The Origins of Harry

The history of Rowling getting Harry Potter published is fairly familiar to fans. She went to 12 different, well known publishers trying to get her manuscript out into the world before Bloomsbury picked it up. Interestingly, Rowling told Oprah in an interview that she knew that getting it published would be hard, but once it was out in the world she had a feeling it would be well received. Of course, well received and the phenomena it has become are two very different things.

One of the reasons it was rejected, it seems, was its length. Which is interesting because not only is it quite thin compared to the others, but according to the CEO of Bloomsbury, Nigel Newton the length was never an issue. What did concern them was that they thought boys wouldn’t read it because it was written by a woman (*eye roll*). Can you imagine a world where Joanne Rowling is a household name instead of JK? The world wouldn’t have collapsed in on itself and boys would have been fine. But we’re drifting off.

The whole Bloomsbury side is a story I hadn’t actually heard before. In an article, Newton describes how he gave his then eight year old daughter a copy of a chapter to read and one hour later she told him he had to publish it. She told him that it was ‘so much better than anything else.”

Rowling famously also got the idea for Harry whilst on a train. She’s spoken in interviews how a vivid image of a boy with glasses and as the story began to form around Harry she realised it was more a wizard story than a normal one. I would love to have read the story of Harry that didn’t involve magic because it would be so different it would be hard to imagine but it would also be wonderful because, you know, it’s Rowling.

This first idea was written down on a napkin and would then be typed up on a typewriter. This is a common occurrence as Rowling has mentioned multiple times that she writes anywhere and on anything, one example being she came up with the ideas for the house names whilst flying and ended up writing them on a sick bag.

Philosopher’s Stone began with Harry and a train in 1990 and by 1995 there was a completed manuscript. It took another year for it to be picked up by a publisher, and by 1997 it was out in the world. Since then it has only grown and grown; from expanded universes and incredibly detailed characters and backstories. Rowling has said that she liked to make biographies for her characters so she knows who they are, and that certainly shows in the story. Even the smallest characters can have so much depth. It is also a bonus because we have been getting additional character information for years since both the books and the movies have finished.

There is so much to discover in the Harry Potter universe itself that it’s always fun to recall its humble beginnings and Rowling’s early life. I guess given what that one little idea sparked we can be eternally grateful that she listened to that idea that popped into her head or we might be in a world without Harry Potter!

Magical Month Begins

Today marks the start of my month-long Harry Potter celebrations! 20 years ago an unknown author published a book called Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone and took the world by storm. I was only 9 or 10 years old when the first book was published in Australia, I remember reading it with such fascination. The one copy we had was passed around the family, a tradition which continued for the remaining six books. Now of course I have copies and special editions coming out my ears, but my original set sit faithfully on their shelf, preserving them, lest anything should happen to them.

Since its release, Harry Potter fever has taken over the world. From 8 movies, numerous re-releases and cover changes for the books, a theme park, a website, even a brilliant experience where you get to walk among the movie props and sets.

In an interview from 1999 ,Rowling is asked if she ever expected this kind of reaction from her books to which she replied ‘No. Of course not. I would have been crazy to expect this. No one – no one could have expected this.”  I know she’s had this question a lot over the years, and one that is wonderfully ironic given the line in Philosopher’s Stone where McGonagall says that “There will be books written about Harry, every child in our world will know his name.” A fact that has most certainly come to fruition If 1999 Rowling could see her today. For the last 20 years Harry Potter has moved beyond being a mere children’s book (though was it ever only a children’s book?). Not only is it loved by readers of all ages, it’s the series of a generation; it’s a lifestyle, as close as a religion as it can be. It’s a series that is filled with lessons about friendship, courage, life, and of course, magic.

One of the things I’m looking forward to exploring this month, well, revisiting really, is all the things that make this series beloved by millions. Billions? I’m sure it’s billions by now. I love reading fan theories (even when they are a tad ridiculous and too far fetched), I love seeing people point out seemingly unimportant but fun and curious bits of story that have been forgotten. I especially love seeing all the fan created content that are just magical in their own right, I’m thinking Harry and the Potters, any Hank Green Potter song, A Very Potter Musical, and of course, The Mysterious Ticking Noise.

All of this and more I am eager to get exploring, so much so I have to retrain myself from publishing it all in random bursts of Harry Potter excitement and actually write a cohesive post about. But never fear! There will no doubt be ramblings at some point along the way. It is me after all.

So sit back, relax, put your feet up with a Butter Beer and prepare yourself for the magical journey that is 20 years of Harry Potter.

A Magical Month Awaits!

Important times are almost upon us! June 2017, specifically 26 June, marks the 20th anniversary of Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone; the book that started so many of us on the journey of wonder and amazement as we followed the life of Harry, the Boy Who Lived, the unknown wizard 11 year old who lived under the cupboard of number 4 Privet Drive.

To mark this special occasion I will be embarking on one of my special event months to celebrate everything Harry Potter and the wizarding world. I will be looking at all 7 books, the 8 movies, and offering so many fun facts and fun things that have accumulated over the last 20 years. I will be posting more about the history of the books, JK Rowling, as well as the vast amount of content that has come out since the books, including Pottermore and sneaky snippets Rowling has released since.

