explains Miller. How do you tell if you've got a pot of gold on your bookshelf? Start by looking on the copyright page. You should see a sequence of numbers the looks like this: 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 98 99 00 01 If you've got that, you're partway there. Next, you need to be sure that you've got a regular edition, not a teacher's edition. The regular edition has boards--those are the actual hard covers of the book--with a diamond-patterned purple or maroon covering the entire board. Teacher's editions, often called "false firsts," sport simple, cheap black boards. On the back spine, you should see a box that looks like a little house. Later editions have the number "1" inside them. If you have a true first edition, then your box is empty. Now check the dust jacket. First, make sure the price is $15.95; once Scholastic began to see what they had on their hands, they raised the price to $16.95. Next, make sure the blurb on the back is from the London Guardian, not Publisher's Weekly.

Still with us? Now, make sure your book isn't in good condition, because, according to Miller, "Good condition really is bad." The highest grade for a book is Fine, followed by Near Fine, Very Good and Good. If your book and its dust jacket are in Fine condition, then it's worth $3,000. Now that's some good--make that fine--reading!

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Posted: 20 years ago
Tibor Fischer reviews Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince by J. K. Rowling.

For a reviewer, tackling a Harry Potter book is truly a unique experience. Those of us who contribute to books pages often suffer from a sense of futility and solitude. Front pages, sports sections, film reviews, business news - these sections all have their devotees, but I fear that, apart from the literary editors themselves, there are few readers who work their way through every book review on offer (I certainly don't).

But, when it comes to Harry Potter, it's not a case of suspecting your critical extrusion will waft away inconsequentially, you know it will; J. K. Rowling is above it all.

For writers, this is J. K. Rowling's most admirable achievement; not just the hugely enviable royalties and readership, but the ascension. Like her creation Harry Potter, she is the Chosen One. It may not happen very often but I can assure you that Salman Rushdie or Ian McEwan will walk into a room or sit down at a dinner party and hear questions like, "so what do you do?" or "should I have heard of you?' J. K. will never phone her publisher and be asked by a temp to spell her name. She will never walk into a bookshop and discover that she is not stocked. Odd territories, like Poland or Korea, won't taunt her by holding out against her books.

J. K. is above all that. It gives me enormous pleasure just to think of how her publishers must get right down on the ground and grovel before her.

And she made it on her own. You will find few writers in the best-seller lists who have got there without the bunk-up of an award, a film or television adaptation or a publisher splashing out on T-shirts for booksellers and sushi for the literati. Long before the hype-machines were switched on for Harry Potter she was sauntering through reprint after reprint.

Is she that good? Is she 1,000 times better than the writers she outsells by that ratio? Of course not, but that isn't to say there aren't sound reasons for Potter's domination. There's a fantastic irony that the most successful writer ever has appeared in a country where literacy may soon be seen as a quaint 20th-century activity and at a time when children have access to limitless electronic temptation. It's not just the scale of the success, but the speed that's remarkable (the first volume was only published in 1997) and that smacks of the dark arts.

J. K. Rowling is a skilful writer (she walks all over, for example, Dan Brown or Jeffrey Archer) and, judging from the manipulation of her characters, a skilful chess player. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince is the sixth in the series and, we are informed, the penultimate volume.

If you haven't read the earlier instalments you'll miss out on some of the fun, but one of the main reasons for the book's 607 pages is regular recapitulation of the previous adventures, as well as regular recapitulation of the goings-on in HPATHBP.

Clearly, I'm not the target audience for this book, but I enjoyed most of it enormously, chiefly the humorous elements. The world of Harry Potter is a cunning amalgam of Billy Bunter, Narnia and Star Wars, and while Good slugging it out with Evil is all very familiar, the jokes are fresh. Rowling is very close to the imaginative gags of Terry Pratchett and Robert Rankin, if somewhat bowdlerised (however sex, in the form of snogging, is everywhere, since Rowling's protagonists are growing up).

Many of the children may miss it, but Rowling is a dab hand at satire; indeed at times she seems to be fighting the urge to shapeshift into Ben Elton, as she makes fun of the spin-doctoring at the Ministry of Magic (although I thought the evisceration of New Labour was better done in the last volume, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix).

Rowling can be very good on character, too. Many of Potter's schoolfriends are anodyne (I keep hoping Ron will die) but every volume has some strong additions. I liked the new face, Professor Slughorn, the lily-livered, crystallised-pineapple munching snob and networking addict. I also adore the sinister Snape, who is my favourite among Rowling's creations. I can't believe Rowling hasn't been influenced by Alan Rickman's performance as Snape in the films, since his sneering has become positively Rickmanesque in this book.

