[NOTD] News Of The Day - 20/07/2007

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Posted: 18 years ago
#1
Happy 56th birthday to Jeff Rawle!
Jeff Rawle, who was born in Birmingham, England on July 20, 1951, is 56 years old today. Jeff Rawle plays Cedric's dad, Amos Diggory in the latest movie Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. He's been in many TV shows in the UK since 1973 including appearances in Dr. Who.

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Posted: 18 years ago
#2

Israeli rabbi gives Jews the okay to fetch Potter books on Sabbath

Tel Aviv - An Israeli rabbi has proposed a creative solution to observing Jews who wish to get their copy of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows on the Jewish Sabbath Saturday. If religious Harry Potter fans pay in advance, before the start of the Sabbath at sundown Friday, they are allowed to pick up their copy early Saturday if they walk to the bookstore and the salesperson is not Jewish, the Orthodox rabbi from Jerusalem told the Jerusalem Post, albeit on condition of anonymity.

Observant Jews are not allowed to work, buy or sell, and drive their cars on the Sabbath, considered a holy resting day in Judaism.

Israeli Trade and Industry Minister Eli Yishai, of the ultra-Orthodox Shas party, has threatened to send inspectors to and fine bookstores in Israel who open their doors on Saturday to join in the worldwide first day of sales of the Potter book.

Israel's leading bookstore chain is not opening its stores throughout the country before the end of the Sabbath at sundown Saturday, but it is organizing several book-launching events, the main one in Tel Aviv's port which is due to start at midnight Friday, with sales starting there at 2.01 am Saturday.

The books, in English, will sell for 139 Israeli shekels (32.76 US dollars or 23.71 euros). A Hebrew translation is due in December.

Source: Earth Times

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Posted: 18 years ago
#3

Digital DNA could finger Harry Potter leaker

(Bloomsbury Publishing/PA Wire)

Cover illustration of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, final book in the boy wizard series

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Jonathan Richards

A few lines of 'digital DNA' could allow the publishers of Harry Potter to find and finger the person apparently responsible for leaking the final adventures of the boy wizard.

A leaked version of what is claimed to be the latest Harry Potter novel, painstakingly photographed page by page, has been posted on the internet before the book's worldwide release on Friday and circulated via file-sharing networks.

But computer experts said today that the identity of the person behind the leak could be revealed by tracing the digital camera that was used.

Information contained on the photographs uploaded to file-sharing websites could provide a trail which leads back to the photographer, said experts at Canon, the imaging company.

By examining the vital information - or 'metadata' - built into each photo, the company's technical officers have established the serial number of the camera that was used, which could in turn lead to the identity of the camera's owner.

The information, known as Exchangeable Image File Format (Exif) data, has already revealed that the camera used was a Canon Rebel 350. Because the model is three years old, the device would likely have been serviced at least once since it was purchased, in which case the owner's name would be known.

The serial number itself would not necessarily give away the name of the owner, Canon said, as it can only match serial numbers with owners if the purchaser registers the device after buying it. Every time a Canon camera is serviced, however, the serial number and owner are logged together.

"In theory, we can find out which country the camera was sold in and in turn the warranty and service centre records in that country could be checked," Vic Solomon, a product intelligence officer at Canon's UK head office, said. "It would take a lot of work, but there's a good chance they could find him or her.

"From what we know, the device is one of the original Rebel cameras, probably a 350D, and given that they've been out for three years, it's likely the owner would have had it cleaned or repaired in that time."

All that could be told initially from the number was that the camera was likely sold in either America or Canada, because the Rebel 350 was not distributed in any other territory.

Bloomsbury, the UK publisher of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, the final book in the J.K. Rowling series, said today that its lawyers are investigating all potential leaks of material from the book and would take legal action wherever necessary.

Every image that is taken on a digital camera contains Exif data, which holds information about the picture such as zoom, contrast, focus and 'distance to subject' measurements. It is typically used for 'trouble-shooting', so an owner can ascertain why a picture may not have worked, but it also enables a court, for instance, to establish whether a picture has been digitally altered.

