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Rowling wins temporary injunction against Lexicon, publisher
Posted on Nov 10 2007 by Mad-Eye
NEW YORK - After being sued by J.K. Rowling, a publisher has agreed to delay its plans to release an encyclopedic reference work on the fictitious world of the Harry Potter novels.

RDR Books Publisher Roger Rapoport said he volunteered to halt typesetting on the planned "Harry Potter Lexicon" until a judge rules on whether the work constitutes a violation of Rowling's intellectual property rights, or the copyright on her novels held by Warner Bros.

The book, drawn on material from the fan-created Harry Potter Lexicon Web site, had been scheduled for release on Nov. 28.

A federal judge in New York gave force to the agreement by issuing an order Thursday barring completion, distribution, marketing or advance sales of the book until further notice.

Rapoport, whose small company is based in Muskegon, Mich., said he had also turned over a copy of the Lexicon to Warner Bros. lawyers, in the hopes that they would read it and decide that it didn't amount to copyright infringement.

"I think they should drop it. I'm hopeful that they will," he said.

The lawsuit, filed Oct. 31, sought an injunction blocking publication of the book because it was likely to borrow too heavily from Rowling's work and interfere with her plans to eventually publish her own version of an encyclopedia on the wizarding world.

The suit was somewhat of a surprise because Rowling had been a supporter of the Lexicon Web site, which would contain much of the same material. But she and Warner Bros. said they saw a difference between fans publishing such information for free on the Web, and putting it into a book for commercial sale.

In a statement released on her Web site, Rowling said she took "no pleasure" in the prevention of the Lexicon's publication.

"On the contrary, I feel massively disappointed that this matter had to come to court at all," the statement said. "Given my past good relations with the Lexicon fan site, I can only feel sad and disillusioned that this is where we have ended up."

The seventh and final installment in Rowling's hugely successful series, "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows," was published in July. The seven books have sold nearly 400 million copies and have been translated into 64 languages.

Source



SoB.net is Expanding Horizons!
Posted on Nov 05 2007 by PadfootReturns
New forums are opening at SoB.net. We hope you will join us in discussions of

 
We are fans of these magical fantasy books as well as others. Exciting times are in the near future. Come in and pass them with us.

Current members will notice some changes in the forums. Nothing has been removed but some forums and threads have been moved and a few names have been changed. More changes may be expected. Enjoy the new look.



Release date for Septimus Heap Book Four
Posted on Oct 31 2007 by Mad-Eye
According to Amazon.com and Fantasy Fiction.co.uk, the fourth Septimus Heap book will be called Queste and the release date for the US will be April 8, 2008, and the release date for the UK will be May 8, 2008. Australia is expected to follow sometime thereafter. Stay with SonOfaBludger.net for updates and breaking news about your favorite fantasy series.



Great news for Eragon fans!
Posted on Oct 31 2007 by Mad-Eye
Today fans of Eragon and the Inheritance trilogy got some good news--a release date for the still-unnamed book 3 and a change from trilogy to cycle. The Inheritance Cycle will now be 4 books long and the third book will be released on September 23, 2008.

ALFRED A. KNOPF BOOKS FOR YOUNG READERS TO PUBLISH BOOK THREE OF CHRISTOPHER PAOLINI’S #1 BESTSELLING INHERITANCE SERIES SEPTEMBER 23, 2008

SERIES WILL BE EXPANDED TO INCLUDE A FOURTH FULL-LENGTH NOVEL

Christopher Paolini, the #1 New York Times bestselling author of Eragon and Eldest, the first two books in his Inheritance series, will write an additional, fourth novel about his hero Eragon, it was announced today by Nancy Hinkel, Publishing Director of Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books. Originally planned as a trilogy, Inheritance will now include four complete novels written by Paolini and be named the Inheritance cycle.

Knopf also announced that it will publish Book Three, as yet untitled, in a national laydown in the United States and Canada on September 23, 2008. Book Four is not yet scheduled for publication. Book Three will be published simultaneously in the United Kingdom by Random House Children’s Books. It will also be released simultaneously in the United States as an audiobook from Random House’s Listening Library division. Random House Children’s Books’ subsidiary rights team will sell the translation rights for Books Three and Four to publishers worldwide, as it did with Eragon and Eldest.

