J.K. Rowling: "Harry Potter" is "quite a good story"
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"Harry Potter" fans enjoyed a rare treat last week. In a surprisingly candid TV event, Oprah Winfrey interviewed the famously reticent J.K. Rowling, discussing the author鈥檚 family, career, and her journey through the "Harry Potter" series. The women spoke in an elegant tea-serviced suite in the Balmoral Hotel in Edinburgh, Scotland, the very hotel where Rowling finished writing the "Harry Potter" series.
鈥淲e have a lot in common,鈥 Oprah observed during the intimate conversation. And indeed, the similarities are striking. Both are self-made billionaires with 鈥渞ags to riches鈥 stories of their rise from poverty. Both oversee vast media empires built on their brands. And both have had an unlikely and not insubstantial impact on reading and literacy.
The conversation was immediately open and easy, with Oprah and Rowling chatting like friends. They shared their own personal experiences and struggles, including the insecurities that come with gaining enormous wealth after poverty, and their sadness at approaching the end of very successful chapters in their lives (Oprah's show is in its last season; Rowling has written what is probably the last of the "Harry Potter" series).
Rowling is the first self-made billionaire author in history. The series of books she created about a young wizard with a lightning bolt-shaped scar have sold more than 400 million copies worldwide and are currently available in 69 languages and 200 countries.
Perhaps the most arresting moment of the interview came when Oprah asked Rowling about bringing the "Harry Potter" series to an end.
Rowling: [The characters] are all still in my head. I mean, I could write. I could definitely write an eighth, ninth, tenth. I could, easily.
Oprah: You could. Will you?
Rowling: I'm not going to say I won't. I don't think I will. I loved writing those books. I loved writing it. So I feel I am done, but you never know.
Rowling went on to say she鈥檒l keep writing books because she 鈥渓iterally can鈥檛 stop,鈥 delighting millions of fans around the world.
Oprah called it one of her most fascinating interviews, and indeed, Rowling鈥檚 easy forthrightness in describing her harrowing journey through fame made for a captivating interview.
The Potter author received 12 rejections from British publishers before Bloomsbury Publishing accepted the manuscript.
鈥淎 lot of people didn鈥檛 want it,鈥 Rowling said. 鈥淎 lot.鈥 and for some reason, I was even quite pleased at the rejection letters 鈥 F. Scott Fitzergerald got rejection letters, it鈥檚 part of being a writer.鈥 In spite of going through a difficult time in her life, Rowling persisted with the story. 鈥淚 did really believe in it鈥 I just had faith in the story.鈥
When the books went on to sell millions, Rowling, who had few family members or friends she could go to for support, said she was 鈥渨illfully unaware鈥 that the universe of "Harry Potter" had spread to such a vast degree. 鈥淚 had no partner at the time鈥. [W]hen I went home and closed the door, it was just [daughter] Jessica and me.鈥 I didn鈥檛 have anyone around me, to be honest.鈥
When people asked how she was handling the fame, Rowling assured them, 鈥 'Yeah, I'm coping, I'm coping.' But the truth was, there were times when I was barely hanging on by a thread,鈥 she said.
To protect herself from the overwhelming shock the 鈥淏eatlesesque鈥 fame could bring, Rowling said she never googled "Harry Potter" or her own name until years later, after she had married her husband and had a support system of friends and family in place.
The billionaire author now lives in Edinburgh with her second husband, anesthesiologist Neil Murray, and their three children.
Although her children aren鈥檛 yet "Potter-philes," Rowling told Oprah she read her 7-year-old son David the first book in the "Harry Potter" series, 鈥淗arry Potter and the Philosopher鈥檚 Stone.鈥
鈥淸It was] bizarre,鈥 she said 鈥渂ecause I hadn鈥檛 read Philosopher鈥檚 Stone for years鈥 and yet, I finished the book and I thought, 鈥榃ow, that鈥檚 quite a good story.' I can see why people like that,鈥 she said, laughing.
Husna Haq is a frequent Monitor contributor.
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