Help/About
The
Harry Potter books
"It's
literature, it is about what we are like, about deeper things than just
telling stories. It's just that it's aimed at an audience who don't drink
a lot of chardonnay."
-- Robbie Coltrane ("Hagrid")
Book
1
Harry
Potter and the Philosopher's Stone
(Harry
Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone) (U.S. title)
Book 2
Harry
Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
Book 3
Harry
Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
Book 4
Harry
Potter and the Goblet of Fire
Book 5
Harry
Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
Book
6
title
unknown
Book
7
title
unknown
The "School Books"
Fantastic
Beasts and Where to Find Them
Quidditch
Through the Ages
About the Harry
Potter books
in Rowling's own
words:
These are comments drawn from the
published interviews with JKR. All of these interviews are copyrighted
to their various sources.
Interview by Borders
Online 1999
A Conversation
With J.K. Rowling
http://go.borders.com/features/emr99063.xcv
How did you get the idea for Harry
Potter?
J.K. Rowling: I was taking a long
train journey from Manchester to London in England and the idea for Harry
just fell into my head. At that point it was essentially the idea for a
boy who didn't know he was a wizard, and the wizard school he ended up
going to.
How long did it take to write the
first book?
JKR: Five years, although during
that time I was also planning and writing parts of the six sequels.
What did you have to do to make sure
readers could start with Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets and not
be confused?
JKR: It's becoming more of a challenge
to keep new readers up to speed with every new Harry book (I'm currently
writing the fourth). In the case of Chamber of Secrets, matters were relatively
straightforward; I tried to introduce information about Harry and his first
year at Hogwarts in as natural a way as possible. However, by the time
I reach books V and VI, this is going to be much harder. It makes me think
of "Previously on ER..." when you have to watch 30 minutes of clips to
understand that week's episode. Maybe I'll just write a preface: "Previously
in Harry Potter..." and tell readers to go back and read books I-IV!
What kind of manuscript changes had
to be made to make the U.S. version more understandable to American readers?
Specific things, like the title change of the first Harry Potter book?
JKR: Very few changes have been
made in the manuscript. Arthur Levine, my American editor, and I decided
that words should be altered only where we felt they would be incomprehensible,
even in context, to an American reader. I have had some criticism from
other British writers about allowing any changes at all, but I feel the
natural extension of that argument is to go and tell French and Danish
children that we will not be translating Harry Potter, so they'd better
go and learn English. The title change was Arthur's idea initially, because
he felt that the British title gave a misleading idea of the subject matter.
We discussed several alternative titles and Sorcerer's Stone was my idea.
Did you always plan to write Harry's
story in more than one book? If so, how many?
JKR: I always conceived it as a
seven-book series because I decided that it would take seven years -- from
the ages of 11-17, inclusive -- to train as a wizard, and each of the books
would deal with a year of Harry's life at Hogwarts.
Any hints you could share about what
to expect in future Harry Potter books?
JKR: The theme running through all
seven books is the fight between good and evil, and I'm afraid there will
be casualties! Children usually beg me not to kill Ron whenever I tell
them this; they seem to think he is most vulnerable, probably because he
is the hero's best friend!
SCHOLASTIC INTERVIEW
February 3, 2000
http://www.scholastic.com/harrypotter/author/transcript1.htm
Did you make up the plot in every
aspect first by charting the characters and knowing exactly what you would
do with them, or did you just piece a lot of it together as you wrote?
I always have a basic plot outline,
but I like to leave some things to be decided while I write. It's more
fun. :-)
How did you come up with Harry Potter?
Harry just sort of strolled into
my head, on a train journey. He arrived very fully formed. It was as though
I was meeting him for the first time.
Do you write every day, and for how
long do you write?
I write nearly every day. Some days
I write for ten or eleven hours. Other days I might only write for three
hours. It really depends on how fast the ideas are coming.
Why did you choose the lightning
bolt as a trademark for Harry Potter?
Just because I decided that it would
be an interesting and distinctive mark.
Do you still write in cafes, or do
you have to stay out of public places while you write so people won't bother
you?
I still write in cafes, but I go
to different ones now!
SCHOLASTIC INTERVIEW
(October 16, 2000)
http://www.scholastic.com/harrypotter/author/transcript2.htm
My impression is that the Harry books
are getting "darker" somehow. Is this because he is growing up, and his
readers have to do the same?
It's really because Voldemort is
getting more powerful, but yes, also because Harry is fourteen now. At
fourteen, you really do start realising that the world is not a safe and
protected place - or not always.
Can you give an example of a surprise
in your writing process, such as a character you weren't expecting?
Yes, it was a big surprise to me
that Mad Eye Moody turned out the way he did. I really like him. I didn't
expect to.
How did you think of all the cool
things that happened to Harry?
Sometimes the ideas just come to
me. Other times I have to sweat and almost bleed to make ideas come. It's
a mysterious process, but I hope I never find out exactly how it works.
I like a mystery, as you may have noticed
Do you ever get writer's block? What
do you do when this happens?
I've only suffered writer's block
badly once, and that was during the writing of Chamber of Secrets. I had
my first burst of publicity about the first book and it paralysed me. I
was scared the second book wouldn't measure up, but I got through it!
Do you have a favorite passage
from one of your books?
Hard to choose. I like chapter
twelve of Sorcerer's Stone (The Mirror of Erised), and I am proud of the
ending of Goblet of Fire.
How did you get the idea to
send Harry to a wizard school?
The idea as it first came
to me was about a boy who didn't know he was a wizard until he got his
invitation to wizard school, so there was never a question that Harry would
go anywhere else!
Has the huge popularity of
Harry Potter changed the direction of the plot in any way?
No, not at all. People have
asked me whether Rita Skeeter was invented for that purpose, but in fact
she was always planned. I think I enjoyed writing her a bit more than I
would have done if I hadn't met a lot of journalists, though!
Did you write Harry Potter because
you like fantasy books, or just because the idea came to you?
The latter. In fact, I am not a
great fan of fantasy books in general, and never read them!
Do you imagine the pictures or images
in your head before you write, or do you have to draw them?
I imagine them very clearly and
then attempt to describe what I can see. Sometimes I draw them for my own
amusement!
Which book was the most fun for you
to write?
Prisoner of Azkaban, without a doubt.
But that doesn't necessarily mean it's my favourite book. I love them all,
but bizarrely the two that were most difficult to write, Chamber of Secrets
and Goblet of Fire - are my favourites.
Do you like being a writer?
I love being a writer. I am very
lucky my life's ambition turned out to be just as much fun as I thought
it would be.
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