“I plotted out the Inheritance series as a trilogy nine years ago, when I was fifteen. At that time, I never imagined I’d write all three books, much less that they would be published” said Paolini. “When I finally delved into Book Three, it soon became obvious that the remainder of the story was far too big to fit in one volume. Having spent so long thinking about the series as a trilogy, it was difficult for me to realize that, in order to be true to my characters and to address all of the plot points and unanswered questions Eragon and Eldest raised, I needed to split the end of the series into two books.”

Michelle Frey, Executive Editor with Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers, who worked with Paolini on Eragon and Eldest, will also edit Books Three and Four. The overall story is not changing, and the series will end as Paolini always envisioned.

Paolini’s fans will be able to see him talking about the fourth book in an exclusive video message that will air on his Web site, www.alagaesia.com, beginning at 5:00 pm EDT today, October 30, 2007. “Christopher has really grown as a writer,” said Hinkel. “And the next two books promise to deliver even more of his signature heart-stopping adventure, as well as thrilling revelations about the characters whom fans around the world have come to love.”

Both #1 New York Times bestsellers in the United States, Eragon and Eldest have also been international sensations. To date there are 50 foreign-language licenses for Eragon alone, and together, Eragon and Eldest have sold 12.5 million copies worldwide. In its first week on sale in North America in August 2005, Eldest sold more than 425,000 hardcover copies, making Eldest the greatest single-week sale ever recorded for a Random House Children’s Books title—hardcover or paperback—and the fastest-selling title in the publisher’s history.

Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers is an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, the world’s largest English-language children’s trade book publisher. Random House Children’s Books is a division of Random House, Inc., whose parent company is Bertelsmann AG, a leading international media company.

Source



Harry Potter is October's Wizard of the Month
Posted on Oct 04 2007 by Mad-Eye
From J.K. Rowling.com:

Harry Potter

(1980 - )
The Boy Who Lived, only known survivor of the Avada Kedavra curse and conqueror of Lord Voldemort, also known as Tom Riddle. Harry Potter joined the reshuffled Auror Department under Kingsley Shacklebolt at age 17, rising to become Head of said department in 2007.



Happy Birthday, Minerva McGonagall
Posted on Oct 04 2007 by Mad-Eye
According to J.K. Rowling.com, October 4th is Professor McGonagall's birthday, so happy birthday Professor!



OotP DVD Released December 11
Posted on Oct 04 2007 by Mad-Eye
From ComingSoon.net:

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix will be available for sell-through pricing on Single Disc in widescreen and full frame formats for $28.98 and on 2-Disc Special Edition DVD in widescreen format for $34.99. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix will also be available on HD/DVD Combo for $35.99 and on Blu-ray disc for $35.99.

Muggles and wizards alike will also enjoy a Harry Potter Limited Edition DVD Gift Set, also available December 11th. The 12-disc Limited Edition Gift Set comes in a magnificent collectible 'suitcase', and includes two-disc editions of all five Harry Potter films - Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire -- and, for the first time on DVD, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. The Harry Potter Limited Edition DVD Gift Set will be available in Standard Definition for $119.97 and on HD DVD and Blu-ray for $149.99.


The 2-Disc Special Edition DVD contains the following special features:

-- Additional Scenes: 17 minutes of never-before-seen footage.

-- Trailing Tonks - Spend a day with Actress Nat Tena and receive a very personal and often wacky tour of the Harry Potter and The Order of the Phoenix stages.

-- Harry Potter: The Magic of Editing - Director David Yates and Editor Mark Day show what a difference a good edit makes to allow the viewers to edit a scene.

-- A&E Documentary: The Hidden Secrets of Harry Potter - Viewers take a thrilling look back at the past Harry Potter films in search of clues to the mysteries of the upcoming Harry Potter saga.

-- ROM - This will include a timeline, a link to sneaks of HP6, along with other materials.

-- The HD/DVD combo contains the following special features:

-- Additional Scenes: 17 minutes of never-before-seen footage.

-- Trailing Tonks - Spend a day with Actress Nat Tena and receive a very personal and often wacky tour of the Harry Potter and The Order of the Phoenix stages.

-- In Movie Experience - Join the cast from Dumbledore's Army as they come together to share memorable moments.

-- Harry Potter: The Magic of Editing - Director David Yates and Editor Mark Day show what a difference a good edit makes to allow the viewers to edit a scene.

-- Web-Enabled Features:

-- Pick Your Favorite Scene - Assemble favorite clips from the movie to create a montage.

