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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: J K Rowling, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 7 of 7
1. Guess how much J K Rowling’s The Tales of Beedle the Bard went for! Guess before you read on.

Oh My Gosh! Guess how much J. K. Rowling’s The Tales of Beedle the Bard (Rowling’s original, handwritten book of wizard fairy tales that was mentioned in the final Harry Potter book) went for in the online auction! Can’t guess? Let me tell you. 1,950,000 Great British Pounds, which is almost $4 million US dollars!! Now those are some dedicated fans who were bidding. Wow.

According to CBBC, “The book was bought by a picture dealership from London called Hazlitt, Gooden & Fox. They are a company which normally buys paintings and drawings.” I wonder if that means that they intend to re-sell it to a Harry Potter fan?

The money from the auction will go directly to The Children’s Voice charity, created by J.K. Rowling, which helps children who most need an advocate in the world. So the money went to a worthy cause. But it still boggles my mind a little. How about you? What do you think?

I found this out via the Longstockings. My guess in their contest for how much the book would go for was $2 million. And I won! (I was the closest.) How fun. :) Now I get Lisa’s Graff’s ARC and chocolate! What could be better?

0 Comments on Guess how much J K Rowling’s The Tales of Beedle the Bard went for! Guess before you read on. as of 12/13/2007 11:25:00 AM
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2. Guess how much J K Rowling’s The Tales of Beedle the Bard will go for.

As you’ve probably heard, J K Rowling hand-wrote and illustrated a collection of wizard fairy tales–The Tales of Beedle the Bard–that was mentioned in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hollows, a book that headmaster Dumbledore left to Hermione. Rowling created only seven copies, six of which she gave as thank-yous to people involved with her Harry Potter books. The seventh copy will be auctioned off, the proceeds going to Rowling’s The Children’s Voice campaign (which sounds really important and worthwhile–they want to make life better for young people in care across Eastern Europe and the world, and they aim to stamp out cruelty, neglect and abuse of young people).

The book will be auctioned off by Sotheby on December 13, with an opening bid of $62,000. (Rowling’s really getting a lot of publicity lately, eh? First Dumbledore being gay, then this, as well as .)

So, this is where the fun comes in. The Longstockings are having a contest to guess how much the book will go for. “Closest without going over gets an as-of-yet-undecided-but-most-assuredly-awesome prize from me.” So have some fun–get over there and make a guess. :)

1 Comments on Guess how much J K Rowling’s The Tales of Beedle the Bard will go for., last added: 11/3/2007
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3. Scholar's Blog Book Discussion Group Reminder



This is just a quick reminder that the Scholar's Blog Spoiler Zone discussion of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Sheila of Wands and Worlds posted two lengthy comments overnight which are thoughtful and invite further discussion, so if you have the chance (and I realise most are busy with school about to or already starting up again for the new term), please stop by, and read and comment !

* * * * * *

And yes, I am still here - still reading others' Blogs, though not posting much on my own. Sorry - the fiction writing bug that gripped me mid-July (to write Tenth Doctor/Martha stories) simply hasn't let go of me yet, so I'm still busy writing lots of shorter stories for them. I presume the pair's death-grip on my brain will lessen eventually and then I'll actually get back to writing other things... Read the rest of this post

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4. Scholar's Blog Book Discussion Group



This month (and next) we're discussing Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows so please head on over and add your tuppence or two cents' worth - that's assuming you're not already all talked-out about this one... Read the rest of this post

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5. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - J K Rowling



So that's it then - the last book in the Harry Potter series has been published, devoured, demolished and discussed endlessly. If you're not all talked out already, please feel free to post here and share your likes and dislikes about the book, how you feel about the Epilogue (which seems to have divided fans) and what you feel worked or didn't work...

For my part, I enjoyed it and thought it was a reasonably satisfying conclusion to the series. I was glad that I was proved right about Harry not having it in him to kill Voldemort, and very glad that Neville, Ginny and Luna lived up to my expectations of playing significant roles (even if they didn't do so in the way I'd hoped).

I was intrigued by the two quotations that started the book, and I thought Rowling did a fairly good job of tying up the loose ends. Dumbledore's back-story was intriguing and interesting as was Snape's, although I think many of us had already guessed that he loved Lily.

Now it's over to you.

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6. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - J K Rowling


No, this is not a review - I'm saving that for the forthcoming HP7 discussion over on the Scholar's Blog Spoiler Zone in early August.

I have finished it though. It took me around seven hours in total - and I'm actually relieved to say I enjoyed it. I wasn't sure I would as I'd been resenting the prospect of reading it so much since rading it would be taking me out of the Whoniverse for several hours - the longest period I've spent *out* of the Whoniverse since I became immersed in it back in January. But once I started reading, the story tugged me along...

It was interesting reading this book from a fiction writer's point of view. This is the first HP book I've read since I began writing fiction myself and it was intriguing. I think I've mentioned here before that I have the facility to read on more than one level at the same time: I read as a child - wanting to get to the end of the story, hoping for a good ending, and I also read as a "critic" - looking at the structure, themes, language style, etc. And since I took up writing fiction I've been reading books at the level of someone who's also producing fiction - it's given me an extra awareness that I didn't possess when reading as a critic - sometimes that merely means thinking "Hmm, not sure I'd have written/structured that like that..." Sometimes it means a flare of admiring envy at the way something has been expressed and the desire to have that kind of mastery myself.

What it means for my reading of Harry Potter is that I've an extra appreciation of how bloody hard it is to tie up all the loose ends of a seven book series in a satisfying way that also gives readers at least a half-way decent story. And I think Rowling achieved that in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.

Oh and I don't totally hate the children's cover any longer - I still prefer the adult one, though ! But seeing it on book it seemed a little less morbid than in the photos (go figure !) And now that I know to what the UK cover relates, I'm impressed that it actually *fits* the story so well !

9 Comments on Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - J K Rowling, last added: 8/1/2007
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7. J K Rowling Tour of the US

This just in from Publishers Weekly:

The last time J.K. Rowling did a U.S. book tour, many of the people who are now her biggest fans either weren't born or hadn't learned to read yet. But to promote Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, the notoriously publicity-shy author will be coming to the U.S. in October for the J K Rowling Open Book Tour. The brief tour, her first in eight years, will include four events: two in New York, one in New Orleans and another in Los Angeles. Three of the events will be expressly for students while the final one, slated for Carnegie Hall in New York, will be open to 1,000 fans who win tickets through a sweepstakes sponsored by Scholastic.

0 Comments on J K Rowling Tour of the US as of 6/15/2007 2:00:00 AM
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