"The Exif data is like the picture's DNA; you can't switch it off. Every image has it. Some software can be used to strip or edit the information, but you can't edit every field," Mr Solomon said.

A post on the digg.com website claimed that the serial number of the camera which photographed the pages claimed to be from the unpublished Harry Potter, was 560151117.

Canon's head office in Japan confirmed that a serial number would reveal the country in which the camera was sold and possibly also the store, but declined to give any further information about the device used in this case.

The discovery reveals the extent to which people who distribute photographs online can be traced, which is especially relevant given the popularity of social networking sites such as Facebook, which have in some cases been sources of incriminating material.

If traced, the person who photographed the Harry Potter novel could be found guilty of copyright infringement, but would be unlikely to face criminal charges as the photos appear not to have been published for commercial gain, lawyers said.

"There are criminal provisions in copyright legislation, but they tend to be used in cases of obvious counterfeiting - such as selling fake computer games or DVDs in a car boot sale," Mark Owen, an intellectual property partner at the London firm Harbottle & Lewis, said. "If Bloomsbury were to pursue an action, it would more likely be a civil case, in which case any damages would be assessed according to the loss in book sales."

JK Rowling, the book's author, said she was "staggered" that "some American newspapers have decided to publish purported spoilers in the form of reviews in complete disregard of the wishes of literally millions of readers, particularly children, who wanted to reach Harry's final destination by themselves, in their own time".

Source: The Times, UK

Edited by ~*Thamizhan*~ - 18 years ago
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Posted: 18 years ago
#4

NY Times defends early review of Potter book

Agence-France-Presse

Published: Friday, July 20, 2007

NEW YORK -- The influential daily New York Times on Thursday defended its decision to review the eagerly-awaited final book in the Harry Potter series before its release, despite a storm of protest.

"Our feeling is that once a book is offered up for sale at any public, retail outlet, and we purchase a copy legally and openly, we are free to review it," said culture, books and theatre editor Rick Lyman in a statement.

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows officially goes on sale after midnight in Asia and Europe, and had been kept tightly under wraps for fear of giving away the ending in the seventh and final instalment of the boy wizard's adventures.

The tight security was shattered when the New York Times revealed the number of characters that die.

Lyman said the Times had found the book in a New York City store, and bought it and reviewed it. "As for charges that we gave away the ending, that is simply not true," he said.

"We took great care not to do so, nor to give away significant details about who lives and who dies, confining our review -- which, incidentally, had extremely high praise for both this final book and the entire series -- to broader-brush assessments of the tone and the writing."

Source: The Vancouver Sun

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Posted: 18 years ago
#5

Diehard Potter fans camp in the rain

Friday, 20th July 2007, 11:10

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The wait is almost over but diehard Harry Potter fans are showing no signs of exhaustion after camping outside Waterstone's for days.

Around fifty people are queuing in the rain outside the Piccadily store with about 2,000 expected to arrive tonight.

The seventh and final installment of the saga Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows officially goes on sale at midnight.

Obsessed fans waving placards such as 'honk for Harry' and 'Harry Potter, I love queuing', have been braving heavy downpours and chilly temperatures to be the first to get their hands on the book.

Melyssa Tari, an 18 year old student from Canada, said: "I have been saving every penny I have got for the last year with my babysitting job.

"I managed to save enough money for the trip and when my mum saw I was serious she decided to come with me. I slept outside the store last night and it was very cold and rainy and I hardly slept. But it is all worth it.

"I love Harry Potter as it is an entirely different world you can escape into. I have been waiting for this book for years and it is unfair that some people are leaking information onto the internet.

"I am afraid people will come by and shout out the ending so I am going to listen to my iPod."

Wearing a wizard hat Renee Vloo, 27, a social worker from Holland who runs a fan website, said: "This is my third time in London for a Harry Potter release. We have been working in shifts.

"We are in a group of six people and we take turns to go to the hotel. The story is so detailed, it really grabs me. We have pillows, blankets, umbrellas, cardboard and alot of plastic because of the rain."

Saskia Haitjema, 19, a student from Holland, is one of the first people in the queue. She arrived on Wednesday at 2pm with twenty other people from another fan website.