-- Live Community Screening - Viewers can create, organize, and invite their buddies to their very own screening.

-- Mobile Downloads - Viewers can scan and select cool images and ringtones to send to their mobile phones.


The Blu-ray disc contains the following special features:

-- Additional Scenes: 17 minutes of never-before-seen footage.

-- A&E documentary: The Hidden Secrets of Harry Potter - Viewers take a thrilling look back at the past Harry Potter films in search of clues to the mysteries of the upcoming Harry Potter saga.

-- Trailing Tonks - Spend a day with Actress Nat Tena and receive a very personal and often wacky tour of the Harry Potter and The Order of the Phoenix stages.

-- Focus Points - Enjoy these fun and fascinating "making of" featurettes to discover just what is involved to create those amazing scenes and characters.

-- Harry Potter: The Magic of Editing - Director David Yates and Editor Mark Day show what a difference a good edit makes to allow the viewers to edit a scene.

-- The Limited Edition Gift Set contains the following additions:

-- Hogwarts Challenge - A bonus disc containing a unique interactive DVD gaming experience with 14 adventure games based on the first three Harry Potter films, and containing clips from the fourth and fifth films.

-- Bonus materials - A bonus disc containing more than three hours of all-new content from the past Harry Potter films.

-- Collectibles:

-- The Harry Potter Bookmark Collection - Five unique souvenir metal bookmarks made especially for this gift set

-- Harry Potter Trading Cards - Collect them all with these four packages containing cards from the first four films



Stephen King Dishes on Harry
Posted on Aug 10 2007 by PadfootReturns
Stephen King really likes Harry Potter and admires JKR for her ability to captivate people of all ages:

His article in it's entirety:

And so now the hurly-burly's done, the battle's lost and won -- the Battle of Hogwarts, that is -- and all the secrets are out of the Sorting Hat. Those who bet Harry Potter would die lost their money; the boy who lived turned out to be exactly that. And if you think that's a spoiler at this late date, you were never much of a Potter fan to begin with. The outrage over the early reviews (Mary Carole McCauley of The Baltimore Sun, Michiko Kakutani of The New York Times) has faded...although the sour taste lingers for many fans.

It lingers for me, too, although it doesn't have anything to do with the ultimately silly concept of "spoilers," or the ethics of jumping the book's pub date. The prepublication vow of omertà was, after all, always a thing concocted by publishers Bloomsbury and Scholastic, and not -- so far as I know -- a part of either the British Magna Carta or the U.S. Constitution. Nor does Jo Rowling's impassioned protest ("I am staggered that some American newspapers have decided to publish...reviews in complete disregard of the wishes of literally millions of readers, particularly children...") cut much ice with me. These books ceased to be specifically for children halfway through the series; by Goblet of Fire, Rowling was writing for everyone, and knew it.

The clearest sign of how adult the books had become by the conclusion arrives -- and splendidly -- in Deathly Hallows, when Mrs. Weasley sees the odious Bellatrix Lestrange trying to finish off Ginny with a Killing Curse. ''NOT MY DAUGHTER, YOU BITCH!'' she cries. It's the most shocking bitch in recent fiction; since there's virtually no cursing (of the linguistic kind, anyway) in the Potter books, this one hits home with almost fatal force. It is totally correct in its context -- perfect, really -- but it is also a quintessentially adult response to a child's peril.

The problem with the advance reviews -- and those that followed in the first post-publication days -- is one that has dogged Rowling's magnum opus ever since book 4 (Goblet of Fire), after the series had become a worldwide phenomenon. Due to the Kremlin-like secrecy surrounding the books, all reviews since 2000 or so have been strictly shoot-from-the-lip. The reviewers themselves were often great -- Ms. Kakutani ain't exactly chopped liver -- but the very popularity of the books has often undone even the best intentions of the best critical writers. In their hurry to churn out column inches, and thus remain members of good standing in the Church of What's Happening Now, very few of the Potter reviewers have said anything worth remembering. Most of this microwaved critical mush sees Harry  --not to mention his friends and his adventures -- in only two ways: sociologically (''Harry Potter: Boon or Childhood Disease?'') or economically (''Harry Potter and the Chamber of Discount Pricing''). They take a perfunctory wave at things like plot and language, but do little more...and really, how can they? When you have only four days to read a 750-page book, then write an 1,100-word review on it, how much time do you have to really enjoy the book? To think about the book? Jo Rowling set out a sumptuous seven-course meal, carefully prepared, beautifully cooked, and lovingly served out. The kids and adults who fell in love with the series (I among them) savored every mouthful, from the appetizer (Sorcerer's Stone) to the dessert (the gorgeous epilogue of Deathly Hallows). Most reviewers, on the other hand, bolted everything down, then obligingly puked it back up half-digested on the book pages of their respective newspapers.