The question of Snape's allegiance has been one of the most powerful engines of the series. Is he or isn't he working for the Dark Lord, Voldemort? I admire Rowling's front in playing that card again and again, and very well, but the issue seems decisively settled in HPATHBP, as the book ends with Snape apparently killing one of the good guys.

Yet, Rowling is terribly sneaky. I will have to read the final volume, just to be sure.

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Posted: 20 years ago

Harry Potter fans, stay away from the Net

THERE'S a reason why the students at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry don't have Internet access.

Two fans read Harry Potter and The Half-Blood Prince at a bookstore in New Delhi. --AFP

With the recent launch of her latest book, Harry Potter And The Half-Blood Prince, author J K Rowling is finding out how disruptive the Internet can be to her best-selling franchise.

First of all, if you're haven't read the book and don't want any spoilers, it is best that you avoid the Internet like the plague.

Cnet News recently reported that avid Potter-heads were hopping mad at inconsiderate fans who had posted online reviews of the story that revealed too much information about the plot, spoiling the experience for many of them.

Already, several fans of the book have blogged about the plot and its surprise ending on online journals. Some have even given away the identity of the beloved character who dies in the book.

On the book's review section at Amazon.com, fans pleaded with their peers to refrain from divulging too much in their dizzy rush to gush about the book on the online retailer's site.

'While free speech is important, Amazon should put a warning on this set of comments so that the rights of others are not trampled upon,' wrote a fan named Pete Cyclone, who called for fans to boycott the review section.

'At the very least, reviews here should be moderated for the next few days. That way I wouldn't have an inconsolable 14-year-old sister to deal with right now.'

MESSAGE BOARDS SHUT DOWN

The fear of an outbreak of spoilers also prompted Potter fan sites, like Mugglenet.com and Harry Potter Automatic News Aggregator, to shut down their message boards for a few days after the launch. Site administrators had apparently anticipated that members would not be able to resist discussing the plot online.

Ms Rowling is also finding out that as long as the content is in demand, it doesn't matter what medium is being used - it will be pirated, just like the most recent Star Wars movie.

Reuters reported that almost immediately after its launch, a team of tech-savvy Potter fans from all over the world coordinated online and scanned all 672 pages of the Half-Blood Prince into digital form. Copies of the scans later appeared online as downloadable e-books.

Even copies of the audiobook version, which lists for US$75 ($126), have been making their rounds in cyberspace via file-sharing networks like BitTorrent. Ms Rowling's lawyer, Mr Christopher Little, told Reuters that his firm was working hard to combat the piracy.

But it is likely that nothing short of magic will keep pirated copies from slipping through.

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Posted: 20 years ago
Professors of potter

Xenia Poole

Xenia Poole talks to the organisers of the first ever British academic conference devoted solely to the world of Harry Potter ... and finds there are serious sides to studying house Elves, Rita Skeeter and the horned snorkack.

In a world gone mugglemad, where the sixth installment in the JK Rowling series, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, managed to smash-book sales records around the world, and a bespectacled boy has managed to force and iPods to second place on a child's Christmas list, it's hardly surprising that academics have grasped hold of the Harry Potter phenomenon just as tightly as every child around the globe.

Accio* UK is the first conference on British soil to concentrate wholly on the Harry Potter books and culture through discussion and academic debate. And it's happening in Reading. "There are huge numbers of fans - adult and children - who communicate face-to-face or via the internet, discussing all aspects of the Harry Potter series, and there are many in the academic world of adult and children's literature who also spend time looking at certain aspects," explains Serena Culfeather, spokeswoman for Accio.

"There is a desire to actually meet, in person, other like-minded people and to theorise in person and this is where such conferences gain interest. The academic side is widespread and such discussions are in depth and go to great lengths to dissect the books and the themes contained within. It is also a commonly discussed series in the literature courses of our universities too."

Accio was started by a group of nine Harry Potter who were also friends. Seeing the Potter conventions and conferences in other parts of the world, they decided it was about time England had one of its own. "It has taken time to get where we are today," admits Serena, "At least two-and-a-half years, but that time has gone by very quickly!

"I've been the spokeswoman for the group, but help with other aspects of the too - not least of which will be working on the trial of Professor Snape to be held on the first day of the conference!"

This is the first event that Accio have ever organised, but they hope that - if all goes to plan this year - there will be more like it in years to come. With 210 delegates lined up for the conference so far and more inquiries coming in, there seems to be a great demand.

