JO ROWLING NET - Your Number #1 Resource For All Things J.K. Rowling
Welcome to JoRowling.net, your number one source for all things J.K. Rowling, the magnificent author behind the Harry Potter series. We have all the latest news, images, graphics and much more. Be sure to stick around because magic is brewing.
Lumos : A charity to ensure the UN minimum standards for the care of children are implemented across the whole of Europe and beyond. This charity was co-founded by Jo.
MS Society : The UK’s leading MS charity founded in 1953. A democratic organisation providing information and support but also funding research and fighting for change.
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Harry Potter Series
Status: Completed
Released: June 30, 1997
Purchase: Bookstores, Amazon.
Comic Relief Series Fantastic Beasts & Where To Find Them; Quidditch Through The Ages
Status: Completed
Released: December 4, 2008 (to the public)
Purchase: Bookstores, Amazon.
Pottermore
Status: Beta
Beta Release: July, 2011
Public Release: April, 2012
E-Book Purchase: here
The Casual Vacancy
Status: Coming Soon
Released: September 27, 2012
Purchase: Available to pre-order at all large bookstores & online stores.
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I sat and thought for four (delayed train) hours, and all the details bubbled up in my brain, and this scrawny, black-haired, bespectacled boy who didn’t know he was a wizard became more and more real to me. — J.K. Rowling
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Jeff O’Neal argues Rowling should get Nobel prize.
Jeff O’Neal has recently written an argument over at Book Riot in regards to Jo Rowling winning the Nobel Prize Literature (a prize she wholeheartedly deserves in my opinion but that could just be me being a little biased). There are some points throughout the article that I disagree with highly, for example, the belief that she doesn’t write great sentences which is complete and utter rubbish.
Read the argument for yourselves below:
Last week, it came out that in 1961, C.S. Lewis nominated J.R.R. Tolkien for the Nobel Prize in Literature and that Tolkien was summarily dismissed by the committee. As far as I know, there has never been much public discussion of Tolkien’s merits as a Nobel laureate, but it was still interesting to see some behind-the-curtains commentary on his candidacy. Anders Osterling articulated the central objection to Tolkien, who he said “has not in any way measured up to storytelling of the highest quality.”
Anyone who follows the literature Nobel at all will not be surprised by this; they know that the Nobel is interested in writing that is decidedly literary (and increasingly that is under-appreciated and/or political). This makes sense, as the award is the ultimate arbiter of what literary excellence means.
But what does literary excellence mean? In his will that established the prizes, Alfred Nobel wanted the Literature award to go to “to the person who shall have produced in the field of literature the most outstanding work in an ideal direction.” This phrase is as ambiguous as it is telling; the “ideal direction” of literature is not stated, but the award clearly is intended for authors whose work strives toward some kind of literary ideal.
These days, we know better than to claim any central, unyielding quality that makes a written work literary, but we can get a sense of what literary means to the Nobel committee by looking at some recent commendations. The most recent winner, Swedish poet Tomas Tranströmer, received the award “because, through his condensed, translucent images, he gives us fresh access to reality.” 2009’s laureate, German writer Herta Müller, was cited for her “concentration of poetry and the frankness of prose” that “depicts the landscape of the dispossessed.”
The structure of these two commendations is repeated in most of the recent award descriptions, and shows how the committee imagines the highest achievement of literature–the combination of exemplary craft (concentration of poetry, condensed, translucent images) and important subjects (“the landscape of the dispossessed” and “fresh access to reality”). This formulation feels both reasonable and desirable, as it captures both the aesthetic and topical demands most readers of literature value.
But it is also a limited formulation of what the “ideal direction” of literature might be. There are other ways of thinking about what literature’s goals should be, and the one that jumps to mind for me is reading itself. Reading is an end in itself and therefore writing that inspires people to read does indeed work in “an ideal direction.” And what living author has inspired more people to read and more love of reading than J.K. Rowling?
Put the artistic imperative aside for the moment and consider this: she is the formative writer for millions and millions of children. She doesn’t write great sentences, and it would be hard to argue that the subject matter is hugely important. But the questions, characters, stories, and values in her work have resonated with the world.