And because of that, very few mainstream writers, from Salon to The New York Times, have really stopped to consider what Ms. Rowling has wrought, where it came from, or what it may mean for the future. The blogs, by and large, haven't been much better. They seem to care about who lives, who dies, and who's tattling. Beyond that, it's all pretty much duh.


So what did happen? Where did this Ministry of Magic come from?

Well, there were straws in the wind. While the academics and bighead education critics were moaning that reading was dead and kids cared about nothing but their Xboxes, iPods, Avril Lavigne, and High School Musical, the kids they were worried about were quietly turning on to the novels of one Robert Lawrence Stine. Known in college as ''Jovial Bob'' Stine, this fellow gained another nickname later in life, as -- ahem -- ''the Stephen King of children's literature.'' He wrote his first teen horror novel (Blind Date) in 1986, years before the advent of Pottermania...but soon you couldn't glance at a USA Today best-seller list without seeing three or four of his paperbacks bobbing around in the top 50.

These books drew almost no critical attention -- to the best of my knowledge, Michiko Kakutani never reviewed Who Killed the Homecoming Queen? -- but the kids gave them plenty of attention, and R.L. Stine rode a wave of kid popularity, partly fueled by the fledgling Internet, to become perhaps the best-selling children's author of the 20th century. Like Rowling, he was a Scholastic author, and I have no doubt that Stine's success was one of the reasons Scholastic took a chance on a young and unknown British writer in the first place. He's largely unknown and uncredited...but of course John the Baptist never got the same press as Jesus either.

Rowling has been far more successful, critically as well as financially, because the Potter books grew as they went along. That, I think, is their great secret (and not so secret at that; to understand the point visually, buy a ticket to Order of the Phoenix and check out former cutie Ron Weasley towering over Harry and Hermione). R.L. Stine's kids are kids forever, and the kids who enjoyed their adventures grew out of them, as inevitably as they outgrew their childhood Nikes. Jo Rowling's kids grew up...and the audience grew up with them.

This wouldn't have mattered so much if she'd been a lousy writer, but she wasn't -- she was and is an incredibly gifted novelist. While some of the blogs and the mainstream media have mentioned that Rowling's ambition kept pace with the skyrocketing popularity of her books, they have largely overlooked the fact that her talent also grew. Talent is never static, it's always growing or dying, and the short form on Rowling is this: She was far better than R.L. Stine (an adequate but flavorless writer) when she started, but by the time she penned the final line of Deathly Hallows (''All was well.''), she had become one of the finer stylists in her native country -- not as good as Ian McEwan or Ruth Rendell (at least not yet), but easily the peer of Beryl Bainbridge or Martin Amis.

And, of course, there was the magic. It's what kids want more than anything; it's what they crave. That goes back to the Brothers Grimm, Hans Christian Andersen, and good old Alice, chasing after that wascally wabbit. Kids are always looking for the Ministry of Magic, and they usually find it.

One day in my hometown of Bangor, I was walking up the street and observed a dirty-faced boy of about 3 with scabbed knees and a look of extreme concentration on his face. He was sitting on the dirt strip between the sidewalk and the asphalt. He had a stick in his hand and kept jabbing it into the dirt. ''Get down there!'' he cried. ''Get down there, dammit! You can't come out until I say the Special Word! You can't come out until I say so!''

Several people passed by the kid without paying much attention (if any). I slowed, however, and watched as long as I could -- probably because I have spent so much time telling the things inhabiting my own imagination to get back down and not come out until I say so. I was charmed by the kid's effortless make-believe (always assuming it was make-believe, heh-heh-heh). And a couple of things occurred to me. One was that if he had been an adult, the cops would have taken him away either to the drunk tank or to our local Dreamboat Manor for a psychiatric exam. Another was that kids exhibiting paranoid-schizophrenic tendencies are simply accepted in most societies. We all understand that kids are crazy until they hit 8 or so, and we cut their groovy, anything-goes minds some slack.

