J. K. Rowling

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Biography

            Joanne Kathleen Rowling, otherwise known as “J.K.” Rowling, was born on July 31, 1965, in Bristol, England.  Joanne’s parents, Peter and Ann, gave birth to another daughter, Diana, a couple of years later.  The family spent its first few years in the town of Yate, where Rowling wrote her first story about a rabbit who contracted the measles at the age of six.   When Rowling was about 9, they moved to Winterbourne where the two sisters made playmates with many of the neighborhood children, two of whom had the last name of Potter, which would become rather significant later.  A few years later, the family moved to the town of Tutshill.  Rowling had to take classes in a school that she did not like.  It is at this stage of her life that she began using the world of books as an escape to slip into the dream world of C.S. Lewis and E. Nesbit, just to name a few (J.K. Rowling).

            Joanne and her family continued to live in the town of Tutshill.  During her high school years, English would develop as Joanne’s favorite subject.  Since she was not athletic, J.K. would amuse herself and others by telling fun and fanciful stories to her friends and anyone who would listen (Rowling, J.K. Current 483).  From high school, Rowling went on to Exeter University and to pursue a degree in French (Paperwise).  She then took her degree and used it while she worked as a secretary and researcher for Amnesty International; she spent most of her time trying to type stories on her computer while no one was watching.  It was also at this time, during a particularly long train trip to London, that Rowling dreamed up the idea of a story about a boy-wizard.  By the time the train pulled into King’s Cross station (also to become significant later), much of the story of Harry Potter was already beginning to take shape (Rowling, J.K.). 

            In 1992, Joanne Moved to Portugal to become a teacher of English as a Second Language.  For her, teaching gave her more free time in which she could work on the story of Harry.  About a year later she married a journalist, but shortly after the birth of her daughter, they divorced.  It was at this time that J.K., and her daughter Jessica, moved to Edinburgh, Scotland, to be closer to her family.  She did this to have a support network to assist her while she was putting the finishing touches on the first novel about Harry Potter.  Her manuscript was rejected several times upon her completion; so, J.K. was forced to go back to work as a French teacher in order to support herself and her daughter (Paperwise). 

            Finally, a London agent named Christopher Little took a look at the work.  He sold it to Bloomsbury Children’s Books.  In 1997, while still working as a teacher, Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone was released.  It achieved, after all the rejections, almost overnight success.  The book continued to sell.  At a book fair that same year, the editorial director of Scholastic Books, Arthur Levine, bought the American rights to the books.  Thus, he made it possible for Joanne to quit her teaching job to pursue her ultimate dream of writing for a living (Rowling, J.K.).

            Rowling worked so hard that each of the consecutive years following book two and book three of the series were released.  Warner Brothers pursued Rowling for movie rights, which she granted, as well as by Mattel, for the merchandising rights to the boy-wizard, Harry (J.K. Rowling).  In addition to this, she has also won many awards in the short time since she has been published.  For Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone she was awarded the British Book Award: Children’s Book of the Year, Rowntree Nestle Smarties Prize, Federation of Children’s Book Groups’ Award for longer novel and overall, Birmingham Cable Children’s Book Award, and the Sheffield Children’s Book Award all in 1997.  In 1998, she was awarded the Children’s Book of the Year Shortlist Citation and the Rowntree Nestle Smarties Prize  for Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, as well as the Young Telegraph Paperback of the Year for Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone.  The year 1999 brought with it the Whitbread Prize for Children’s Book of the Year awarded for Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azakaban.  She was given the WH Smith Children’s Book of the Year Award, 2000 for Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire; and most recently she was awarded the Rebecca Caudill Young Reader’s Book Award, 2001 for Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, as well as the Hugo Award for Best Novel, World Science Fiction Society, 2001, for Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire.   Also, in a before unheard of feat, the three books hold the top three positions on the New York Times best-sellers list (Rowling, J.K. Current 481).  All this however, has come at a price for J.K.  Recently, she has come under attack from some who feel that her books delve too much into the area of wizardry and witchcraft.  For this J.K. has but one response: “The book is really about the power of the imagination.  What Harry is learning to do is to develop his full potential.  Wizardry is just the analogy I use”  (Rowling, J.K.). 

            Regardless of the medium, J.K. has done a wonderful thing; she has gotten children reading again.  Currently, she is still living with her daughter Jessica close to her sister in Scotland.  She continues to work on the seven part series of the very popular boy-wizard, Harry Potter (Rowling, J.K.).

 

--Angela Dorzweiler, Matt Heuer, Sarah Ketchum, Shannon Olivas, and Quinci Shaver


Works Cited

“J.K. Rowling Timeline.” Harry Potter Network and Sites.  18 September 2001  
          <
http://www.hpnetwork.f2s.com/jkrowling/timeline.html>

Paperwise. 18 September 2001 <http://gaga.esortment.com/jkrowlingbiogr_reak.htm>

“Rowling, J.K.” Educational Paperback Association.  17 September 2001  
          <
http://www.edupaperback.org/authorbios/Rowling_JK.html>

“Rowling, J.K.” Current Biography Yearbook 2000 – With Index 1991-2000.  New York:  H.W. 
          Wilson Company, 2000:  481-84.

 

 

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