Categoria: 2002

Famosa autora corresponde-se com criança enferma

Tradução: Pê Agá
Revisão: Adriana Snape

Grondahl, Paul. “Famous author corresponds with ailing child,” Albany Times Union, December 22, 2002

CLIFTON PARK, N.Y. — Once upon a time, a little girl who believed in magic fell in love with the Harry Potter books her mom read to her.

Her name was Catie Hoch. One day, doctors found a tumor in her kidney. She was 6. Neuroblastoma, an aggressive childhood cancer, quickly spread to her liver, lungs and spinal column.

Surgeons removed her kidney and adrenal gland, three-quarters of her liver and portions of her lungs. She endured seven rounds of high-dose chemotherapy, radiation and numerous clinical drug trials.

The sparkle drained from her blue eyes. She lost her curly blond hair. The treatments made her violently ill.

“She never complained or asked, “Why me?”‘ Catie’s mom said. “She was a ray of sunshine.”

Catie left her dad, two younger brothers and friends behind in their suburban Albany home when she and her mom moved to New York City while she received treatment at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.

Catie rode the train to Penn Station dressed as Harry Potter. Sick, scared and living in a strange place, Catie took comfort in J.K. Rowling’s best-selling stories of good triumphing over evil.

She and her mom stayed at a Ronald McDonald House for 18 months, returning home for a visit every six weeks or so. They read all the Harry Potter books, one after the other.

They were nearing the end of the third book in the series, “Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban,” when doctors said Catie was losing her fight with cancer.

Catie had a wish. She wanted to have her mother read her book four, “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire.” But Rowling was still writing it and the book wasn’t due out for many months. Catie did not have that long.

A friend of a friend sent an e-mail to Rowling’s publisher in England.

A short while later, an e-mail arrived.

“Dear Catie. I am working very hard on book four at the moment … on a bit that involves some new creatures Hagrid has brought along for the care of Magical Creatures classes. You are an extremely brave person and a true Gryffindor. With lots of love, J.K. Rowling (Jo to anybody in Gryffindor).”

Rowling sent Catie a plush stuffed owl named Pigwidgeon (a character in her book) for Valentine’s Day along with a card. Two weeks after Valentine’s Day, Rowling wrote again.

Catie dictated her replies to her mom, who typed them into their home computer and sent them to the author by e-mail. Mostly, Catie talked about the intricacies of the Harry Potter plot, her family and friends. And Rowling replied.

“I love you even more for telling me to make book four long, because I am worried about how long it’s getting. You’ve cheered me up a lot. Lots of love. Your friend right back. Jo XXX”

Catie defied doctors’ predictions and made it through her March birthday. She received a card and presents from Rowling, a plush cat and a dream decoder book.

Spring arrived, and Catie lapsed into a coma. When she awoke, she asked her mom to invite several of her girlfriends. Catie gave her American Girl dolls to her friends.

The end was near. Catie’s mom relayed this information to Rowling in an e-mail.

A phone call came to the Hochs’ Clifton Park home from Edinburgh, Scotland, on a Sunday afternoon. It was Rowling. She wanted to read parts of book four to Catie.

“We laid Catie down on the living room couch, and Jo read to her over the phone. Catie’s face just lit up,” her mom recalled.

Rowling called three or four more times to read to her, but Catie started failing so badly she couldn’t receive any more calls.

Catie died May 18, 2000. She was 9.

Three days later, Rowling wrote a message of condolence.

“Dear Gina and Larry. I have been away again. I’ve only just received your message. I have been praying that Catie would be released, that she would go where she can wait happily and painlessly for the rest of us to join her. But there are no words to express how sorry I am.

“I consider myself privileged to have had contact with Catie. I can only aspire to being the sort of parent both of you have been to Catie during her illness. I am crying so hard as I type. She left footprints on my heart all right. With much love, Jo”

Rowling continued to write to Catie’s family in the ensuing weeks and shared in their feelings of grief and loss.

“I look back at Catie’s e-mails to me and happiness shines out of each and every one. Please don’t thank me for anything I did, because I feel truly honoured to have known your daughter, however briefly. Jo XXX”

Catie’s parents … Gina Peca, a homemaker, and Larry Hoch, a tax lawyer for General Electric Co. … established a nonprofit public charity in Catie’s memory.

The Catie Hoch Foundation raised $120,000 in two years and made gifts to Sloan-Kettering and to Ronald McDonald houses in New York, Boston and Albany to help children with neuroblastoma, the third most common form of pediatric cancer.

The foundation recently received a surprise, unsolicited donation of $100,000 from Scotland. It game from J.K. Rowling. And Catie’s mother told her story.

On the Web: http://www.catiehochfoundation.org.

Copyright (c) 2002, The Associated Press

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Rowling encontra um significado para a fama

Tradução: Camila Weasley
Revisão: Adriana snape ** Adriana Snape

McQuillan, Rebecca. “Rowling finds a meaning in fame,” Bookshelf, December 2002
The creator of Harry Potter tells Rebecca McQuillan how celebrity and its trappings have given her the ability to campaign in memory of her mother

SHE may be an internationally renowned author with a fortune to rival Madonna’s but according to J K Rowling, it is not the financial rewards of success that have given her the most satisfaction since she shot to fame as the creator of Harry Potter. It is something far more personal. “For me, being able to campaign and fund-raise for multiple sclerosis is the most personally meaningful thing to have come out of being famous,” she says. “It would mean everything to me if I thought even one person did not have to go through what my mother did.”

In the two years since Rowling became patron of the Multiple Sclerosis Society Scotland, she has foregone her well-guarded privacy to campaign and fund-raise on its behalf, driven on by the memory of her mother, Anne, who died of respiratory failure linked to MS when she was 45. Looking back now on her first two years as a campaigner, Rowling reveals that the personal thanks of MS sufferers and their families has meant a huge amount to her. “The biggest feedback I’ve got is from letters and people coming up to me in the street – people who have MS themselves or those with friends and relatives with MS – saying how happy they are to see the subject getting some media coverage,” she says.

A Hallowe’en Ball she hosted at Stirling Castle the weekend before the launch of {Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets }raised £275,000, smashing the target of £100,000. “I can’t tell you how happy that made me; I was still beaming about it at the film premiere two days later. We got enough money on that one night to double the number of MS nurses in Scotland, though we still need the commitment of health boards and the Scottish Executive.”

Talking exclusively to The {Herald }as a £500,000 MS research group, largely funded by Rowling, is launched in Aberdeen, the author says she is not just hopeful that a cure will be found – she is positive. The question is when. But she condemns the Scottish Executive’s failure to fund research into the disease or draw up national guidelines on care standards, even though Scotland has the highest per capita incidence of MS in the world.

She knows how it feels to watch a desperately loved relative suffer for lack of better care and treatment. Her mother, whom she has described as an energetic, youthful figure with a contagious laugh, a keen gardener who swam, played badminton, and walked the dog for miles, started having trouble lifting the teapot when the young Joanne was just 12. Anne put the pins’n’needles feeling she experienced down to a touch of rheumatism or a trapped nerve. But within two years it had spread up her arm and across her chest. At the age of 35, she was told she had multiple sclerosis, a neurological condition in which the body’s immune system malfunctions and starts attacking the brain and the spinal chord.

She remained “relentlessly cheerful” when anyone asked her about her health but when she was just over 40 she started using a wheelchair outside the house and, at 42, was using a walking frame inside it. Rowling last saw her just before Christmas 1990 and on New Year’s Eve, she died.

Rowling, 37, who has a nine-year-old daughter, Jessica, and is pregnant with her second child, deeply regrets that her mother did not have the help of specialist carers, such as nurses and physiotherapists, who could have helped her to overcome the isolation that increased as her mobility diminished. “Physiotherapy helped her physically when she received it, though we never seemed able to establish on-going care. People came and went; she was living in a rural area – just as so many people with MS are in Scotland,” she says.

“I saw my mother’s health decline steadily from the age of 35 until her death at 45. The care was intermittent and inadequate and she never came into sight of a specialist MS nurse. Nobody should have to suffer that lack of care or isolation in a rich, western country.”

Although no-one knows yet what causes MS, researchers believe genes may play a part. For Rowling, that worry does surface sometimes. “I was told when I was about 18 that there was a ‘familial tendency’ by a doctor I saw at university,” she says. “I understood that to mean that I’m a bit more likely to get MS than the next person, though a lot of people are the only ones in their family with MS and there seems to be no hereditary link at all. The only time I’ve ever been scared was last year when I hurt my back and my legs went numb for a while. It turned out that I was being paranoid, but it did bring back a lot of memories of my mother’s first symptoms.”

Rowling did not lack information about the condition when her mother was diagnosed because, like her mother, her reaction was to try to read as much as she could about it. She praises the MS Society Scotland (“I’ve never met so many dedicated people packed into such a small place”) which, for some Scottish MS sufferers, is the only source of information and support.

Informing the wider public about the disease is not so easy but TV can help. In the Emmy award-winning drama {The West Wing}, President Jed Bartlett, played by Martin Sheen, has MS and manages to keep it quiet for years. Rowling is pleased that the disease features in the programme, not least because she and her family are “obsessed” by it. “Sometimes we have to remind ourselves that Jed Bartlett is fictional, so as to stop ourselves writing him fan mail,” she says. The more ardent among her Harry Potter fans will recognise the sentiment.

She points out that the fictional President Bartlett does not have a very severe form of MS, but, even so, agrees it is “very useful” to see a character living with the condition. It has not always been so sensitively portrayed. “I will never forget watching an episode of {Fame }with my mother when I was about 15 – she had just been diagnosed. A beautiful young dancer popped up in this particular episode and the curly-haired keyboard player character, whose name escapes me, fell in love with her. The dancer became progressively more ill and was diagnosed with MS in the space of about 20 minutes. And I remember my mother saying tearfully ‘but does she end up his girlfriend?’ Well, of course she didn’t – it was {Fame }- people weren’t allowed to be ill in {Fame}. She never appeared again. So I am all for President Bartlett fighting MS onscreen. I’ll bet there are a few people out there who found out what MS was from {The West Wing}, which can’t be bad.”