This happened around 1982, while I was getting ready to write a long story about children and monsters (It), and it influenced my thinking on that novel a great deal. Even now, years later, I think of that kid -- a little Minister of Magic using a dead twig for a wand -- with affection, and hope he didn't consider himself too old for Harry Potter when those books started appearing. He might have; sad to think so, but one thing J.R.R. Tolkien acknowledges that Rowling doesn't is that sometimes -- often, really -- the magic goes away.

It was children whom Ms. Rowling -- like her Fear Street precursor, but with considerably more skill -- captivated first, demonstrating with the irrefutable logic of something like 10 bazillion books sold that kids are still perfectly willing to put aside their iPods and Game Boys and pick up a book...if the magic is there. That reading itself is magical is a thing I never doubted. I'd give a lot to know how many teenagers (and preteens) texted this message in the days following the last book's release: DON'T CALL ME TODAY I'M READING.

The same thing probably happened with R.L. Stine's Goosebumps books, but unlike Stine, Rowling brought adults into the reading circle, making it much larger. This is hardly a unique phenomenon, although it seems to be one associated mainly with British authors (there was Huckleberry Finn, of course, a sequel to its YA little brother Tom Sawyer). Alice in Wonderland began as a story told to 10-year-old Alice Liddell by Charles Dodgson (a.k.a. Lewis Carroll); it is now taught in college lit courses. And Watership Down, Richard Adams' version of The Odyssey (featuring rabbits instead of humans), began as a story told to amuse the author's preteen daughters, Juliet and Rosamond, on a long car drive. As a book, though, it was marketed as an ''adult fantasy'' and became an international best-seller.

Maybe it's the British prose. It's hard to resist the hypnotism of those calm and sensible voices, especially when they turn to make-believe. Rowling was always part of that straightforward storytelling tradition (Peter Pan, originally a play by the Scot J.M. Barrie, is another case in point). She never loses sight of her main theme -- the power of love to turn bewildered, often frightened, children into decent and responsible adults -- but her writing is all about story. She's lucid rather than luminous, but that's okay; when she does express strong feelings, she remains their mistress without denying their truth or power. The sweetest example in Deathly Hallows comes early, with Harry remembering his childhood years in the Dursley house. ''It gave him an odd, empty feeling to remember those times,'' Rowling writes. ''[I]t was like remembering a younger brother whom he had lost.'' Honest; nostalgic; not sloppy. It's a small example of the style that enabled Jo Rowling to bridge the generation gap without breaking a sweat or losing the cheerful dignity that is one of the series' great charms.

Her characters are lively and well-drawn, her pace is impeccable, and although there are occasional continuity drops, the story as a whole hangs together almost perfectly over its 4,000-plus page length.

And she's in full possession of that famously dry British wit, as when Ron, trying to tune in an outlaw news broadcast on his wizard radio, catches a snatch of a pop song called ''A Cauldron Full of Hot Strong Love.'' Must have been some witchy version of Donna Summer doing that one. There's also her wry send-up of the British tabloids -- about which I'm sure she knows plenty -- in the person of Rita Skeeter, perhaps the best name to be hung on a fictional character since those of Jonathan Swift. When Elphias Doge, the perfect magical English gentleman, calls Rita ''an interfering trout,'' I felt like standing up and giving a cheer. Take that, Page Six! There's a lot of meat on the bones of these books -- good writing, honest feeling, a sweet but uncompromising view of human nature...and hard reality: NOT MY DAUGHTER, YOU BITCH! The fact that Harry attracted adults as well as children has never surprised me.

Are the books perfect? Indeed not. Some sections are too long. In Deathly Hallows, for instance, there's an awful lot of wandering around and camping in that tent; it starts to feel like Ms. Rowling running out the clock on the school year to fit the format of the previous six books.

And sometimes she falls prey to the Robinson Crusoe syndrome. In Crusoe, whenever the marooned hero requires something, he ventures out to his ship -- which has conveniently run aground on the reef surrounding his desert island -- and takes what he needs from stores (in one of the most amusing continuity flubs in the history of English literature, Robinson once swims out naked...then fills his pockets). In much the same manner, whenever Harry and his friends get into a tight corner, they produce some new spell -- fire, water to douse the fire, stairs that conveniently turn into a slide -- and squiggle free. I accepted most of these, partly because there's enough child in me to react gleefully rather than doubtfully (in a way, the Potter books are The Joy of Magic rather than The Joy of Cooking) but also because I understand that magic is its own thing, and probably boundless. Still, by the time the Battle of Hogwarts was reaching its climax of clumping giants, cheering portraits, and flying wizards, I almost longed for someone to pull out a good old MAC-10 and start blasting away like Rambo.