She said: "We have mattresses and we have taken shifts to keep our place in the queue. We really wanted to be the first and luckily the second group only joined us a few hours later.

"When it rains the staff at Waterstone's give us raincoats and we sit outside singing. Lots of people say we are crazy but some of them are impressed that we are doing this because we are so devoted.

"We came to London because it is JK Rowling's country."

Debra Tilley, from Waterstone's, explained what will happen tonight before the book goes on sale.

Ms Tilley said: "We are going to close the store at 10pm and the whole of the front is going to be dressed as Hogwarts.

"From 9pm we will have entertainment in the queues including magicians, lookalikes, mythical creatures, games and prizes.

"We have never seen a queue build up so early but this is the last book. Everyone wants to be here.

"Harry Potter has a following that does not exist for any other book. The fans have been through everything, but they have not stopped smiling."

Source: Life Style Extra, UK

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Posted: 18 years ago
#6
Fans finally receive Potter book
JK Rowling
Rowling has made more than 540m from writing
Harry Potter fans can finally find out their hero's fate, as the seventh and final book in the series goes on sale. The first copies were snapped up just after midnight, as author JK Rowling read excerpts to 500 devotees at the Natural History Museum in London. On Friday, she described a "heady mixture of excitement, nerves and relief" as the launch approached. "All the secrets I have been carrying around for so long will be yours, too," she wrote to fans on her website. "Within hours you will know what happens to Harry, Ron, Hermione and the rest in their final adventure. "Those who guessed correctly will be vindicated, and those who guessed wrongly will not, I hope, be too disappointed!" Upsetting
JK Rowling on Blue Peter
The author appeared on Blue Peter to answer children's questions
Appearing on BBC One's Blue Peter on Friday, the author warned that the book could be upsetting for some readers. "Will I cry?" asked Natasha, a young fan in the audience for the show. "Have you ever cried before at a sad book?" asked Rowling. "Well, I cried when Dumbledore died," she replied. "I think you'll probably cry at this book, too," the author said. 325 million sold A decade after the first instalment, Harry Potter has become a global phenomenon with 325 million books already sold. That number will grow as millions of copies of the new novel are snapped up over the weekend. It is being released simultaneously in 93 countries, with a print run of 12 million in the US alone and more than 2.2 million ordered in advance from internet retailer Amazon.
A few people who got the book early posted on my friend's blog, telling her the plot - she was devastated
Abi C
Harry Potter fan

Loyal fans will finally reach the climax of the story after 10 years of twists and turns in the life of the young wizard. A final confrontation between Harry and his evil nemesis, Lord Voldemort, has been building throughout the series - and Rowling has revealed some characters do not survive. Fans around the world queued in their thousands outside bookshops waiting for the late-night launch. Many came dressed in character - as wizards, teachers, death eaters, giants and even owls. Cahina Lewis, who joined the London queue in a witch's costume, said: "For the last nine or 10 years it's been such a big part of my life.
Harry Potter fan in London
Fans queuing in London have had to cope with torrential rain
"I've been talking to my friends about Harry Potter theories for so long, and I'm not going to be able to do that anymore. What will I do with my life?" Stefanie Van Gompel, 16, from Eindhoven in the Netherlands, arrived in London on Wednesday morning to queue for her copy of the book. "The Dutch version isn't released until December so it's not such a big deal over there," she explained. Chellie Carr, 17, from Okemos, Michigan, said she pestered her mother to bring her to London. "For all the other books she said: 'No. It's just a book.' But for this one, she said yes," she said. Global celebrations All-night parties and Hogwarts Express-style train trips have been planned elsewhere around the world to celebrate the release.
Staff in a London bookshop
The book's launch has sparked a price war between British retailers
Staff at stores in Hong Kong will tour the city dressed as wizards, while in Bangladesh, customs offices are continuing to work on a Friday - a holiday in the country - to ensure the novel is delivered on time.

Stores in Taiwan and India are laying on "magic breakfasts" for early customers and a Sydney shop is taking fans aged from two to 84 on a train ride to a secret location to get the book.