While TV may be doing its bit, she is much less impressed with the action, or lack of it, taken over the past three years by the Scottish Executive. Despite of the high incidence of MS in Scotland, where 10,400 people have the disease, many of them between 20 and 40, the Scottish Executive does not fund any research into the condition. Nor, as yet, has the executive set national clinical standards for MS care or assigned a higher priority to neurological conditions, as has been done in England and Wales.

Rowling says that the lack of progress makes her feel “perplexed and angry”.

“Perplexed because people with MS will tell you that the standard of care varies greatly depending on the area of Scotland in which you live. Angry – it’s obvious why.”

The lack of funding for research is “deeply disappointing”.

“The Westminster government does fund a small percentage of research into MS, but here in Scotland, nothing – and yet MS is more prevalent in Scotland than in any country in the world.”

There has been one major step forward in the past year. In February, the UK government forged a deal with pharmaceutical companies whereby Beta Interferon would be made available to those who could benefit from it, ending the bane of postcode prescribing. Rowling was delighted when she heard, not least because she felt that the argument against its use – its expense – was fallacious. “Compare the cost of maintaining somebody’s health and mobility – possibly so that they can continue working – with the cost of relegating them to a life-time of state-funded or family care. I’ve met people with MS whose partners have been forced to give up work to care for them full-time. I would be interested to hear how anyone thinks providing Beta Interferon is a more expensive option than having two people give up their jobs and become state-supported.”

The new group in Aberdeen is an important development for MS research in Scotland, where work on the fundamental causes of the disease is not well-represented.

The team will be headed by the internationally-renowned MS expert, Dr Chris Linnington, who has worked on MS at the Max Plank Institute for Neurobiology, Martinsried, Germany, for the past 12 years.

Dr Linnington has high hopes for the research group and believes that if developments in research continue at their current rate, there could be important breakthroughs on the horizon.

“I would be surprised if we don’t see significant progress in the next 10 years. It may not be a cure, but it may mean we detect it earlier and find treatments that will delay the progress to such an extent that people may live well into old age.”

Aberdeen’s fame as a centre for medical imaging will help the researchers. Using nuclear mag-netic resonance they will be able to see what is happening inside the brains of sufferers. They will also investigate the reasons why the immune system appears to attack the optic nerve first in MS sufferers and to what extent genetic and environmental factors might contribute to causing the disease.

Rowling says she would be happy with any advance the group manages to make. For her part, she will continue campaigning. Given her commitment to awareness-raising, she might be expected to try and write a character with the disease into one of her multimillion-selling Harry Potter novels. Well, it’s not quite as simple as that. As Rowling explains: “One problem with the world of Hogwarts – or not, depending on how you look at it – is that, being wizards, they tend not to have to suffer what the rest of us do. I spent ages working out what magic could and couldn’t do with regard to illness and decided that normal human ailments – such as MS – could be cured. It’s a bit harder in the real world, but we’re going to see what we can do up in Aberdeen.

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Harry Potter e Eu

Tradução: Virag
Revisão: {patyda}
*OK Categorias e Conteúdo

“Harry Potter and Me,” A&E Biography, 13 November 2002
This is the American version of 2001’s BBC Christmas Special

Narrator: Just a few years ago, JK Rowling was broke and jobless, a single mother who spent her afternoons writing in Edinborough coffee shops while her baby slept. Today she is rich and famous, the most popular children’s author on the planet.

(“‘Cause It’s Witchcraft” plays)

The Potter books she created evolved into international bestsellers and the first Harry Potter move was a blockbuster success. Her legions of fans are desperate for the next installment of the boy wizard’s adventures. But it is JK Rowling’s story that is the most amazing of all; only now has she agreed to tell it in her own words.

JK Rowling: A lot of rubbish has been written. Not necessarily malicious rubbish, but things get exaggerated and distorted and I just thought maybe the moment has come just to um, just to say how it happened. Truthfully. And then I can at least go easy to my bed and think, well the truth’s out there. And people can take it or leave it.

Narrator: Harry’s arrival on the door step of his muggle, or non-magic relatives, the Dursley’s, is the start of an epic journey. Harry grows up thinking he’s just an ordinary boy until he finds out that in the wizard world his name is legendary and he’s destined to attend Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.

Then Harry’s adventures really begin as he and his classmates, Hermione and Ron, battle with the dark forces of magic; a story that JK Rowling has meticulously planned to tell over seven books, one for each school year.

It was a journey that began back in 1990.

JK Rowling: I was going by train from Manchester to London, sitting there, thinking of nothing to do with writing and the idea came out of nowhere and I could see Harry very clearly; this scrawny little boy and it was the most physical rush of excitement. I’ve never felt that excited about anything to do with writing. I’ve never had an idea that gave me such a physical response. So I’m rummaging through this bag to try and find a pen or a pencil or anything. I didn’t even have an eyeliner on me. So I just had to sit and think. And for four hours, because they train was delayed, I had all these ideas bubbling up through my head.

(Excerpt from PS/SS read by Stephen Fry: Harry was small and skinny, with brilliant green eyes and jet black hair that was always untidy. He wore round glasses and on his forehead was a thin, lightning shaped scar.)

I can’t describe the excitement to someone who doesn’t write books except to say it was that incredibly elated feeling you get when you’ve just met someone with whom you might eventually fall in love. That was . . that was the kind of feeling I had getting off the train. As though I’d just met someone wonderful and we were about to embark on this wonderful affair. That kind of elation, that light headedness and that excitement. And, um, so I got back to my flat in Clapham Junction and started writing. And I’ve now been writing for 10 years, so it’s been a good affair.

(Images & Video of King’s Cross Station)

For me, King’s Cross is a very, very romantic place. Probably the most romantic station purely because my parent’s met here. So that’s always been part of my childhood folklore. My dad had just joined the navy, my mum had just joined the Wrens. They were both traveling up to Abroath in Scotland from London and they met on the train pulling out of King’s Cross. So, um, I wanted Harry to go to Hogwarts by train. I just love trains, I’m a bit nerdy like that, and obviously therefore it had to be King’s Cross.

(Excerpt from SS/PS Film:

Harry: Excuse me, sir, can you tell me where I might find Platform 9 ¾? 9 ¾?
Conductor: Think you’re being funny, do ya?)

Like a lot in the Harry Potter books, it was reality with a twist. I wanted to find another entrance to the magical world, but I didn’t want a kind of time warp thing. I like the entrances to be places you can only find if you have the knowledge. So anyone who ran at the barrier with enough confidence would be able to break through, um, onto this platform between platform 9, platform 10.

(Excerpt from SS/PS Film:

Mrs. Weasley: Best do it at a bit of a run if you’re nervous.
Ginny Weasley: Good luck.)

I wrote Platform 9 ¾ when I was living in Manchester and I wrongly visualized the platforms and I was actually thinking of Euston. Um, so anyone who’s actually been to the real platforms 9 and 10 in King’s Cross will realize they don’t bear a great resemblance to the platforms 9 and 10 as described in the book. So that was just me coming clean there. I was in Manchester. I couldn’t check.

It was five years from the train journey where I had the original idea to finishing the book. And during those five years this mass of material was generated, some of which will never find it’s way into the book – will never need to be in the books – it’s . . . it’s just stuff I need to know for my own pleasure – partly for my own pleasure and partly because I like reading a book where I have the sense that the author knows everything. They might not be telling me everything but you have that confidence that the author really knows everything.

(Rowling on the floor, papers everywhere, going through notes, papers, notebooks on the Harry Potter Universe)

Ok, so this is um, to the untrained eye might look like a pile of wastepaper, but um, this is 10 years work. As you can see I file meticulously. And I know where every single piece of paper is (coughs in sarcasm). I’ve dragged out a few bits and pieces.

So this is the name of everyone in Harry’s year. And all these little symbols mean what house they’re in, how magical they are, what their parentage is because I needed this later for the death eaters and so on and the various allegiances that would be set up within the school.

I like this. This was ages – this was ’98 and this was me trying to find words for the Dementors. So I’ve all these Latin words written all over the inside of my diary.

I used to cover just about anything with writing as you can see. This is my application for housing benefit in 28 Gardiner’s Crescent which is where I – the first place I lived, obviously, when I was in Edinburgh um, treated with complete lack of respect by me.

Discarded first chapters of book one. I reckon I must’ve got through fifteen different alternative chapters of book one. The reason for which I discarded each of them were they all gave too much away. And in fact if you put all those discarded first chapters together, almost the whole plot is explained.

This is an old notebook in which I worked out, and again I don’t want you to come close on this, that is the history of the death eaters.

Where’s my Portuguese diary (in US we call them Planners) gone? There it is. So this is a Portuguese diary, as you can see. Not filled in. Uh, because I’ve never filled in a diary in my life. But it had paper in it to write on. So we have another draft of book one, chapter one.

I drew a lot of pictures. I drew them for no one but me. I just wanted to what, what characters looked like. So anyway, that was Argus Filch. No prizes. Snape obviously. That is um, Harry, arriving in Privet Drive with Professor Mcgonagall, and Hagrid, and Dumbledore. That was a Gringott’s cart. Mirror of Erised. That’s the Weasley’s. Professor Sprout. I like this one. I thought I’d lost this picture actually. Because I was going to show it to Chris Columbus. Um, and true to form I only found it when it was no use and they’d already, they had already filmed that bit anyway. But this is how the entrance to Diagon Alley works in my imagination. So Chris is going to murder me when he finds out I had a pic of it all along and he was asking me how it worked. But it was buried in boxes.

