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The Author > Scholastic Online Chats: 2000
On February 3, 2000, classrooms across America went online to ask J.K. Rowling their burning questions about Harry Potter. Below is the transcript from that interview.
WARNING: The transcript below reveals plot elements from Harry Potter Books 1 through 3. If you have not read all these books, you may not want to continue.
Q: 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?
A: I always have a basic plot outline, but I like to leave some things to be decided while I write. It's more fun. :-)
Q: When is your fourth book coming out, and what will it be called?
A: It's coming out in July. I prefer not to say the title at the moment. I'm superstitious about my titles.
Q: Is there anything that you can reveal about the fourth book?
A: Yes! Harry goes to the Quidditch World Cup, and you also find out about some other Wizardry schools.
Q: Do you now or have you in the past kept a journal? If so, do you believe that it helps in your writing?
A: I've never managed to keep a journal longer than two weeks. I get bored with my life. I prefer inventing things.
Q: What is Nearly Headless Nick's last name?
A: It's in Book I: De Mimsy-Porpington. ;-)
Q: Why does Professor Dumbledore like sherbet lemons?
A: Because I like sherbet lemons! And he's got good taste. :-)
Q: Was it hard to think of the monsters' names?
A: Some of the monsters are from folklore, so I didn't invent them. In Book IV you'll see some creatures I did invent, and I had fun making up their names. But I'm not going to say what they are. :-)
Q: What do you think has been your greatest experience because of Harry Potter's success?
A: The last American tour. Because for the first time I realized how many children love Harry. It was a moving experience for me.
Q: What makes some witches/wizards become ghosts after they die and some not?
A: You don't really find that out until Book VII, but I can say that the happiest people do not become ghosts. As you might guess, Moaning Myrtle!
Q: How long have you been writing?
A: As far back as I can remember. The first story I finished was when I was six years old.
Q: What about the rumors of a movie?
A: There is going to be a movie made by Warner Bros. But it hasn't gone into production yet, so there's no more I can tell you about that one.
Q: What would your advice be to any other young people that would want to write stories?
A: The most important thing is to read as much as you can, like I did. It will give you an understanding of what makes good writing and it will enlarge your vocabulary. And it's a lot of fun! And also, start by writing about things you know -- your own experiences, your own feelings. That's what I do.
Q: I heard a lot of rumors as to why the fourth book isn't out yet in the U.S. What is the truth and when will it be out?
A: The reason it's not out yet is because I haven't finished it. :-) The first book took me five years to write, so I'm speeding up, a lot! But I still can't produce a novel in six months.
Q: What did the Potter parents do for a living before Voldemort killed them?
A: I'm sorry to keep saying this, but I can't tell you because it's important to a later plot. But you will find out later!
Q: In the first book you said Slytherin house Quidditch captain was sixth year Marcus Flint. If there are only seven years of Hogwarts, why is he in the third book?
A: He had to do a year again! :-)
Q: How do students at Hogwarts get educated in Muggle subjects? Do they even need to know other things besides magic?
A: They can choose to study Muggle subjects. In the third book, Hermione takes the class Muggle Studies, and that's where they learn about Muggles in school.
Q: Since Harry Potter's parents were sorcerers and Petunia was Harry's mother's sister. Shouldn't Petunia be a witch or wizard?
A: No. As Hagrid explains in Book I, sometimes a witch or a wizard occurs in an otherwise Muggle family, just as a Squib is a non-magic person who occurs in an otherwise magic family.
Q: Do you think that you will write about Harry after he graduates from Hogwarts? Isn't there a University of Wizardry?
A: No, there's no University for Wizards. At the moment I'm only planning to write seven Harry Potter books. I won't say "never," but I have no plans to write an eighth book.
Q: Will we ever get a Defense Against the Dark Arts teacher who lasts more than a year?
A: I'm not telling you. ;-)
Q: Is Harry Potter ever going to fall in love with Hermione or is he going to fall in love with Ginny Weasley?
A: In Book IV Harry does decide he likes a girl, but it's not Hermione or Ginny. However, he's only 14, so there's plenty of time for him to change his mind. ;-)
Q: If you had to choose one teacher from your books to teach your child, who would it be and why?
A: It would be Professor Lupin, because he is kind, clever, and gives very interesting lessons.