If all those creative spells -- produced at the right moment like the stuff from Crusoe's ship -- were a sign of creative exhaustion, it's the only one I saw, and that's pretty amazing. Mostly Rowling is just having fun, knocking herself out, and when a good writer is having fun, the audience is almost always having fun too. You can take that one to the bank (and, Reader, she did).

One last thing: The bighead academics seem to think that Harry's magic will not be strong enough to make a generation of nonreaders (especially the male half) into bookworms...but they wouldn't be the first to underestimate Harry's magic; just look at what happened to Lord Voldemort. And, of course, the bigheads would never have credited Harry's influence in the first place, if the evidence hadn't come in the form of best-seller lists. A literary hero as big as the Beatles? ''Never happen!'' the bigheads would have cried. ''The traditional novel is as dead as Jacob Marley! Ask anyone who knows! Ask us, in other words!''

But reading was never dead with the kids. Au contraire, right now it's probably healthier than the adult version, which has to cope with what seems like at least 400 boring and pretentious ''literary novels'' each year. While the bigheads have been predicting (and bemoaning) the postliterate society, the kids have been supplementing their Potter with the narratives of Lemony Snicket, the adventures of teenage mastermind Artemis Fowl, Philip Pullman's challenging His Dark Materials trilogy, the Alex Rider adventures, Peter Abrahams' superb Ingrid Levin-Hill mysteries, the stories of those amazing traveling blue jeans. And of course we must not forget the unsinkable (if sometimes smelly) Captain Underpants. Also, how about a tip of the old tiara to R.L. Stine, Jo Rowling's jovial John the Baptist?

I began by quoting Shakespeare; I'll close with the Who: The kids are alright. Just how long they stay that way sort of depends on writers like J.K. Rowling, who know how to tell a good story (important) and do it without talking down (more important) or resorting to a lot of high-flown gibberish (vital). Because if the field is left to a bunch of intellectual Muggles who believe the traditional novel is dead, they'll kill the damn thing.

It's good make-believe I'm talking about. Known in more formal circles as the Ministry of Magic. J.K. Rowling has set the standard: It's a high one, and God bless her for it.


Having someone as brilliant as Stephen King in your corner has got to give J.K. Rowling even more respect in the literary community. Let us hope that these encouraging words will spur her on to even greater heights! This article was obtained from EntertainmentWeekly.com.



Why Couldn't My Mom Have Named ME Harry Potter!?!
Posted on Aug 03 2007 by PadfootReturns
Yes I realize there are very obvious reasons. But even so, can you believe the luck. Just because they're named Harry Potter, they get to meet JKR!!! I think I'm changing my name!! 

Bradenton's Harry Potter is suddenly in big demand. Profiled in Wednesday's Herald and the Sun, the 78-year-old has been inundated by media outlets hither and yon. Would you believe, Geraldo, too?

"But that's not the best part," said Potter's amused wife, Jan.
One of the calls she took was from the author — J.K. Rowling.
"When she identified herself, I went, 'Oh, suuure,' " Jan Potter said. "But it was her. She was calling from England."

Rowling told her she wants to host a gathering for all of the real-life Harry Potters. It is tentatively set for December in either New York City or London, and Rowling will pick up the tab for everything.

Now our Harry Potter needs to renew his passport. Which ought to be fun. "I can see it now," he said. "I go to the courthouse, tell them I would like a new passport. And my name is Harry Potter."

Read the amazing story in the Sun-Herald.



Surprise! Surprise! Deathly Hallows Breaks U.S. Sales Records!
Posted on Aug 03 2007 by PadfootReturns
Are you really surprised? I'm not. DH broke the record set by HBP for 24 hour sale mark. HBP sold 6.9 million books in the U.S.  during the first 24 hours after release.  DH crushed that record selling a whopping number, 8.3  million in the first day of release. DH also set the 10 day record selling 11.5 million. But that should not surprise any Harry Potter fan. We knew it was going to be big. Read about it in Business Weeks Financial News.



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