(Excerpt from SS/PS Film – entrance to Diagon Alley.

Hagrid: Welcome, Harry, to Diagon Alley.)

Narrator: As JK Rowling continued to build Harry’s world, her own fell apart. She arrived in Edinburgh in 1993, after a brief time teaching English in Portugal. There she’d married, had a baby, and then left her husband. She had no job, virtually no money, and a tiny daughter to support.

JK Rowling: That was the phase where the ‘penniless single mother’ sort of tag to my name came along, which is true. But it wasn’t enough that I was a penniless single mother, I had to write on napkins ‘cause I couldn’t afford paper and then we started straying into the realms of the ridiculous. Let’s not exaggerate here, let’s not pretend I had to write on napkins, because I didn’t. They’ve started sort of adding little bits and pieces that just weren’t necessary because the stark reality was bad enough.

(Cut to outside Rowling’s old apartment in Edinburgh)

I haven’t been back here since 1994, when I moved out. And um, I don’t like being back here, which is no offense to the place, but I’ve uh, I’ve kind of avoided this place since I moved out in um, just in deference to the fact that it was a pretty unhappy six months. I did a lot of writing here. I would say it’s here that really the first book became a book, as opposed to three chapters and a collection of notes. So are we going to go in then? Off we go.

You couldn’t really objectively speaking look around and say ‘Well, you’ve made a success of your life.’ I was 28, I was living on benefit. I was living on about 70 pounds a week, I had no work. And so, suddenly being in position where actually I couldn’t support myself because obviously anyone who’s tried to get state child care will know that you’ll be very lucky to get the kind of child care that means you can even work part time. So it was all a real shock to the system.

(Inside the apartment)

Oh my god. This is um. This is, this is so different. This. . oh my gosh. Oh wow. This is so so different to how it was when I was here. This is nice. This is really nice. And I’m really glad. You just expect time to stand still when you’ve walked away from a place, and I should know better. I have just been . . . every time I come anywhere near this place or passed it in a bus or a taxi I’ve imagined as it was when I . . when I lived here. And it’s, it’s all been . . . I would have been delighted to live here. This is great actually. It is. It’s like an exorcism. Everything was just very very very dilapidated. And always filthy, which wasn’t the flat’s fault, it was normally my fault because people very often say to me ‘how did you do it, how did you raise a baby and write a book?’ And the answer is – I didn’t do housework for four years. I am not superwoman. And um, living in squalor, that was the answer.

During the day I was writing in cafes, as everyone famously knows. But can I just say for the record, once and for all, ‘cause it’s really irritating me, I did not write in cafes to escape my unheated flat. Because I am not stupid enough to rent an unheated flat in Edinburgh in mid-winter. It had heating. I went out and wrote in cafes because the way to make Jessica fall asleep was to keep her moving in the push chair. So I used to take her out, tire her out, put her in the push chair, walk her along, moment she fell asleep into the nearest café and write.

(Enters Nicolson’s Café)

So this is Nicolson’s, where I wrote huge parts of the book. Um, this was a really great place to write because there are so many tables around here that I didn’t feel too guilty about taking a table up for too long. And, um, that was my favorite table. I always wanted to try and get that one because it was out of the way in the corner.

(Words on screen: Back in 1997. Rowling shown in corner café window writing.)

It was just great to look up while you were writing and stop and think about things and be able to look out on the street, which was quite busy. They were pretty tolerant of me in here partly because one of the owners is my brother-in-law. And I used to say to them ‘Well you know, it gets published and I’ll try to get you loads of publicity.’ And it was all just a big joke. No one ever dreamt for a moment that was going to happen.

To muster the willpower to keep going with no promise of publication, obviously I must have really believed in the story and I did. I really believed in it. But it was more a feeling of – I have to do right by this book – I have to give it my best shot. But at the same time my realistic side was reminding me that a completely unknown author always has a struggle to get published. And who knew? Just because I thought it was so great was no guarantee that anyone else would like it.

Narrator: JK Rowling sent her manuscripts off and lined herself up a literary agent, only to find that publishing houses threw Harry on the reject pile.

Christopher Little (Literary Agent): In the very beginning, we were very excited about it in, in the agency. But it was a very difficult book to sell. Um, and an, quite a large number of publishers turned it down. It was too long, it dealt with going away to school, which is something that was regarded as being not politically correct.

Barry Cunningham (Former Editor at Bloomsbury): Well of course everybody now denies turning it down. And, um, uh, and want to distance themselves from this, uh, from this terrible terrible error.

JK Rowling: Is it nice to name names? You’re nodding, but I don’t think it’s very nice to name names.

Christopher Little (Literary Agent): It was all the major publishers we know.

Barry Cunningham (Former Editor at Bloomsbury): Among them Puffin and Collins, for sure. It’s like turning down the Beatles, isn’t it?
The very first question she asked me was ‘how do you feel about sequels?’ And then she told me the entire story of Harry Potter, all through the entire series. I realized of course that she knew exactly about this world and where it was going and who it was going to include, how the character would develop and of course it was fascinating because this doesn’t normally happen. Children’s book characters don’t grow up in real time normally, you know, their locked in the time they are and the sequels are endless re-runs of the same kind of adventures. But to have a character developing in real time as his age developed was a really interesting idea.

I gave Jo one memorable piece of advice. Uh, after our first lunch together we were sitting down and I said, ‘The important thing, Jo is for you to –

JK Rowling: – keep your real job.’ He said, um, Barry said, and Christopher, my agent also said to me –

Christopher Little (Literary Agent): – children’s authors, you know, really don’t make any money.

JK Rowling: They, both of them, were at pains to say to me ‘We really like the book, but um, you know it’s not that commercial.’

Narrator: Bloomsbury publishing acquired what would become the biggest phenomenon in modern literature for only 2,500 pounds. That’s about $4000.

JK Rowling: That was, second to the birth of my daughter, the best moment of my life. Christopher phoned me up on a Friday afternoon and he said it so matter of factly.

Christopher Little (Literary Agent): She was speechless, certainly for at least the period of time it takes to build enough steam for a big scream, I think.

JK Rowling: And he said ‘Are you alright, are you still there?’ And I said ‘Um, well it’s just that my only lifetime ambition has just been fulfilled.’ And I was – that was the best. The best moment. Nothing since has come anywhere close to the fact that I was actually going to be in print. It was going to be an actual book in a bookshop. The best moment, oh my God.

Narrator: JK Rowling introduced both Harry and her readers to a magical world in Harry Potter and Philosopher’s Stone. Not only does Harry find out he’s a wizard, but a famous one at that. He’s renowned as the miraculous survivor of a brutal attack by the evil Lord Voldemort, who murdered his parents. Through his adventures at Hogwarts, Harry begins to find out the mysteries of his past.

Philip Pullman (writer): The orphan is an excellent protagonist for any story because they’re free and yet they’re bereft. They’re bereft of what gives a child most of the sense of who he or she is and where they come from and where they belong. So they cut adrift in some strange way. They have this great need – because we all need to know where we come from and we need to find where we will eventually belong.

(Excerpt from SS/PS Film:

Sorting Hat: Hmm. Difficult. Very difficult. Plenty of courage, I see. Not a bad mind either. There’s talent, oh yes, and a thirst to prove yourself. But where to put you?

Harry Potter: Not Slytherin, not Slytherin.

Sorting Hat: Not Slytherin, eh?)

JK Rowling: When he first arrives at school he’s totally unsure, he has the feelings we all have – as adults as well – when you enter a new place and you don’t know what’s going on. But greatly exaggerated by the fact that he is set apart even there by his fame and his ancestry. And, um, this curious quirk, um, that meant that he survived this, what should have been a fatal, attack.

He’s every boy, but with a twist.

Narrator: JK Rowling mixture of the everyday and the magical, the matter-of-fact, and the mystical permeates her books.

(Excerpt from SS/PS read by Stephen Fry: ‘You are here to learn the subtle science and exact art of potion making’, he began. He spoke in barely more than a whisper, but they caught every word. Like Professor McGonagall, Snape had the gift of keeping a class silent without effort. ‘As there is little foolish wand waving here, many of you will hardly believe this is magic. I don’t expect you will really understand the beauty of the softly simmering cauldron with it’s shimmering fumes, the delicate power of liquids that creep through human veins, bewitching the mind and ensnaring the senses. I can teach you how to bottle fame, brew glory, and even stopper death.’ )

JK Rowling: I don’t believe in witchcraft, though I’ve lost count of the number of times I’ve been told I’m a practicing witch. Ninety – let’s say ninety five percent at least, of the magic in the books in entirely invented by me. And I’ve used things from folklore and I’ve used bits of what people used to believe worked magically just to add a certain flavor, but I’ve always twisted them to suit my own ends. I mean, I’ve taken liberties with folklore, um, to suit my plot.

Witches and wizards are a huge part of children’s literature. It’ll never go away, I don’t think it will ever, ever, ever go away, 100 years, 200 years time there’ll be another kind of wizard’s story.

Narrator: In 1997, JK had moved on to the second book in the series, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. Book one was doing well, but nowhere near its popularity today. JK Rowling was still making her living as a teacher.
Then something happened that would change her world forever. In 1997, Harry Potter cast a spell on America. American publishers got caught up in a bidding war for the book.

Arthur A. Levine (VP, Scholastic Publishing): My boss would say, ‘ok, do you love it?’ and I’d say ‘Yes, I love it.’ ‘Ok, stay in the auction. Do you love it this many dollars?’ ‘Uh, yeah.’ I kept saying yes, I just was getting more and more nervous, um, because at the end of the day this is more money than I had ever paid any author as an advance, let alone an advance for a first novel. It was unprecedented.
And she said, ‘Do you love it $105,000?’ And I said, ‘Yes! Yes!’ And she said, ‘Well go ahead and make that offer.’ And that was it.