Q: How many countries have you visited since writing Harry Potter?
A: Um...let me think. Spain, Italy, France, America. That's all. I will be visiting lots more, but because my daughter's still so young, I don't like to travel too much. Unless I can take her with me.
Q: Will Harry ever get a break and not live with the Dursleys?
A : I'm not going to tell you! ;-)
Q: Will we ever see Scabbers again?
A: Yes. You will see Scabbers again.
Q: Will Harry ever get to go with his godfather (Cornelius Black)?
A: He is in contact with Sirius Black in Book IV, but as Sirius is on the run, it's difficult for them to be together at the moment.
Q: Is it true you're doing 7 books, one for each year that Harry will be at Hogwarts?
A: Yes, it is true.
Q: Do you have an actual floor plan for Hogwarts? Do you use it when writing the books?
A: I haven't drawn it, because it would be difficult for the most skilled architect to draw, owing to the fact that the staircases and the rooms keep moving. However, I have a very vivid mental image of what it looks like.
Q: What made you think of the people's names and dormitories at Hogwarts?
A: I invented the names of the Houses on the back of an airplane sick bag! This is true. I love inventing names, but I also collect unusual names, so that I can look through my notebook and choose one that suits a new character.
Q: Do you take real people you know and put them in your books?
A: The closest I've come to putting a real person in my books is with Gilderoy Lockhart, who is an exaggeration of someone I once knew. John Weasley is a little bit like my oldest friend, a man I was at school with, whose name is Sean. But neither of them are accurate portraits.
Q: How long does it take to write one Harry Potter book?
A: It depends. The quickest, so far, was a year.
Q: How does it feel to know that millions of kids are reading your books?
A: Amazing! I don't think I really realized how many there were until I visited the States in October, and met thousands and thousands of people at book signings.
Q: How did you come up with Harry Potter?
A: 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
Q: Why are the gnomes bad? What do they do?
A: Gnomes eat the roots of your plants, and make little heaps of earth, like moles do. They are also a bit of a giveaway that wizards live in a house.
Q: Did you ever meet a boy like Harry?
A: I probably met a boy like Harry, since I've been meeting readers of the Harry books. But he wasn't based on anyone real.
Q: Are any of your female characters, like Hermione, modeled after your own daughter?
A: No, if Hermione was based on anyone, she was based on me when I was younger. But my daughter is turning out to be a bit like me, so she is a bit like Hermione. :-)
Q: Was there a particular teacher who encouraged you to write when you were a child? If there was, how did he or she encourage or help you?
A: I had some wonderful teachers, but I never confided that I wanted to be a writer. So, no. Writing for me is a kind of compulsion, so I don't think anyone could have made me do it, or prevented me from doing it.
Q: Where were you born and what was your childhood like?
A: I was born in a place called Chipping, so perhaps that explains m I y love of silly names.
Q: How can two Muggles have a kid with magical powers? Also how does the Ministry of Magic find out these kids have powers?
A: It's the same as two black-haired people producing a redheaded child. Sometimes these things just happen, and no one really knows why! The Ministry of Magic doesn't find out which children are magic. In Hogwarts there's a magical quill which detects the birth of a magical child, and writes his or her name down in a large parchment book. Every year Professor McGonagall checks the book, and sends owls to the people who are turning 11.
Q: Does Harry give Christmas gifts to his friends? The books mention only gifts he receives. I am interested in knowing whether he gives gifts and if they are appropriate for the receiver.
A: Ron is very sensitive about his poverty, and Harry knows that Ron might be offended if he tried to give him too much. You will see in Book IV that Ron feels awkward accepting too much from Harry.
Q: What is your next book going to be called?
A: I'm still not going to tell you! ;-) [And I’ll still you, it’s Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire]
Q: Do you have a role model, if so, who?
A: I don't really have a role model, but I have a heroine! Her name was Jessica Mitford, and she was a human rights activist.
Q: When you were my age, did you ever write a book? I am in the fifth grade.
A: Yes, as a matter of fact I did. I wrote a story about seven cursed diamonds. I thought it was a novel. I think now it was really a very long short story.
Q: Where is Azkaban?’
A: In the north of the North Sea. A very cold sea.
Q: We are Windy Hills Elementary. Do you write every day, and for how long do you write?
A: 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.