In New York, a street party will include face-painting, wand-making, fire-eaters and magicians, while in Bangkok, an outdoor movie screen will show all the Potter films throughout the night.

Source: BBC News


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Posted: 18 years ago
#7
Hallows be thy name
Harry Potter book on sale

By Neil Hallows

The title of JK Rowling's final boy wizard book, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, has long been a source of excited debate among fans. What exactly are hallows? "Hallows be thy name!" went the playground chant. At school, I encouraged harmless nicknames as a distraction from those involving skinny legs. A pun based on the Lord's Prayer was not the cruellest thing they could have said. It didn't last anyway. The children who understood it got bored of explaining it to the ones who didn't. And 30 years have passed almost without a pun - it's just not worth the bother when there are names like Hank Wangford in the world. But one day last December, I was suddenly back in the playground.
Any clarification of the meaning of 'Hallows' would give away too much of the story - it would, wouldn't it? Being the title and all
JK Rowling
A stream of texts arrived that read like bad cryptic crossword clues, all involving the word "deathly". Posters in bookshops announced my name, although not in the way I would have liked. Fake book covers were lovingly mocked up and e-mailed by friends with quiet jobs and good software. Why did you do it, JK Rowling, why? Don't expect an answer from the author before the book is published on 21 July. On her official website, she says: "Any clarification of the meaning of 'Hallows' would give away too much of the story - well, it would, wouldn't it? Being the title and all. So I'm afraid I'm not answering." As no doubt she intended, fans have been speculating since the title was announced six months ago. Angels of death Contributors to one fans' site thought it was connected to Godric's Hollow, where Harry's parents James and Lily were killed. I don't think so, but I like that idea because my name may have come from the family once having lived in a hollow, or valley (rather than being especially holy).
Amazon warehouse
Security remains very tight
I am guessing like everyone else, because no Hallows, deathly or otherwise, was consulted on the book. But if you take what the word means, there seem to be two possibilities. Rowling might just be looking for another way to say "holy" or "saint". The word is best known from All Hallows' Day, otherwise known as All Saints' Day, celebrated on 1 November although with less enthusiasm than the day before, Halloween. "Deathly saints" are hard to imagine, but think of them as angels of death, and you might just have identified Hogwarts' latest unwelcome boarders. But I prefer another possibility, which delves into Arthurian legend. Perceval, The Story of the Grail, was written by the French poet Chrtien de Troyes in the late 12th Century. Perceval, one of King Arthur's knights, visits the castle of the wounded and mysterious Fisher King. There he is shown a "Grail" decorated with jewels. It is the earliest reference we have of the Grail but Chrtien is tantalisingly short on detail. Among later writers a tradition emerged that it was the cup from which Jesus drank at the last supper. Perceval was shown other objects too - a sword, a platter, and a lance with a drop of blood falling from the tip. They often appear together in the medieval stories, and were described a century ago as the "Hallows" by Arthur Waite, a writer with an interest in the occult. Celtic myth Waite's writing makes The Da Vinci Code seem modest and cautious. "Each of the Hallows has its implied enigma... they are both declared and undeclared", he wrote in a curious book of 1909 where he describes the "Hallow-in-chief" - the Grail itself, and the "lesser Hallows".
Yeats, Eliot, Rowling. You don't often list them in the same sentence