"I continue to be amazed by the whole Harry Potter phenomenon, which seems to grow more and more every year," says Serena. "It's something that 'appeals to all ages and all backgrounds and is a real talking point. For many people it's a family thing - parents and children finding common ground as they read it together and both adults and children find different aspects to draw their interest. The people who are coming to the conference represent something in the region of 22 different countries, from age 18 and up. The furthest travellers are coming from Australia and Japan with a lot of Americans and a large number of Danes in Although the event, which will be taking place at Reading University, has a number of sponsors, on the whole it has been self-funded. Accio is a notfor-profit outfit, but any money they have spare in their budget is to be donated to the National Literacy Trust.

"This is the first event to be held in the UK, but there have been others in America and Canada and I recently learned of another academic conference in Russia."

It may be an unofficial friendly event, but on the whole, the people attending the weekend gathering are seriously potty about Harry. The events list reads like a different language with papers like Which beast is more fantastic: the rule of law or the crumpled horned snorkack?; Beings and the beast - free will, destiny, contagion for animagi and werewolf; Alchemical symbols; of Rita Skeeter, Dolores Umbridge and Bellatrix Lestrange and the creation of degrees of evil; and Social problems of the wizarding community within Harry Potter - House elves.

And that's not to say that there won't be some silliness at the proceedings. A mock game of Quidditch is even on the cards. "Our conference has a very academic slant, whereas the others have been more fan based," explains Serena. "It is intended to be serious and we have some very illustrious speakers. We do also have some less serious events to act as breaks in between the 'serious stuff' and as ice-breakers and we have a number of panels and round table events for more open discussion.

Serena adds: "I'm not sure if you'll see lots of wizards in town but you never know!"

*Accio! is the incantation for the Summoning Charm. For example, the incantation Accio Firebolt would cause the broomstick to fly into the hand of the person using the charm.

* Accio UK 2005 takes place at Reading University from Friday, July 29 until Sunday, July 31. The event can still be attended on a day pass for the Saturday but weekend registration is unfortunately closed. Visit www.accio.org.uk

So, why Reading?

Our town is an ideal spot for an Harry Potter gathering. We are:

* Ten miles from Bracknell where they filmed 4 Privet Drive

* Forty-five minutes by car from Virginia Water where scenes from Prizoner of Azkaban-were filmed.

* An hour and a half from Tutshill in the Forest of Dean where JKR spent much of her later childhood.

* Two hours drive from Gloucester where some of the Basilisk and cloister shots ( Chamber of Secrets) were-filmed.

* And 15 mins by train to Oxford where they used the quad at College and the original Dining Hall (and Oxford is dripping with Lewis Carroll, JRR Tolkien, and Philip Pullman sites too).

"We chose Reading, because our committee members have some connections to the town [namely Ali Hewison who lives here] and it was a popular choice. It's also ideally suited to the event for logistic reasons, though, being easy to reach from the major southern airports and close to places of interest to tourists such as Oxford and some of the sites for the Harry Potter films."

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Posted: 20 years ago
Academics hold Harry Potter talks
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince was published this month
Highbrow fans of Harry Potter are holding an academic conference about the teenage wizard this weekend. Professors and academics will take part in the event at Reading University, looking at topics such as the social issues of the wizarding community. Light-hearted events will include a mock trial of potions master Severus Snape and a Hogwarts-style banquet. But those aged under 18 will not be able to take part, despite the fact JK Rowling's books are aimed at children. The event is being organised by the fan club Accio, but has not been backed by Rowling or her publisher Bloomsbury. Seminar topics being discussed around the books include mythic symbols, alchemy and religious identity.

Accio spokeswoman Serena Culfeather said: "The appeal of the Harry Potter books is so wide-ranging that we felt a conference exploring the text was long overdue."


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Posted: 20 years ago
Pope should spell out views on Potter

Edmund Kern

FIVE is the total number of sentences Pope Benedict XVI has devoted to Harry Potter - well, only one, really, but more on that in a bit.

The sentences were written in 2003, while the pontiff was still Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger. His opinion of JK Rowling's hero then attracted little attention, even though, at the time, he was head of the Church's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, an institution known as the Universal Inquisition until 1908.

Since then, of course, much has changed, not the least of which is Cardinal Ratzinger's elevation to the Holy See. Now, with millions reading Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, the Pope's two-year-old opinion is everywhere. What a shame, for it has generated far more heat than light.

In 2003, Cardinal Ratzinger wrote two letters replying to Gabriele Kuby. She is an outspoken Catholic sociologist and author of the book, Harry Potter: Gut oder Bse (Harry Potter: Good or Evil), an attack on Ms Rowling's novels seeking to outline the spiritual and social dangers allegedly facing readers.