Narrator: The deal with Scholastic meant that at last JK Rowling could fulfill her life long ambition: to become a full time writer.

JK Rowling’s memories of her childhood have profoundly influenced her writing. She was born in 1965 in Chipping Sodbury, and grew up near Bristol with her parents, Ann and Peter and her younger sister, Di. She admits to being bookish and bossy as a child, not unlike one of Harry’s best friends.

(Excerpt from SS/PS Film:

Ron: Wingardium Leviosa!

Hermione: No, stop stop stop. You’re going to take someone’s eye out. Besides, you’re saying it wrong. It’s levi-o-sa. Not levio-sa.

Ron: You do it then if you’re so clever.)

JK Rowling: When I started to write Hermione, when I actually got hold of a pen, she came incredibly easily, um, largely because she’s me.

(Excerpt from SS/PS Film:

Ron: Go on, Go on.

Hermione: Wingardium Leviosa. [feather floats])

I was swotty, and I had that, you know, sense of insecurity underneath. Trying to compensate for that by getting everything right all the time. And like Hermione, I projected a false confidence, which I know was very irritating to people at times, but underneath it all, I felt completely and utterly inadequate, which is why I completely understand Hermione.

Narrator: Even as a very young child, JK Rowling loved to write, completing her first book at the age of six.

JK Rowling: The first finished book I did was a book called ‘Rabbit,’ um, about a Rabbit called Rabbit. Thereby revealing the imaginative approach to names that has, um, stood me in such good stead ever since. Um, and I wrote the Rabbit stories for ages to the point where, um, a series, a series of books about Rabbit which were very dull, um, illustrated by the author.

The one book I could say that specifically influenced my work was, um, The Little White Horse, by Elizabeth Goudge. She always listed the exact food they were eating. Wherever you were in the book, whenever you had a meal, you knew exactly what was in the sandwiches. And I just remember finding that so satisfying as a child.

(Excerpt from PoA, read by Stephen Fry: There were shelves upon shelves of the must succulent looking sweets imaginable. Creamy chunks of nougat, shimmering pink squares of coconut ice, fat honey-colored toffess, hundreds of different kinds of chocolate in neat rows. There was a large barrel of Every Flavor Beans and another of Fizzing Whizbees, the levitating sherbet balls that Ron had mentioned.)

As I moved into my teens I was into very dramatic, gritty realism, entirely influenced by Barry Hines and Kes. Unfortunately I didn’t live in a northern town. My urban landscape wasn’t very developed because I lived in Chepstow, in the middle of a lot of fields and it’s quite hard to be a disaffected urban youth in the middle of a muddy field.

(Outside cottage in Chepstow)

So this is a cottage, obviously, where I lived from the age of nine. My bedroom’s furthest on the right and, uh, I spent an awful lot of time in that bedroom writing. I have very happy memories of this place. It’s quite emotional being back here actually, because, um, I’ve only once been – because my dad left this house shortly after my mother died. So I’ve only once been back here since my mum died.
I remember hanging out of my bedroom window, smoking behind the curtains late at night. My father will not be happy to hear that. I wasn’t very clever about that either. Because, you know, I used to leave the cigarette, the cigarette ends were, you know, below the window, I mean – ‘Oh yes, someone from the pub dad’s been throwing them into the garden again.’

It was at Wydean that I met Sean, which has been a very important friendship in my life – huge friendship in my life. I always felt a bit of an outsider and that might, perhaps explain why Sean and I were so close because he came in late, like me he didn’t have a local accent, and so I think, to an extent, we both felt like outsiders in the place, and that probably formed quite a big bond between us.

So this is, um, Sean, to whom the second Harry Potter book is dedicated, and Ron owes a fair bit to Sean. I never set out to describe Sean in Ron, but Rean has a Sean-ish turn of phrase.

(Excerpt from SS/PS:

Ron: Whew. We made it. Can you imagine the look on McGonagall’s face if we were late? (McGonagall transforms from cat to human) That was bloody brilliant.

McGonagall: Oh, thank you for that assessment, Mr. Weasley)

Sean: I think with the, the Ron character, I think what comes through, to me anyway, maybe I’ve misinterpreted it, is that he, he’s always there, or thereabouts well-intentioned.

JK Rowling: He’s always there when you need him, that’s Ron Weasley. Sean was the first of my friends to pass his driving test. And, um, he had this old Ford Anglia, old claptrap Ford Anglia – turquoise and white – which is now quite famouse as the car that the Weasley’s drive. Well I was obviously going to give the Weasley’s Sean’s old car. And that car was freedom to us. And my heart still lifts when I see an old Ford Anglia, which is a bit sad.

(Excerpt from CoS read by Stephen Fry: It was as though they had been plunged into a fabulous dream. This, thought Harry, was surely the only way to travel, past swirls of turrets of snowy cloud in a car full of hot bright sunlight with a fat pack of toffees in the glove compartment and the prospect of seeing Fred and George’s jealous faces when they landed smoothly and spectacularly on the sweeping lawn in front of Hogwarts Castle.)

He was the coolest man in school. He had a turquoise Ford Anglia –

Sean: Turquoise Ford Anglia –

JK Rowling: And you were pretty cutting edge I think.

Sean: I was in those days, yeah.

JK Rowling: Yes.

Sean: It’s all gone horribly wrong since, but –

JK Rowling: Spandau Ballet haircut. Sorry.

Sean: And, um, of an evening she’d phone up and say, ‘Come pick me up,’ and I’d drive down there and we’d head off somewhere else in the car. So the car became –

JK Rowling: And sit under the Severn bridge

Sean: And sit under the Severn bridge or else where?

JK Rowling: And discuss life. And drink. It’s a very sad life isn’t it? This – this is what we thought was exciting when we were seventeen. We used to sit down here in a Ford Anglia. Yeah, those urban kids, they don’t know what they miss.

Narrator: JK Rowling escaped small town life by attending the University of Exeter. There she earned a degree in French and Classics before moving to London. Then, a bombshell hit. Her mother, Ann, and been battling with Multiple Sclerosis for a decade when the disease took her life.

JK Rowling: Mum dying was like this depth charge in my life. The pain of her, of her going and just missing such a huge part of her life – she was 45 when she died which is far too young to die – far too young to leave your family. Never knew what we all ended up doing and so on. For mum there would have been a particular glory in being a writer because she was the real book lover. And so, it does add a little bit of poison to the knife, if you like, that the one thing that I think she really would have prized she never knew.

Perhaps two or three days after I had the idea for Harry, um, I disposed of his parents in a – in quite a brutal way. Not a cruel . . . not cruel . . . it didn’t read in a cruel way, but I mean it was very cut and dry, nothing lingering, no debate about how it had happened or . . and that stage, no real discussion of how painful that was going to be. Well, of course, mum – mum died six months after I had written my first attempt at an opening chapter. Um, and that made an enormous difference, uh, because I was living it – I was living what I had just – what I had just written.

The Mirror of Erised is absolutely entirely drawn from my own experience of losing a parent. ‘Five more minutes, just please God, give me five more minutes.’ It’ll never be enough.

(Excerpt from SS/PS Film:

Harry: (at Mirror of Erised) Mum? Dad?)

After five minutes of telling her all about Jessie and, you know, because she – she has a grandchild whom obviously she never saw, and then I’d just be trying to tell her about the books and then I’d realize that I hadn’t asked her what was it like to be dead. Fairly significant question. But I can well imagine that happening. But it would never be long enough, that was the point of Chapter Ten. You know, it’s tougher on the living and you’ve just got to get past it.

(Excerpt from SS/PS Film:

Quirrel/Voldermort: KILL HIM!)

Death is an extremely important theme throughout all seven books, I would say possibly the most important theme. If you are writing about evil, which I am, and if you are writing about someone who’s, essentially, a psychopath – you have a duty to show the real evil of taking human life.

(Excerpt from SS/PS Film:

Quirrel/Voldermort: (screaming) What is this magic?)

More people are going to die. And, um, they, well there’s at least one death that I. . . that I . . that is going to be horrible – horrible to write. To re-write actually because it’s already written. But, um, it has to be.

Narrator: Some parents have questioned whether children can cope with the darker side of the books.

JK Rowling: It’s very interesting how parents think that they have the right to dictate to you because you’re writing reading materials for their children. I got a horrible letter on book two – very, very stuffy letter – from a mother saying, um: ‘This was a very disturbing ending. And I’m sure a writer of your ability will be able to think of a better way to end the next book.’ Um – so basically ‘liked it ‘till 2/3 of the way through but, um, if you could really address this issue in the future – and I’ll be back in touch if I find you unacceptable.’ And it was at that point that I snapped. And I wrote back and said: ‘Don’t read the rest of the books. Yours sincerely, Jo Rowling.’ There’s no point, I mean, there’s no point, I’m not taking dictation here.

Do I care about my readers? Profoundly and deeply. But do I ultimately think that they should dictate a single word of what I write? No. No, I am the only one who should be in control of that. And, I’m not writing to make anyone’s children feel safe.

Narrator: 1999 marked JK Rowlings transformation from popular author, to international superstar with the launch of Book Three – Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. For the first time ever, three books by the same author topped the New York Times best-seller list. Her book signings began to resemble rock concerts. At the stroke of midnight on July 8, 2000, Potter-mania took hold with the release of Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. Thousands of fans waited in line for hours for a copy.

(Random scenes from the release of Goblet of Fire:

Bookshop Clerk: “Don’t read the ending before the beginning! Don’t do that!”

Young Reader: “Oh, God, this is definitely not the way it’s supposed to start.”)

In Toronto, an audience of 12,000 gathered for the biggest book reading ever. JK Rowling was terrified.