This was at the time when it first became popular to look for hidden meanings in the Grail stories. In 1888, the folklore expert Alfred Nutt wrote a highly influential book where he argued the Grail stories were a way of telling an older, pagan, Celtic myth. He linked them to a people called the Tuatha D Danann, who are said to have brought four magical treasures to Ireland; a cauldron, spear, stone and sword. Juliette Wood, a lecturer at Cardiff University and expert on the Grail, says there is insufficient evidence to make the link, as the treasures are sometimes more than four and not always the same. But it led to something of a craze with books "decoding" Arthurian characters to reveal their supposedly pagan roots. Waite linked the treasures, the four Hallows of the Grail romances, and the suits of the Tarot. So did Jessie Weston, an Arthurian scholar who in 1920 went a stage further and linked them to an ancient fertility ritual.
Da Vinci Code at the Louvre, Paris
The Holy Grail could link the two books
Such theories owed more to the imagination of Waite and Weston and interest in the occult than to historical evidence, says Dr Wood. But their influence was undeniable. There is still a very healthy industry in finding secret meanings to the Grail. And Waite and Weston have influenced at least two of our greatest authors, although there is still debate as to the extent. WB Yeats belonged to the same occultist order as Waite, and used tarot imagery in his writing. TS Eliot also alluded to the Tarot, in The Waste Land, and took the title from Weston's description of the Fisher King's barren and sterile territory. Yeats, Eliot, Rowling. You don't often list them in the same sentence. But the author may well be drawing from the same legend and the sometimes bizarre connections that have been made from it. After all, she is no stranger to ancient myth. Argus, Hermes, Nimbus, Sybill - her books read like a classicist's in-joke, replete with characters who share traits with their Greek or Roman counterparts. Clue And the four Hallows connection is all the more likely because the final Harry Potter book is likely to focus on the search for magical relics.
King Arthur in the BBCs Arthur, King of the Britons
Does King Arthur hold the key?
In the previous book, Harry's late headmaster Albus Dumbledore told Harry about horcruxes, objects in which Lord Voldemort had hidden a portion of his soul. Harry has to find and destroy them. Two have already surfaced but there are four mystery objects still to be located, probably related to the founders of Hogwarts. A big clue came from Rowling's alternative title for the book, for the benefit of a Swedish translator struggling with the word "hallows" - Harry Potter and the Relics of Death. So if that's not the answer, I'll eat my sorting hat. If only Arthurian legend could reveal the biggest question of them all, namely whether Potter gets potted. My nephews (different surname, lucky lads) have promised to tell me if Harry still has a pulse as soon as they reach the end of the 608 pages, which will be a few hours after the book's publication. Good luck Harry, and don't let the Hallows get you. Add your comments on this story, using the form below. As a fellow member of the Hallows Family, I am most excited to see where Rowling has taken the family name. Many of my family members will be lined up at a local bookstore in San Luis Obispo, California with T-shirst that say "Hi, I'm a deathly Hallows". Its not every day that such an obscure last name makes it to stardom. For one I will enjoy the limelight while it lasts.
Ryan Hallows, Bloomington, Indiana In French too, the official translation of the last Harry Potter book is "Les reliques de la mort" ie the relics of death, so it seems that last idea is the right one.
Caroline, Paris, France Your comments on a sword being a hallow also ties back to the cover which shows one in Ron's hand.
Matt Bennett, Windsor The noun Hallow is a derived from the verb "to hallow", which means "to make Holy". There are various degrees: a priestly blessing of the inherently corruptible congregation, or of less-corruptible Holy water, for instance. Then there is the entire panoply of saints, principally in the concrete form of their relics, which are very often fraudulent. And finally there is the limited set of hallows directly associated with the divine, none of which are currently in circulation: the most recent surviving record is of the Ark of the Covenant, last recorded by one of the spiritual fathers of Thomas Kempis as being in Catholic hands in 1305. Similarly, the Moslim faith respects certain buildings as particularly hallowed by their close association with the Prophet: equally, other religions feel the same way about their origins.
Jel, Swansea