The first letter, dated March 7, 2003, and running to three sentences, thanked Ms Kuby for her "instructive book", apparently endorsed the claims made within it and suggested that she send a copy to Monsignor Peter Fleetwood, who at the time was an official at the Pontifical Council for Culture. During April, Msgr Fleetwood made headlines when some attributed his favourable assessment of the Potter books to John Paul II. Perhaps it was this, in addition to Ms Kuby's own request, that prompted a second, two-sentence letter to Ms Kuby, dated May 27, granting her permission to publicise the views of the first. Despite Ms Kuby's attempts, those views drew limited coverage at the time.

One possible reason for this lack of attention is that the then-cardinal had so little to say. Only one of his five sentences actually offers anything resembling an assessment of Harry Potter. Another possible reason is the sentence mires itself in confusion. The ambiguity exists in the German and the various English translations, including my own.

The first letter told Ms Kuby: "It is good that you enlighten us on matters relating to Harry Potter, for these are subtle temptations, which act imperceptibly and, for that reason, deeply, and subvert Christianity in the soul, before it can really grow properly."

To what, exactly, does the word "these" refer? Matters? If so, what matters? The Harry Potter books? The cultural phenomena surrounding them? Or a more general interest in magic and witchcraft? Unfortunately for those who might be interested in a reasoned response from the Vatican, what is being asserted is unclear.

The second letter compounded the obscurity of the first. It is difficult not to conclude that it is precisely the imprecision of this judgment that has led to headlines employing such words as "disapproval", "peril", "condemnation" and even "evil."

The Pope's "judgment" about Harry Potter is sad. It is sad because its disclosure calls unwarranted attention to the simplistic attacks of religious zealots, while denigrating the accomplishments of an author whose works has enriched the lives of millions of children. It is also sad because there is nothing to suggest that he read any of the Potter books - or Ms Kuby's, for that matter.

Echoing her books' views, she says on her website "Harry Potter is a global, long-term project" intent on destroying "inhibitions against magic and the occult". She claims the setting is "a... world of violence and horror, of cursing and bewitching, of racist ideology, of blood sacrifice, disgust and obsession". Ultimately, she says, "through the Potter books, faith in a loving God is systematically undermined, even destroyed, in many young people". In 2003, did Cardinal Ratzinger really find such claims from Ms Kuby "instructive" after carefully considering them? A return to his second letter might cast some doubt on that. It reads: "Somehow your letter was buried under a mass of name day, birthday, and Easter cards. Finally, this pile has been cleared, so that I can gladly permit you to quote my judgment about Harry Potter."

The head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith found a stack of greeting cards more important than countering a threat to Christianity?

If Pope Benedict believes the Harry Potter books are worth the Church's attention, he owes millions of readers a better explanation of why he chose to lend his support this attack. Five sentences? Again, what a shame.

Edmund Kern is chair of the department of history at Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin, in the US and author of The Wisdom of Harry Potter: What Our Favorite Hero Teaches Us about Moral Choices, published by Prometheus Books. He will be speaking at the Harry Potter conference at Reading University which opens today

Edited by aries_sakshi - 20 years ago
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Posted: 20 years ago

J K Rowling named most powerful British woman:-

Author of the Harry Potter series, J K Rowling, has been named UK's most powerful woman by Forbes magazine.

According to the Daily Mail, Rowling replaces UK Prime Minister Tony Blair's wife Cherie Blair, who dropped to 50th place in the list. Rowling, who was on the 85th position in the world list last year, ranks 40th in the world list this time. Rose Marie Bravo, chief executive of Burberry, is 63rd, while the Queen is at the 75th place. Top four British Women are:

1. J K Rowling2. Cherie Blair3. Rose Marie Bravo 4. Queen Elizabeth (ANI)

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Potter lady richer than PM's wife
Friday July 29 2005 19:05 IST

ANI

LONDON: Author of the Harry Potter series, J K Rowling, has been named UK's most powerful woman by Forbes magazine.

According to the Daily Mail, Rowling replaces UK Prime Minister Tony Blair's wife Cherie Blair, who dropped to 50th place in the list.

Rowing, who was on the 85th position in the world list last year, ranks 40th in the world list this time.

Rose Marie Bravo, chief executive of Burberry, is 63rd, while the Queen is at the 75th place.

Top four British Women are:

1. J K Rowling 2. Cherie Blair 3. Rose Marie Bravo 4. Queen Elizabeth

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