JK Rowling: I’ve never been good at speaking in public, in fact, it’s a borderline phobic. And I thought: ‘What have I done?’
(Excerpt from Toronto Reading:

Announcer: Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls – JK Rowling!)

And I felt so pathetically, woefully inadequate for the task ahead. Just me with my book, shaking. And I had two earplugs, so I could only very distantly hear the noise of the crowd.

(Excerpt from Toronto Reading:

JK Rowling: Good Morning. I am delighted and terrified to be here to be honest with you.)

So I did my reading. And once I was up there, I was actually ok.

(Excerpt from Toronto Reading:

JK Rowling: But Dudley kept running his hand nervously over his backside . . . )

And then I finished and I said ‘Thank you very much’ and that’s – whatever I said – and I just wanted to hear what it actually sounded like. So I took out one of the plugs. And it was as though my ear drum exploded. I actually heard the noise that everyone else could hear in the stadium. It was unbelievable.

I you could take me back and you were able to tell me exactly what has happened . . . first off I wouldn’t believe you at all. Then if you managed to convince me of the truth, then I don’t know what I would have done because I would have thought, ‘I won’t be able to handle that, I won’t be able to cope with that.’ So I don’t know, um, what I would have done. And there’ll be people watching this who will never believe that because of the money, but the reality of it is has been a strange and terrible thing at times.

How ironic is it that I spent five years imagining myself into the mind of a boy who became suddenly famous. I mean I spent five years doing that – imagining what it would be like to live in total obscurity and suddenly be famous.

It’s never pleasant, when they go digging in areas that have absolutely no relevance to your work. I mean, there’s a lot of my life that has absolutely nothing to do with Harry Potter. Journalists who shall remain nameless – though I can’t really think why ‘cause I think these people should pay for their crimes – um . . went after my father. . . um. . . and pursued a very horrible line of questioning with him along the lines of ‘Why does your daughter hate you?’ Which was a bit of a shock for my dad as I’d just got off the phone from him. And, um, fairly upsetting. And they came and door stepped me – they came to my front door and started banging on the front door, and, um, that really wrong-footed me completely because in my total naivety I though, ‘Oh if I just stay at home and work,’ you know. So, um, I think then I realized this isn’t going to go away.

Narrator: And in some places the books have sparked controversy. JK Rowling has become the center of a modern day witch hunt. Some Christian groups claim the Potter books promote the occult. In South Carolina, parents have tried to ban Harry from the classroom.

(Excerpt from a Department of Education Meeting:

‘The books, uh, we believe, promote the religion of witchcraft, Wicca.’
‘I’m deeply concerned. I spent a lot of time in prayer crying because I’ve seen the effects of putting negative thoughts into the minds of our children.)

JK Rowling: The pause is due to all the very rude things I’d like to say to these people bubbling up and now I’ll say the polite version. And the polite version is: That’s not true. Not once has a child come up to me and said, ‘Due to you, I’ve decided to devote my life to the occult.’ People underestimate children so hugely – they know it’s fiction. When people are arguing from that kind of standpoint I don’t think reason works tremendously well. But I would be surprised if some of them had read the books at all.

Narrator: So far, nothing can cloud JK Rowling’s success. The long awaited Harry Potter movie achieved the biggest opening weekend in film history.

JK Rowling: The closer the viewing came, the more frightened I became to the point where when I actually sat down to watch the film, I was terrified. Because I just thought, ‘Oh please don’t do anything that’s not in the book, please don’t take horrible liberties with the plot.’

I liked it, which was a relief, as you can imagine. Yeah, I’m, I’m happy.

I am loving writing book five. Harry gets to go to places in the magical world we haven’t yet visited. More boy/girl stuff inevitably – they’re 15 now – hormones working overtime. And Harry has to ask some questions that I hope the reader will think, ‘Well why hasn’t he asked that before?’ Harry find out a lot more – a lot more in this book, um, about his past.

Narrator: Harry Potter’s life won’t completely unfold until book seven. JK Rowling has already written its last chapter.

JK Rowling: This is the thing that I was very dubious about showing you. And I don’t really know why because what does this give away. But this is the final chapter of book seven. Um, which I’m still dubious about showing you. I don’t know. Well I feel like the camera’s going to be able to see through the folder. So this is it, and I’m not opening it for obvious reasons. This is. . . this is really where I wrap everything up, it’s the epilogue. And I, I basically say what happens to everyone after they leave school – those who survive – because there are deaths – more deaths coming. It was a way of saying to myself, ‘Well you will get it, you will get to book seven one day. And then you’ll need this!’ So I’d just like to remind all the children I know who come around my house and start sneaking into cupboards that it’s not there anymore – I don’t keep it at home anymore for very, very, very obvious reasons. So there it is.

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Gostosuras ou Travessuras: J.K. Rowling transforma Castelo de Stirling em Hogwarts

Tradução: Bruno Radcliffe
Revisão:

Mcpherson, Lynn. “Trick & Treat: J.K. Rowling turns Stirling Castle into Hogwarts for Halloween fundraiser,” The Sunday Mail, November 2002
HARRY POTTER creator JK Rowling is planning to transform historic Stirling Castle into her famous school of witchcraft and wizardry, Hogwarts. She is hosting a £250-a-head Halloween charity ball at the castle, which promises to be one of the most glamorous events of the year.

Rowling, 36, is patron of the Multiple Sclerosis Society in Scotland, who will receive all the profits from the bash, and selected the top-secret guest list herself.She’s even sent out a cheeky letter with the invite, gently poking fun at the schoolboy wizard character that has made her a multi-millionaire. She asks guests if they are planning to celebrate Halloween by “hiding from the hordes of Harry Potter lookalikes banging on your front door? “Or would you prefer to come to a stunning Celtic Halloween Ball and allow me to apologise in person for inflicting so many round, plastic spectacles on the world?”

No expense has been spared for the black-tie ball, which is sponsored by the author’s publisher, Bloomsbury. Rowling promises her guests “a truly magical night without a single badly-drawn-in-lipstick lightning scar”.

On arrival, guests will be greeted by witches, wizards and magicians, while the music will be supplied by pipers, clarsach and flute players. And, just like Hogwarts, burning torches will decorate the castle’s Great Hall, where a four-course dinner will be served, before a charity auction. But there is a serious side to the ball, on November 1. Rowling’s mother Anne died from multiple sclerosis in 1990 after a long battle with the illness. In her letter, Rowling writes: “Over 10,000 people have MS in Scotland, making it the MS capital of the world, yet the level of research and care generally available here can best be described as appalling. “My mother died of MS at the age of 45 and this is therefore a cause that is very dear to my heart.” Mum-of-one Rowling has admitted her mother’s death is responsible for the fact Harry Potter is an orphan and the pivotal role death and bereavement play in her books.

And she says she still cries when thinks of her mother. She said: “I miss her almost daily and I feel desperately sad for all she missed. “She died before either of her daughters married, never met her granddaughter and I never told her about Harry Potter. I still can’t write about her without crying.”

JK Rowling’s spokeswoman last night confirmed the glittering event was to take place, and added: “Jo has written a private letter, and the event was her idea. “It’s something that’s been discussed right from the start of her involvement with She’s very much a hands-on patron.” She refused say who had been invited, adding: “It’s a private invitation list and will be a fairly exclusive event.”

Rowling, who married 30-year-old doctor Neil Murray on Boxing Day last year, has already helped organise the Scottish charity premiere of the film Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone.

The event raised money for the MS Society and Maggie’s Cancer Care Centres in Scotland.

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A mágica por trás de Harry Potter

Tradução: Sarah Lee
Revisão: Adriana Snape

The Magic Behind Harry Potter
Interviewer: Lesley Stahl
Source: Sixty Minutes (CBSNews)
Date: October 3, 2002
Context: Publicity tour for Book 5

Quote: “No one knew a thing about me. And the only explanation for this was word of mouth with children.” — J.K. Rowling

Next week, children and adults around the world will finally be able to buy the book they’ve been waiting three years for: “Harry Potter And the Order Of The Phoenix”.

This fifth installment in the Harry Potter series will no doubt set all sorts of new publishing records. Right now, 8.5 million copies have been printed just for the U.S. market.

60 Minutes first introduced you to J.K. Rowling, Harry Potter’s creator, almost four years ago. And at the time, she was just beginning to understand the phenomenon she had produced.

Correspondent Lesley Stahl interviewed Rowling in a broadcast that first aired October 3, 2002.

When we first introduced you to Harry Potter a few years ago, more than a few people out there said, ‘Harry who?’

Today, there may be someone somewhere who doesn’t know him, but we can’t find him.

Harry Potter is the wizard hero of the world’s most popular novels – four so far, with three more to come. He’s also the star of two blockbuster movies.

Nothing has ever happened in the world of children’s books or any other kind of books, for that matter, to even approach the Harry Potter phenomenon.

But when we first introduced audiences to Joanne Rowling, Harry’s creator, the third book was just about to come out, and the scale of her success was just beginning to sink in.

Joanne Rowling, 36, currently the world’s most successful author, lives and writes in the shadow of Edinburgh Castle in Scotland.

“The basic plot is that Harry’s not only a wizard, he’s a famous wizard, which he doesn’t find out until he’s 11,” says Rowling.

“He finds out why he’s got this lightning-shaped scar on his forehead. He finds out that his parents were murdered and what he’s supposed to do about it, and also to confront the person who murdered them.”

Harry Potter is an old-fashioned good-triumphs-over-evil story, full of quirks and surprises: boys on broomsticks, owls that deliver the mail. It’s set in a British boarding school just for young wizards called Hogwarts.

There are a million funny names like that: Headmaster Dumbledore, Evil Lord Voldemort and Harry’s know-it-all friend Hermione. It’s very apparent that Joanne Rowling was born to play with words.