I'd just like to point out to Neil that the Tuatha D are actually called the Tuatha D Dannan and they were never what you'd consider mortal. They occupied (and if you believe still do) the spiritual realm of the Celts. Almost like the Pagan version of the Holy Trinity. You had the De Dannan (Spiritual) the Fir Bolg (Physical) and then the Celts themselves. Just thought I'd let you know. In relation to Harry Potter.....I lost interest after the 2nd book. Give me Lord of the Rings any day!
Ken McAlester, Dublin

Source: BBC News

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Posted: 18 years ago
#8

Rowling bids her boy wizard goodbye
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EDINBURGH, Scotland (AP) — Harry Potter's life hangs in the balance. Millions of fans are holding their breath. Meanwhile, his creator is baking a cake — and keeping her secret.

On Saturday, readers around the globe will learn the schoolboy wizard's fate with the publication of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, the seventh and final book in J.K. Rowling's fantasy series. Will Harry defeat his evil nemesis, Lord Voldemort, and restore order to the wizarding world? Will he die in the attempt, as many fans fear — and as Rowling, an expert narrative tease, has hinted?

"Harry's story comes to a definite end in book seven," is all she will say a few days before publication, serving up tea and home-baked sponge cake in her comfortable Edinburgh house. Writing the final words of the saga felt "like a bereavement."

That sounds ominously final. So have we really seen the last of the staff and students of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry?

"Because the world is so big, there would be room to do other stuff," Rowling says carefully. "I am not planning to do that, but I'm not going to say I'm never going to do it."

Rowling (her name rhymes with bowling, rather than howling), looking relaxed in jeans and a sweater, shoulder-length blonde hair stylishly cut, has wildly mixed emotions at leaving behind the character she conjured up during a train journey across England in 1990: a neglected, bespectacled orphan who learns on his 11th birthday that he is a wizard.

She's enjoying the absence of pressure from publishers and fans clamoring for the next installment in Harry's adventures. And she's reveling in the chance to focus on normal life with her husband and three children.

But after finishing the last book, "I felt terrible for a week."

"The first two days in particular, it was like a bereavement, even though I was pleased with the book. And then after a week that cloud lifted and I felt quite lighthearted, quite liberated," she says.

"Finishing is emotional because the books have been so wrapped up with my life. It's almost impossible not to finish and look back to where I was when I started."

It has been an extraordinary journey. When Rowling created Harry Potter, she was a struggling single mother, writing in cafes to save on the heating bill at home. Now, at 41, she is the richest woman in Britain — worth $1 billion, according to Forbes magazine — with houses in Edinburgh, London and the Scottish countryside.

Her first book, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, was published in 1997, with a print run of less than 1,000. Rowling's publisher suggested she use gender-neutral initials rather than her first name, Joanne, to give the book a better chance with boys. Lacking a middle name, she took the K from her paternal grandmother, Kathleen.

By the time the book appeared in the United States in 1998 — as Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone— Harry was on his way to becoming a publishing phenomenon.

The six Potter books have sold some 325 million copies in 64 languages, including Latin and Ancient Greek. Deathly Hallows has an initial print run of 12 million in the United States alone; more than 2 million copies have been ordered from Internet retailer Amazon.

The novels have produced five movies, mountains of toys, a riot of Internet fan sites and scores of companion books — from academic studies to parodies to pop psychology. A theme park, complete with Hogwarts castle and Forbidden Forest, is to open in Orlando, in 2009.

The launch of each new book is now accompanied by choreographed chaos and military-level security. No book is sold until a minute past midnight on Saturday.

The series' success has been "a once-in-a-lifetime phenomenon," said Joel Rickett, news editor of trade magazine The Bookseller. "It has brought a new generation to reading — got kids absorbed in huge hefty hardbacks the way they wouldn't have been," he said.

While some critics have dismissed the books as lightweight kiddie fare, others have been impressed by their moral complexity and darkening tone. Death haunts Harry Potter, who was orphaned at the age of 1 when Voldemort killed his parents. He loses his godfather Sirius Black in the fifth book and his beloved headmaster Dumbledore in the sixth. No wonder fans fear for Harry's future.

Rowling was profoundly affected by the death of her own mother from multiple sclerosis in 1990 at the age of 45.

"My mum died six months into writing (the books), and I think that set the central theme — this boy dealing with loss," Rowling says.

And she makes no apologies for exposing children to death.

"I think children are very scared of this stuff even if they haven't experienced it, and I think the way to meet that is head-on," she says. "I absolutely believe, as a writer and as a parent, that the solution is not to pretend things don't happen but to examine them in a loving, safe way."

Rowling says her success has been "the experience of a lifetime." But it also has brought an intense level of pressure, scrutiny and criticism. In the United States, her book tours have attracted thousands of screaming children, but also death threats. Some Christians have called for the books to be banned, claiming they promote witchcraft.