If I really sat down and thought about it I could have Harry Potter content running for 6 months nonstop, just based on the incredible theories, the fun facts, and brilliant fan made content, not to mention the deep history and detail that there exists in the books alone. For now, though, I will be limiting it to the single month, but I’m sure, like all the special event months that have come before it, it will be an incredible adventure, and one I hope you will come along with me on.

Let us step into the night and pursue that flighty temptress, adventure.

The Upside of Unrequited by Becky Albertalli

Published: 11th April 2017Goodreads badge
Publisher:
 Puffin
Pages: 336
Format: Paperback
Genre: Young Adult
★   ★   ★   ★   ★  – 5 Stars

Seventeen-year-old Molly Peskin-Suso knows all about unrequited love-she’s lived through it twenty-six times. She crushes hard and crushes often, but always in secret. Because no matter how many times her twin sister, Cassie, tells her to woman up, Molly can’t stomach the idea of rejection. So she’s careful. Fat girls always have to be careful.

Then a cute new girl enters Cassie’s orbit, and for the first time ever, Molly’s cynical twin is a lovesick mess. Meanwhile, Molly’s totally not dying of loneliness-except for the part where she is.
Luckily, Cassie’s new girlfriend comes with a cute hipster-boy sidekick. Will is funny, flirtatious, and just might be perfect crush material. Maybe more than crush material. And if Molly can win him over, she’ll get her first kiss and she’ll get her twin back.

There’s only one problem: Molly’s coworker, Reid. He’s an awkward Tolkien superfan, and there’s absolutely no way Molly could fall for him. Right? 

There is so much to love about this book. I found myself smiling like an idiot at times, other times with just a slight constant smile because everything was so wonderful, and not even in a cheesy way. What is wonderful about this is Molly is falling for the non-typical guy. The Reid’s of the world, not the Wills like movies and books have told us in the past. WHICH I LOVE!

I am in love with Reid myself, but I am a dag who actually loves when people are in love with something and don’t care whether it’s uncool (which it very rarely is). Plus he’s a sweetie and isn’t some profound teen who has Insights and Thoughts about the world. It’s not that Will isn’t a sweetie, which is important because then you realise she isn’t just liking Reid because Will is a bad person. She likes Reid because Reid is her type of guy, Will isn’t. He’s nice, they may have been a good first boyfriend team as Molly says, but Will isn’t Molly’s type. Will was actually great, he seemed to mock his own hipsterness and he also wasn’t the guy who had Thoughts and Insight and Opinions that wowed our main girl. Albertelli did very well on that front.

Molly’s reservations are not unjust (well yes, but no). She doesn’t overreact; she doesn’t go wild and crazy in rebellion. I will admit I may have liked it more than Simon (forgive me), but I do love them both. I also know yearning for a boyfriend isn’t the be all and end all, and shouldn’t be shown to be, but I think how Albertelli shows Molly’s twenty six crushes and desire for a boyfriend is different than just wanting one. She wants to fit in, she wants to have a connection with her sister and her girlfriend. I think because Molly feels like an outsider at times she just wants what other people get seemingly so effortlessly. The sisterly relationship between Molly and Cassie is wonderful and realistic and Albertelli highlights how hard it can be being sisters and twins but also being your own people. I also like the friendships in this, they’re complicated and new and weird but it works.

There are so many positive things in this book; there is a realistic and healthy approach to teens around love, sex, body etc, also a great diversity of characters with numerous POC and queer relationships that are portrayed as normal non-occurrences. There is the inclusion of a racist character which puts things into a perfect uncomfortable position because after reading about this normal family with two mums and a lesbian daughter, plus multiple different genders and relationships one racist grandmother throws a spanner into the works and makes you realise just how dumb she is being and how ludicrous her arguments are.

There is so much I could talk about this book, the characters are incredible, the dialogue is incredible, the entire book is incredible. For every amazing moment in this book I want to mention I think of three more. There’s so much that makes this a wonderful book, not only the characters but the messages Albertelli sends out about who you are and the relationships you have. It’s a fantastic book and one everyone should read.

You can purchase The Upside of Unrequited via the following

Dymocks | Book Depository

QBD | Fishpond

BookWorld | Amazon

Wordery | Amazon Aust

Top Ten Tuesday: Covers That Caught My Eye

Top Ten Tuesday is an original and weekly meme created by The Broke And The Bookish

Topic:  Cover Freebie – Covers That Caught My Eye

I actually couldn’t decide what topic to do for this week. I tossed up about colours, prettiest, animals on the covers. In the end, I decide to do the covers that made me pick up the book. Not because I liked the author already, not because it was recommended to me, but I saw these covers and it made me pick up the book and read the blurb and subsequently, the book.

1. The Weight of A Human Height by Ryan O’Neill

2. The Library of Shadows by Mikkel Birkegaard

3. The Book of Lost Things by John Connolly

4. Northern Lights by Philip Pullman

5. The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafron

6. The Shadow Thief by Alexandra Adornetto

7. The Memory Book by Lara Avery

8. The Books of Pearl by Timothee de Fombelle

9. Scarred Lions by Fane Viljoen

10. Yellow by Megan Jacobson

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