“I used to collect names of plants that sounded witchy, and then I found this, ‘Culpeper’s Complete Herbal,’ and it was the answer to my
every prayer: flax weed, toadflax, fleawort, Gout-wort, grommel,
knotgrass, Mugwort.”

Harry Potter was born in Rowling’s imagination nearly 10 years ago. She says she started by drawing pictures of the characters.

The drawings, which she once considered using in the books, are amazingly detailed: Harry, his awful cousin Dudley, Hogwart’s magical potions, Professor McGonagall.

Those images were turned into the vivid words that are now captivating so many kids: “Professor McGonagall watched them turn a mouse into a snuffbox. Points were given for how pretty the snuffbox was but taken away if it had whiskers.”

“I met this mother in a signing queue not long ago who said to me, ‘Oh, and my son is here and he wants to meet you, but he was too ashamed of the state of the book to ask you to sign it,’” remembers Rowling.

“And it was all wrinkly and covered in rubbish and the cover was
falling off. And I made her go and get him because that is exactly the
state I want to see my books in. I have no track with these people, these very anally retentive people, who don’t crack the spine when they read a book. I say crack the spine and read it because that’s what it’s there for.”

Harry Potter has now turned Rowling into a publishing figure of historic proportions.

“It’s unprecedented in American children’s books. It’s unprecedented in English children’s books,” says Eden Ross Lipson, children’s book editor of The New York Times. “There’s nothing that compares to the velocity of the success of Harry Potter.”

What makes Rowling’s success all the more remarkable is what it
followed. In 1994, when her marriage to a Portuguese journalist collapsed, she moved to Edinburgh, Scotland. She had few friends and fewer prospects and ended up on welfare, actually skipping meals to make sure she had enough money for her four-month-old baby.

And while she thought of herself as a writer, she had never published anything.

“Someone, a journalist, actually said to me the other day, ‘So you
wrote your whole first novel on napkins, paper napkins,’” says Rowling. “No, I did not write on napkins. I could afford pens and paper, yeah.”

But she was on welfare, and in bad straits. “I was in worst straits than I’ve ever been before,” she says.

By then, she had been playing with the idea of Harry Potter, and she says she’s always written, ever since she was a little girl growing up in southern England. Even when she worked as a teacher, she was just biding time.

She showed 60 Minutes a photocopy from a textbook when she was teaching in Portugal, scrawled with notes. “This was what I was supposed to be doing with the children, and on the back, you’ve got all the ghosts for Gryffindor.”

Gryffindor is one of the dormitories at Hogwart’s. And her random scribblings were actually all part of a master plan. Long before she was published, Rowling already had seven Harry Potter books meticulously plotted out on grids, one for each year Harry spends at wizards school.

But before you assume she’s compulsively organized, you should know that her filing system consists of many, many boxes in her bedroom.

It’s one thing to have boxes full of notes, another thing entirely to turn them into a book. Back in 1994 with a baby daughter and no money, Rowling knew she had to write it quickly or forget it.

“I decided it was going to be my last-ditch attempt to get
this book published. And so I’d walk around Edinburgh pushing her in
the pushchair and wait till she fell asleep. And then I would literally run to the nearest cafe and write for as long as she stayed asleep.”

Most often, she wrote in Nicholson’s Restaurant, where they
let her stay for hours, nursing just one cup of coffee. Finally, she
had a manuscript to send off – only to have it rejected.

“Four or five publishers turned it down, I think, and the consistent criticism was, ‘It’s far too long for children,’” says Rowling, who then began looking in a directory for a literary agent. She came across Christopher Little’s name.

“These things can sit in a pile for ages. They’re known as the slush pile. They’re the unsolicited and, you know, it’s the also-rans usually,” remembers Little. “And just by chance, two days afterwards, picked up this pile and went off to a lunch because somebody was turning up late. And inside, I started reading about Harry Potter and, you know, my toes curled.”

He says he knew it would be a success. However, several more publishers turned Harry Potter down before the British company Bloomsbury finally bought it.

“That moment when he told me that Bloomsbury wanted to take the book, second only to the birth of my daughter, was the happiest moment of my life,” says Rowling, who realized that this was not the everyday children’s book once book sales were climbing steadily without any publicity.

“No one knew a thing about me. And the only explanation for this
was word of mouth with children,” says Rowling.

“The publishers printed, you know, very few books, as they often
do, and the demand came not from anywhere else but out of the playgrounds,” adds Little.
Kids in Stamford, Conn., are typical of the fans creating the Harry Potter avalanche.

“It’s very different. It’s not like a normal, average book,” says R.J. “It’s, like, so imaginative. It’s so detailed, you can, it’s almost like watching the book instead of reading it.”

“She has a way of making things funny and still mysterious at the
same time,” says Lauren.

That’s what has kids turning off the TV and computer games. And it’s not just kids — adults are into Harry Potter, too. In Britain, there’s even a special grownup edition just for them. Everyone’s drawn in by the same thing: adventure and suspense set in a wizard world that’s magical and somehow still recognizable.

“She has this parallel universe, just a little off-center, that has a banking system, it has a newspaper, it has a ministry, a ministry of
magic,” says Lipson. “It is so complete. And because it’s complete, she can keep pulling rabbits out of this hat.”

Just the fact that both girls and boys are excited about the same book sets Harry Potter apart. In fact, Rowling’s publisher originally tried to mask the fact that she’s a woman by using her initials, J.K. on the books.

“Traditionally, boys don’t like to read books written by girls,” says Little. “Girls read books written by anybody. But boys have this sort of peculiar sort of sexist thing.”

Now, kids who don’t like to read or who have never read before are picking up Rowling’s books, reading them and wanting to read more.

“There’s nothing better than that,” says Rowling. “I’ve twice met mothers of dyslexic sons and one of them told me that their sons did read the entire books themselves … This absolutely supports my view that children are grossly underestimated.”

Rowling would love to be left alone to spin out the rest of her series at a quiet corner table in an Edinburgh cafe. But she’s so famous now, that it’s getting harder to do. There’s also enormous pressure to turn Harry Potter into a marketing machine.

“We’re getting over 100 inquires a day, and whether it’s Sony Corporation or Microsoft or Boeing, to people that make, you know, cups and saucers,” says Little.

“If people could see the kinds of offers I’ve had to use Harry in advertising and publicity and all sorts of ridiculous, frankly, things,” says Rowling. “I’ve said no to absolutely all of them.”

But Rowling is no longer the sole proprietor of Harry Potter. She’s sold Warner Bros. the rights to put him on the silver screen and everything that goes with that.

The movie “Harry Potter and the Sorceror’s Stone” was a huge, holiday hit and the most successful film of 2001.

As for Rowling, she’s still working on book number five, and she recently got married … no, not to a wizard, but to a Scottish doctor.

© MMIII, CBS Worldwide Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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NÃO haverá um oitavo livro de Potter

Tradução: Frede_Potter
Revisão: {patylda}

Mzimba, Lizo. “There will NOT be an eighth Potter Book,” CBBC Newsround, 21 October 2002
JK Rowling and her agents have categorically denied that an eighth Harry Potter adventure is planned. Reports in UK newspapers on Sunday and Monday had claimed that these were the titles for the remaining two Harry Potter adventures and a “secret” eighth book:
Harry Potter and The Pyramids of Furmat
Harry Potter and the Chariots of Light
Harry Potter and The Alchemist’s Cell

But JK Rowling, speaking from Edinburgh, has exclusively told Newsround: “No one, literally no one, not in my family or anybody, knows the titles to Book Six or Seven. “And I’m going to keep it that way for now.”

No eighth adventure

And a spokesman from the Christopher Little Literary Agency confirmed that the author is only planning seven books. “There is absolutely no truth in reports that JK Rowling is planning an eighth Harry Potter adventure, or that these are the titles of the remaining books to be published.”

How did the rumours start?

The false titles seem to have emerged in early 2000. Someone in America – we don’t know who – appears to have made up the three names and registered them along with Harry Potter and The Goblet of Fire. (At that time, the fourth book hadn’t been published and the title was still a secret). Later in 2000, all four titles were transferred to Warner Bros – although it’s not clear why this happened.

Seven years at Hogwarts

The misunderstanding that these were the names of the new Harry Potter books took place when journalists checked what names were owned by Warner Bros. Those journalists assumed (wrongly) that these must be unpublished titles. JK Rowling has said in the past that the whole Harry Potter saga fits neatly into seven books, one for each of Harry’s years at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. And if she ever did write an eighth book, then it wouldn’t be another adventure, but a book for charity which would be the encyclopedia of the Harry Potter world. At the moment JK Rowling is putting the finishing touches to the fifth book Harry Potter and The Order of The Phoenix. The film of Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets will be released next month.

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Newsround conversa exclusivamente com J.K. Rowling

Tradução: patriciaruiva
Revisão:

Mzimba, Lizo. “Newsround talks exclusively to J.K. Rowling,” CBBC Newsround, 19 September 2002
Lizo spoke exclusively to JK Rowling about her reaction to her court case victory and how book five, the Order of the Phoenix is going. Here’s the full interview!

Lizo: How do you feel now that the court case is over?

JK: I’m so relieved. This court case has dragged on for a few years. I’m a really happy woman today!

Lizo: How do you feel about the fact that she made up so many things to try and win the case?

JK: You can imagine the relief that finally the truth is actually out there. While it was going on there’s nothing you can say, you feel powerless. The judge found for us very quickly – I’m really happy.

Lizo: There have been quite a few rumours about when book five will be out – when do you think it’ll be ready?

JK: There’s a lot of book done – that’s all I want to say because if I give a date and then I pass it everyone will be upset.

I will say that I have a beginning, a middle and an end – you could read it all the way through and I know a lot of Harry Potter fans will say just give it to us but I’m perfectionist and I want a bit more time to tweak.

I really am getting there and I have to laugh when I read the bits about writers block because I don’t think I’ve ever been blocked in my life!