Q: How do you feel about receiving the British Book Awards Children's Book of the year?
A: Very, very honored. :-)
Q: Where did Sirius Black and Buckbeack go after they went into hiding?
A: Somewhere nice and warm!
Q: Do you have any pets/animals? If so, did any of your ideas for monsters come from watching them?
A: A very violent rabbit. ;-) If I'd known what her personality was like, I would have called her Fluffy, after Hagrid's dog!
Q: How many languages is the book published in?
A: Oh goodness! Twenty-five, I think!
Q: Would you get a mythical pet from one of your books? If you could, which one?
A: If I could, I would choose a Phoenix, because they have such useful properties, as Harry finds out in Book III.
Q: Did you have any help writing any of the books?
A: No, I did it all by myself! :-)
Q: Why did you choose the lightning bolt as a trademark for Harry Potter?
A: Just because I decided that it would be an interesting and distinctive mark.
Q: 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?
A: I still write in cafes, but I go to different ones now!
Q: Will we see the Marauders map in a future book?
A: Yes, you'll see it in Book IV. :-)
Q: Is tMcGonagall is a sprightly seventy. Wizards have a much longer life expectancy than Muggles. (Harry hasn't found out about that yet.)
Q: How does the wizarding world protect Muggle banks and vaults, etc. from wizards apparating into them and stealing the contents?
A: Well, the Ministry of Magic keeps tabs on people apparating. That's why you have to have a license to do it, and the moment you abuse it you can find yourself in serious trouble (or Azkaban!).
Q: What position did James play on the Gryffindor Quidditch team? Was it seeker like Harry, or something different?
A: James was Chaser.
Q: How painful is the editing process for you? Compared with writing a first draft, how long do you spend editing? Who do you conference with?
A: I work with my editors. I enjoy the editing process, but I edit fairly extensively myself before my editors get to see the book, so it's never a very long job.
Q: Are you writing all the books at the same time, like in little pieces, while concentrating mostly on the present one, or do you just have a general idea about them?
A: During the first five years that I was writing the series, I made plans and wrote small pieces of all the books. I concentrate on one book at a time, though occasionally I will get an idea for a future book and scribble it down for future reference.
Q: Any plans for a video game soon?
A: I think there probably will be a video game, but when, I have no idea.
Q: Do you think elementary-age children will be able to read the other three books in the series?
A: Yes, I do. I personally feel the books are suitable for people aged 8 years and over. Though my daughter, who is seven, has read them all and not been very frightened – but maybe she's tough, like her mother!
Q: When you are not writing or reading, what things do you enjoy in your free time?
A: Let's see.....when I'm not reading, writing or spending time with my daughter, there isn't much time left over, but I like traveling most.
Q: Some sets on the movies are already being created. Do you think they represent how you envisioned them in the book?
Q: Have you had any input on the shooting locations?
A: I know they look as I imagined them (those that have been done so far)!
Q: Hello, I was wondering how much Tolkien inspired and influenced your writing?
A: Hard to say. I didn't read The Hobbit until after the first Harry book was written, though I read Lord of the Rings when I was nineteen. I think, setting aside the obvious fact that we both use myth and legend, that the similarities are fairly superficial. Tolkien created a whole new mythology, which I would never claim to have done. On the other hand, I think I have better jokes.
Q: Ms. Rowling, for being fictional books, the Harry Potter books have a great grasp of the Latin language. I have noticed that many, if not most, of the names and incantations are of Latin heritage. How much research does it take to give these books their Latin heritage?
A: My Latin, such as it is, is self-taught. I enjoy feeling that wizards would continue to use this dead language in their everyday life.
Q: Will you have a cameo in the Harry Potter movie?
A: No, definitely not. I hate watching myself onscreen!
Q: If there were one thing you could change about the world, what would it be?
A: I would make each and every one of us much more tolerant.
Q: Do any of the things that happen in the Harry Potter books reflect any of your childhood fantasies?
A: Flying, definitely. And who wouldn't want to be able to use the Jelly-Legs Curse?
Q: Why did you choose the owl as the animal messenger in your books?
A: Owls are traditionally associated with magic, and I like them.
Scholastic: Our thanks to J.K. Rowling for joining us today. Any thoughts you would like to leave us with?
Rowling: Keep reading! (And it doesn't have to be Harry Potter!)
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