But it's only now that she realizes just how intense the pressure has been at the center of the Harry Potter whirlwind.

"I was very lonely with it," she says. "It's not like being in a pop group, where at least there would be three or four other people who knew what it was like to be on the inside. Only I knew what it was like to be generating this world as it became bigger and bigger and bigger and more and more people were invested in it."

After producing a book a year between 1997 and 2000, Rowling took a break. There was a three-year gap between the fourth book, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, and Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, published in 2003. During the gap, Rowling met and married Neil Murray, a Scottish doctor. They live in Edinburgh with their children David, 4, and Mackenzie, 2, as well as Jessica, Rowling's daughter from her first marriage to a Portuguese journalist.

Rowling now seems reconciled to her success. She says she lives a normal life and is rarely recognized in the street, although her graystone town house on a tree-lined street is protected by an 8-foot stone wall and iron security gates. Like the neighborhood — a leafy literary enclave that's also home to crime novelist Ian Rankin and No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency writer Alexander McCall Smith — the house exudes solid affluence, rather than extravagance.

The modestly sized lawn holds a soccer net and a colorful plastic jumble of children's toys. In the tidy family room, are crowded bookshelves, an aquarium, photo albums and board games — the trappings of any middle-class family's life.

Rowling predicts that some of Harry's fans will dislike Deathly Hallows. But she is proud of it. "The final book is what it was always supposed to be, and so I feel very at peace with that fact," she says.

As for the future, she says she has no plans.

"I can never write anything as popular again," she said. "Lightning does not strike in the same place twice."

"I'll do exactly what I did with Harry — I'll write what I really want to write, and if it's something similar, that's OK, and if it's something very different, that's OK.

"I just really want to fall in love with an idea again, and go with that."

Source: USA Today

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Posted: 18 years ago
#9

J.K. gives final official message before the midnight release

Today on her official web site, J.K. Rowling has posted her final message to the public and her fans before publication of the last Harry Potter book, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. She started off her message by saying, "Within hours you will know what happens to Harry, Ron, Hermione and the rest in their final adventure. All the secrets I have been carrying around for so long will be yours, too, and those who guessed correctly will be vindicated, and those who guessed wrongly will not, I hope, be too disappointed! As for me, I feel a heady mixture of excitement, nerves and relief. 'Deathly Hallows' remains my favourite of the series, even after sever re-reads; I cannot wait to share it with the readers who have stuck with me through six previous books." She also used this message to acknowledge everyone who was important to her and Harry over the years, including Christopher Little, who she said, "who has been with me from the beginning and who took a chance on an unknown author whom he sweetly advised not to give up the day job". She also thanked the Bloomsbury editors and everyone at Bloomsbury Childrens books. J.K. also especially thanked her American publisher, saying, "A turning point in my life was the first day I spoke to Arthur Levine for the first time. He was the American editor who had just out-bid three other publishers for the first Harry book. I felt terrified as I picked up the telephone to speak to him; the first thing he said was, 'are you terrified?' I think I loved him from that moment."
She thanked Booksellers everywhere, Christine and Angela in her office, her PA Fiddy, her sister, her husband, and her children, especially Jessica, who she was pregnant with when she wrote the first book, and doesn't know a world in which Harry Potter doesn't exist. I think most fans would agree, J.K., we feel the same way! He can't imagine a world without Harry in it, either!

You can read J.K.'s message in full by going to her official web site, clicking on the "eraser", and then opening the door which normally says "Do Not Disturb". No games or riddles are necessary to open the door this time.

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11 months ago

HBO's New Harry Potter Series: News, Updates, and Discussion Thread

Hello fellow Potterheads!⚡ Exciting times ahead in the Wizarding World! As many of you have heard, HBO has officially announced a brand-new...

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Posted by: minakrish

4 months ago

⚡ Happy International Harry Potter Day!🧙‍♂️✨ ⚡ Happy International Harry Potter Day!🧙‍♂️✨

Happy International Harry Potter Day Today, 2nd May — we celebrate the magical world that gave us spells, friendships, bravery, and...

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