I’m loving the writing and now the revising and I’m getting on really well.

Lizo: You can’t tell us whether that will be weeks or month?

JK: I’d rather not say just in case I have a bus accident and things get knocked off track! It won’t be too long – that’s all I’ll say!

Lizo: Is there anything that you can tell us about book five? Any new characters?

JK: Well, we’ve obviously got a new Defence Against The Dark Arts teacher because Professor Moody wouldn’t want the job again having been locked in a trunk for a year! It’s a woman this time.

You may see a little more of Mundungus and there’s a new sorting hat song.

Lizo: Is the book going to be as long as book four was?

JK: Yes, it is looking that way – it’s already passed Azkaban, so I think yes, we are looking at Goblet of Fire length.

Lizo: Do you keep an eye on the internet and all the rumours about when the new book will be out?

JK: For my own mental health it’s best not to go onto the internet and type in Harry Potter too often because it’s scary!

I will say that while the court case was going on someone told me to go and have a look at a couple of the fan sites and I did and they were very very supportive of me.

It meant a lot to me at a time when I was wondering whether anyone would ever believe that I hadn’t stolen from someone else -I’d like to say thank you to those people.

Lizo: Is this book is definitely called The Order Of The Phoenix?

JK: Yes

Lizo: We’ve had loads of kids e mailing in saying how glad they are the court case is over – they’ve followed it for two years – what is your message to them?

JK: Thank you. Thank you for believing that I was telling the truth. It did mean a lot to me.

People often think that when you’re successful things like this don’t hurt you and they couldn’t be more wrong.

It was really hard for a while and I couldn’t be more grateful to those people for saying that – it means a lot to me.

Lizo: The other thing is that we’ve had so many e mails from children saying ‘lets not hassle JK about the book, when it’s ready we’ll be really eager to read it’ what’s your message to them?

JK: I like them even more! They’re very unusual children because even my own daughter has no problem asking me about the book!

Lizo: Finally, what’s your message to children who’ve been waiting for the next book for a two and half years?

JK: It’s coming and it’s a lot nearer than you’d think if you read some newspapers – just trust me.

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Um tipo de magia

Traduzido: GabihMosena
Revisado: Adriana Snape

Rowling, J.K. “A Kind of Magic,” The Daily Telegraph (London), June 9, 2002

Abstract: A kind of magic J. K. ROWLING wrote the first Harry Potter book while living on the poverty line, bringing up her daughter single-handedly. Here she recalls her struggle and introduces a book of short stories published in aid of the Magic Million Appeal for one-parent families.

My involvement with the National Council for One Parent Families came about either very simply, or very circuitously, depending on how you look at it.

The simple version involved Andy Keen Downs, the charity’s deputy director, sitting down in my habitually untidy kitchen, pulling out a sheaf of notes from his briefcase and embarking on what I’m quite sure would have been a marvellously persuasive, well-constructed and beautifully delivered speech. “Andy,” I interrupted, in that harassed voice by which lone parents can often be identified, “you’d like me to be Patron, wouldn’t you?” “Well, we’re calling it Ambassador,” said Andy tentatively, cut off mid-flow. “OK, I’ll do it,” I said, “but could we please discuss the details on the way to school, because Sports Day starts in five minutes.” And so we discussed the National Council for One Parent Families while watching the egg-and-spoon races; a fitting start, I felt, for my association with a charity devoted to helping those parents whose lives are a constant balancing act.

The long version of how I became Ambassador includes my personal experience of single motherhood and my anger about our stigmatisation by some sections of the media. That story starts in 1993, when my marriage ended. I was living abroad and in full-time employment; leaving my ex-husband meant leaving my job and returning to Britain with my baby daughter and two suitcases full of possessions. I knew perfectly well that I was walking into poverty, but I truly believed that it would only be a matter of months before I was back on my feet. I had enough money saved to put down a deposit on a rented flat and buy a highchair, a cot and other essentials. When my savings were gone, I settled down to life on slightly less than pounds 70 a week.

Poverty, as I soon found out, is a lot like childbirth – you know it’s going to hurt before it happens, but you’ll never know how much until you’ve experienced it. Some of the newspaper articles written about me have come close to romanticising the time I spent on Income Support, because the cliche of the writer starving in a garret is so much more picturesque than the bitter reality of living in poverty with a child.

The endless little humiliations of life on benefits – and let us remember that six out of 10 families headed by a lone parent live in poverty – receive very little media coverage unless they are followed by what seems to be, in newsprint at least, a swift and Cinderella-like reversal of fortune. I remember reaching the checkout, counting out the money in coppers, finding out I was two pence short of a tin of baked beans and feeling I had to pretend I had mislaid a pounds 10 note for the benefit of the bored girl at the till.

Similarly unappreciated acting skills were required for my forays into Mothercare, where I would pretend to be examining clothes for my daughter that I could not afford, while edging ever closer to the baby-changing room where they offered a small supply of free nappies.

I hated dressing my longed-for child from charity shops, I hated relying on the kindness of relatives when it came to her new shoes; I tried furiously hard not to feel jealous of other children’s beautifully decorated, well-stocked bedrooms when she went to friends’ houses to play.

I wanted to work part-time. When I asked my health visitor about the possibility of a couple of afternoons’ state childcare a week she explained, very kindly, that places for babies were reserved for those who were deemed “at risk”. Her exact words were, “You’re coping too well.” I was allowed to earn a maximum of pounds 15 a week before my Income Support and Housing Benefit were docked. Full-time private childcare was so exorbitant that I would need to find a full-time job paying well above the national average. I had to decide whether my baby would rather be handed over to somebody else for most of her waking hours, or be cared for by her mother in far from luxurious surroundings. I chose the latter option, though constantly feeling I had to justify my choice at length whenever anybody asked me that nasty question, “So what do you do?” The honest answer to that question was: I worry continually, I devote hours to writing a book I doubt will ever be published, I try hard to hold on to the hope that our financial situation will improve, and when I am not too exhausted to feel strong emotion I am swamped with anger at the portrayal of single mothers by certain politicians and newspapers as feckless teenagers in search of that holy grail, the council flat, when in fact 97 per cent of us have long since left our teens.

The sub-text of much of the vilification of lone parents is that “couple families” are intrinsically superior, yet during my time as a secondary-school teacher I met a number of disruptive, damaged children whose home contained two parents. There are those who still believe head-count defines a real family, who believe that marriage is the only right context in which to have children, but I have never felt the remotest shame about being a single parent. I have the temerity to be rather proud of the period when I did three jobs single-handedly (the unpaid work of two parents and the salaried job of teacher – for I did eventually manage to take my Post-Graduate Certificate of Education, thanks to the generosity of a friend who lent me money for childcare).

There is a wealth of evidence to suggest that it is not single-parenthood but poverty that causes some children to do less well then others. When you take poverty out of the equation, children from one parent families can do just as well as children from couple families.

My family’s escape from poverty to the reverse has been only too well documented and I am fully aware, every single day, of how lucky I am; lucky because I do not have to worry about my daughter’s financial security any more; lucky because when what used to be Benefit Day comes around there’s still food in the fridge and the bills are paid. But I had a talent that I could exercise without financial outlay: anyone thinking of using me as an example of how single parents can break out of the poverty trap might as well point at Oprah Winfrey and declare that there is no more racism in America.

People just like me are facing the same obstacles to a full realisation of their potential every day and their children are missing opportunities alongside them. They are not asking for handouts, they are not scheming for council flats, they are simply asking for the help they need to break free of life on benefits and support their own children.

This is why I didn’t need to hear Andy’s well-rehearsed arguments on Sports Day. I had already made up my mind that it was time to put my money where my mouth had been ever since I experienced the reality of single-parenthood in Britain. The National Council for One Parent Families is neither anti-marriage (nearly two-thirds of lone parents have been married, after all) nor a propagandist for going it alone. It exists to help parents who are bringing up children by themselves, for example in the aftermath of a relationship breakdown or the death of a partner, when children are faced with a new kind of family and one parent is left coping with the work of two, often on a considerably reduced income. It provides invaluable advice and practical support on a wide range of issues affecting lone parents and their children, and I am proud to be associated with it.

The charity’s Magic Million Appeal, which the new book, Magic, will raise money for, should help maintain the broad range of services offered to lone parents who want nothing more than to pull themselves out of the poverty trap while bringing up happy, well-adjusted children. These families, too often scapegoated rather than supported, could do with a lot less Dursleyish stigmatism, and a little more magic in their lives.

Copyright (c) 2002 Telegraph Group Limited, London, England Record Number: 0F41353EB7DBD95A

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J.K. Rowling nos seus dias de pobreza

Tradução: Salas Wulfric
Revisão: Adriana Snape**

Goldwin, Clare. “J K Rowling on her Days of Poverty,” The Daily Mirror, June 2002
AT FIRST glance it’s a rags-to-riches tale that could have come straight from the imagination of JK Rowling herself.

A penniless writer lives in a freezing flat and nurses cups of coffee for hours at a time in a warm cafe, where she sits with her baby girl and writes the books that will one day make her fame and fortune.

This is the popular version of JK’s own life story but the truth of being a single parent was no romantic fairy story for the Harry Potter author.

This will become apparent when Bloomsbury publishes Magic – a collection of short stories sold to raise money for the National Council For One Parent Families’ Magic Million Appeal.

The book, to be published next month, is co-edited by Chancellor Gordon Brown’s wife, Sarah, who is also patron of the NCOPF, and novelist Gil McNeil.

They persuaded 18 of Britain’s most acclaimed writers – including Sue Townsend, Fay Weldon, Jo Harris, Arabella Weir, Meera Syal and Ben Okri – to contribute a story for free.

Jo Rowling is the charity’s ambassador and has written the foreword.

In it, Jo gives her most searingly honest account yet of the poverty and humiliation she faced bringing up her daughter alone.

Thanks to Harry Potter, Jo, 36, is now a multi-millionaire who can cater for her daughter’s every need.

But the indignities she endured as a lone parent still burn strong.

“I remember reaching the supermarket checkout, counting out the money in coppers, finding out I was two pence short of a tin of baked beans and feeling I had to pretend I had mislaid a £10 note for the benefit of the bored girl at the till,” says Jo.

“Similarly unappreciated acting skills were required for my forays into Mothercare, where I would pretend to be examining clothes I could not afford for my daughter.

“All the time I would be edging ever closer to the baby-changing room where they offered a small supply of free nappies.

“I hated dressing my longed-for child from charity shops.

“I hated relying on the kindness of relatives when it came to her new shoes.

“I tried furiously hard not to feel jealous of other children’s beautifully decorated, well-stocked bedrooms when we went to friends’ houses to play.”

Jo had moved to Portugal to teach English in 1991 and met a Portuguese television journalist. They married in October 1992 but Jo left with her baby the following year.

“My story starts in 1993, when my marriage ended,” Jo explains in the forward. “I was living abroad and in full-time employment when I gave birth to my daughter.”

LEAVING her ex-husband meant leaving her job and returning to Britain with two suitcases full of possessions.

“I knew perfectly well that I was walking into poverty,” she adds, “but I truly believed that it would be a matter of months before I was back on my feet.

“I had enough money saved to put down a deposit on a rented flat and buy a high chair, cot and other essentials.

“When my savings were gone, I settled down to life on slightly less than £70 a week.

“Poverty, as I soon found out, is a lot like childbirth – you know that it’s going to hurt before it happens but you’ll never know how much until you’ve experienced it.

“Some articles written about me have come close to romanticising the time I spent on Income Support, because the well-worn cliche of the writer starving in the garret is so much more picturesque than the bitter reality of living in poverty with a child.

“The endless little humiliations of life on benefits – and remember that six out of 10 families headed by a lone parent live in poverty – receive very little media coverage unless they are followed by what seems to be a swift and Cinderella-like reversal of fortune.”

As Jo was to discover, finding work and looking after a small child at the same time was an almost impossible juggling act.

“I wanted to work part-time,” she explains. “When I asked my health visitor about the possibility of a couple of afternoons’ state childcare a week she explained, very kindly, that places for babies were reserved for those who were deemed ‘at risk’.

“Her exact words were: ‘You’re coping too well’.

“I was allowed to earn a maximum of £15 a week before my Income Support and Housing Benefit was docked.

“Full-time private childcare was so exorbitant that I would need to find a full-time job paying well above the national average. I had to decide whether my baby would rather be handed over to somebody else for most of her waking hours, or be cared for by her mother in far from luxurious surroundings.

“I chose the latter option, though constantly feeling I had to justify my choice at length whenever anybody asked me that nasty question: ‘So what do you do?’ The honest answer to that question was that I worried continually – I devoted hours to writing a book I doubted would ever be published, I tried hard to hold on to the hope that our financial situation would improve.

“And when I was not too exhausted to feel strong emotion, I was swamped with anger at the portrayal of single mothers by certain politicians and newspapers as feckless teenagers in search of the Holy Grail – the council flat – when 97 per cent of us had long since left our teens.”

Eventually, Jo was able to train as a teacher after a friend lent her the money for childcare. And she explains she believes there is no reason to be ashamed of being a single parent. “The sub-text of much of the vilification of lone parents is that couple families are intrinsically superior yet, during my time as a school teacher, I met a number of disruptive, damaged children whose home contained two parents.

“There are those who still believe head-count defines a ‘real’ family, who believe that marriage is the only ‘right’ context in which to have children. But I have never felt the remotest shame about being a single parent.

“I have the temerity to be rather proud of the period when I did three jobs single-handedly – the unpaid work of two parents and the salaried job as a teacher.

“There is a wealth of evidence to suggest that it is not single-parenthood but poverty that causes some children to do less well than others.

“When you take poverty out of the equation, children from one-parent families can do just as well as children from couple families.”

Jo has not forgotten how far she has come from the time when she was unable to afford a tin of baked beans and prayed for fine weather to avoid a big gas bill.

“I am fully aware, every single day, of how lucky I am,” she writes.

“I am lucky because I do not have to worry about my daughter’s financial security any more, because what used to be Benefit day comes around and there’s still food in the fridge and the bills are paid.

“I had a talent that I could exercise without financial outlay. But anyone thinking of using me as an example of how single parents can break out of the poverty trap might as well point at Oprah Winfrey and declare that there is no more racism in America.

“People just like me are facing the same obstacles to a full realisation of their potential every day and their children are missing opportunities alongside them.

“They are not asking for hand-outs, they are not scheming for council flats, they are simply asking for the support they need to break free of life on benefits and support their own children.”

Jo became a patron for the NCOPF two years ago and has donated £500,000 to the charity.

SHE says: “The National Council For One Parent Families is neither anti-marriage nor a propagandist for ‘going it alone’.

“It exists to help parents bringing up children alone, for example, in the aftermath of a relationship breakdown or the death of a partner, when children are faced with a new kind of family and one parent is left coping with the work of two – often on a considerably reduced income.

“It provides invaluable advice and practical support on a wide range of issues affecting lone parents and their children – and I am very proud to be associated with it.”

As Jo explains in the foreword, her involvement came about in an appropriate way for a single mother.

“Andy Keen Downs, the charity’s deputy director, came to see me and sat down in my habitually untidy kitchen, pulled a sheaf of notes from his briefcase and embarked on what I’m quite sure would have been a marvellously persuasive, well-constructed and beautifully delivered speech.

“‘Andy,’ I interrupted, in that harassed voice by which lone parents can often be identified, ‘you’d like me to be a patron, wouldn’t you?’

“‘OK, I’ll do it but could we please discuss the details on the way to school, because sports day starts in five minutes.’

“And so we discussed the National Council For One Parent Families while watching the egg and spoon races.

“It was a highly fitting start, I felt, for my association with a charity that is devoted to helping those parents whose lives are a constant balancing act.

“But I didn’t need to hear Andy’s well-rehearsed persuasive arguments on sports day. I had already made up my mind that it was time to put my money where my mouth had been ever since I experienced the reality of single-parenthood in Britain.

“I want to offer my very deepest thanks to, not only the authors of this book, but to everybody, who, through buying this book, contributes to our appeal.”

The proceeds from the sale of the book will go towards the charity’s Magic Million Appeal, whose funds will help maintain the broad range of services offered to lone parents who want to pull themselves out of the poverty trap while bringing up happy, well-adjusted children.

“You are offering hope to families who are too often scapegoated rather than supported,” Jo concludes, “families who could do with a lot less Dursleyish stigmatism and a little more magic in their lives.”

Magic, edited by Sarah Brown and Gil McNeil, is priced at £6.99. For every edition sold, £1 will go to the Magic Million Appeal, which aims to raise £1million to fund better information services for lone parents.

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Dê empréstimos aos pobres, diz Rowling

Tradução: .Rodrigo Black.
Revisão:

Womack, Sarah. “Give loans to the poor, says Rowling,” Telegraph, 15 April 2002
J K ROWLING, the author of the Harry Potter best-sellers, has attacked the Government in the run-up to the Budget for its treatment of single parents.

The multi-millionairess and former single mother, whose support has been courted by Labour strategists, said ministers had left the poorest lone parents deeper in debt. She called for reform of the Social Fund, an emergency loans scheme helping the poor with basic items such as beds, cookers and cots.

Eighty per cent of the money paid by the fund is in the form of loans, but many applicants are deemed too poor to qualify. Those helped are often forced below benefit levels to meet repayments.

Miss Rowling, 36, said loans should be replaced with a programme of Child Development Grants focused on providing essentials for a decent home. She also wanted Opportunity Grants to help parents move from welfare to work by assisting with work-related costs such as upfront child care bills and work clothes.

Her criticisms came in a foreword to a report by three charities, the National Council for One Parent Families, the Family Welfare Association and the Child Poverty Action Group.

They follow the disclosure last week that the Government had only lifted 500,000 children out of poverty, not the 1.2 million it had claimed.

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Rowling para leituras de Potter no rádio

Tradução: Bruno Radcliffe
Revisão:

“Rowling stops Potter radio readings,” BBC News, 8 March, 2002
JK Rowling: Her books are available in 40 languages

Harry Potter creator JK Rowling has prevented a Swedish radio station from broadcasting extracts of her books.

The British author was upset when an announcer on Sveriges Radio read passages from her Harry Potter series on a children’s programme without her permission.

Swedish law allows radio and TV stations to broadcast readings of published works without approval from the author, providing they pay royalties.

But it also says the author has the right to stop broadcasters putting out their work and Rowling has made known she would only allow her books to be broadcast “unabridged”.

A spokeswoman for the author said: “Our policy is that they (the Harry Potter series) only be broadcast in their unabridged version to protect the integrity of the books.”

Rowling was alerted to the radio readings after the station contacted her agent with questions on where to send royalty money.

Gunhild Frylen, the lawyer acting for Sveriges, said: “They (Rowling and her agent) were very upset and said, ‘What do you mean you’ve read our books?’ It was very hard for them to understand that this is the law here.”

She added that, in her 35-year career, she had only known of a handful of similar cases where authors had objected to their works going on the air.

These, said Frylen, included Ernest Hemingway and Swedish writer Vilhelm Moberg.

Annika Seward Jensen from Tiden, the Swedish publishers of Rowling’s books, said their success was bound to create copyright problems.

The four Harry Potter books tell the fictional story of the young wizard Harry Potter and his adventures at Hogwarts school of magic.

They have been translated into 40 languages. and their huge popularity has become a global phenomenon, resulting in an extremely succesful movie.

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