Only You Can Save Harry Potter!
All "Harry Potter" fans should read and give their signatures to save boy-wizard.
Harry Potter fans have begun a petition in which they ask the author Joanne Rowling to write one more book about the adventures of Harry and he's friends. Fans are measured to collect not less than one million signatures on the Save Harry Potter site, newspaper "The Daily Mail" informs.
Harry Potter fans say, "There has never been a place like Hogwarts. There has never been a writer like JK Rowling. And there has never, ever been a character like Harry Potter. Millions, perhaps billions of us love reading his adventures, and we never want them to end".
Joanne Rowling says, that the seventh book about Harry Potter becomes last. In May, 2007, that is two months prior to an output of " Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows ", the writer has informed, that will write the eighth volume - The Encyclopedia of Characters and Realities.
Are you a Harry Potter fan? Than go to saveharrypotter and save Harry!
Do we want Harry Potter back for good?
Jean Hannah Edelstein
July 11, 2007 9:35 AM
http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/books/2007/07/do_we_want_harry_potter_back_f.html
Magic at the tills ... Harry Potter books go on sale at Waterstone's. Photograph: Kim Myun Jung Kim/PA
"There has never been a place like Hogwarts. There has never been a writer like JK Rowling. And there has never, ever been a character like Harry Potter. Millions, perhaps billions of us love reading his adventures, and we never want them to end."
This would be a rather sweet plea if it was drafted by the 8-11 year-olds who were originally the target demographic for the Harry Potter series. But that tell-tale "W" at the bottom of the website that touts itself as the epicentre of "the international campaign to SAVE HARRY!" betrays the truth: this crusade is brought to you by your friendly neighbourhood bookselling behemoth, Waterstone's.
Are they really trying to save Harry, or are they trying to save themselves? With the impending publication of the final book in the epic Harry Potter series, Waterstone's aims to gather 1,000,000 signatures from ardent fans, petitioning JK Rowling not to quit after book seven. According to Wayne Winston, the head of children's books by Waterstone's quoted in the Telegraph: "We're not asking J K Rowling to start work on another novel tomorrow, we're just asking that she doesn't rule it out. Of course she wants a break but when she wakes up one day in the future with a fantastic new idea half-formed in her mind, hopefully she'll run with it and not deny her muse."
Despite the vague press release that she issued indicating that she'd never say never to resurrecting her hero, I don't imagine that JK Rowling will be particularly bowled over by a million signatures. The fact that she's a billionaire has probably clued her in to the fact that her books are quite popular.
But for Waterstone's, the end of Harry means the end of the guaranteed massive volumes of sales that they've made every time a new book in the series has been released. With no clear successor to the series on the horizon, I imagine that the company's strategy meetings are less than jolly these days as they scramble desperately to identify the next pot of mass market publishing gold.
Independent booksellers, on the other hand, will not be signing the petition. Although making the statement in polite bookish society that you're not keen on the Potter is tantamount to saying that you enjoy kicking adorable puppies, independent booksellers can't compete with the deep discounts that large retailers can sell the books at. Indeed, 25% of them won't be stocking book seven because they cannot afford it. The prospect of a publishing market that is not dominated by a single author and title each year or two must be extraordinarily appetising for them.
And it should be exciting for readers, too. Remember how upset everyone was when Take That broke up? Oh, that was a tragic day for the nation. How the youth of Britain wept and moaned and tore their hair! And yet, although I have come across one or two people who still reflect fondly on days of yore when they kissed a photo of Howard Donald before falling asleep at night, it appears to me that Britain did eventually bounce back from that terrible rent in its cultural fabric. Some people have even occasionally deigned to listen to other sorts of music.
So what if Harry's graduated from Hogwarts? There are so many millions of other lovely books to read. Rather than crying apocalypse and bullying JK Rowling to carry on doing something that she no longer seems to especially relish, perhaps Waterstone's could try to redirect some of the enthusiasm of its millions of petition-signatories? Instead of "Save Harry!" a slogan such as "Remember Take That? We Got Over It!" could be just the ticket to launch an inspiring movement for a long-overdue diversification of literary consumption.Fans start 'Save Harry Potter' petition for one more book
The seventh book, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, is published on July 21 and Rowling says it is her last.
She has let slip that two characters will die - and speculation abounds that one of them will be Harry himself.
But fans say even that should not prevent Rowling from writing an eighth book - insisting that, in a world of magic and wizardry, Harry could be brought back from the dead.
Harry Potter in the latest blockbuster film
http://www.netscape.com/viewstory/2007/07/09/fans-start-save-harry-potter-petition-for-one-more-book/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.dailymail.co.uk%2Fpages%2Flive%2Farticles%2Fnews%2Fnews.html%3Fin_article_id%3D467148%26in_page_id%3D1770&frame=trueSave Harry Potter! Rowling says "never say never" to more books
Posted Jul 9th 2007 3:03PM by Jonathon Morgan
Filed under: Media, Books
Will Harry Potter dies at the end of the 7th and "final" book of the series that bares his name? Who knows -- but "no matter what happens at the end of 'Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows,'" a new petition begs JK Rowling, the books' author, to continue writing more stories about Hogwarts, and its world-famous boy wizard.
Will the petition be successful? Says Rowling: "Never say never."
In spite of this, an 8th book seems unlikely, especially if Potter doesn't make it through the end of "Hallows." However, Waterstones, the bookseller that's behind the survey, notes that plenty of characters have been "resurrected" -- including the great Sherlock Holmes.
If you, like Waterstones (who I'm sure will sell significantly fewer books once Potter mania has subsided), are upset that this may be the last adventure for your favorite magic-making hero, you can sign the petition here.
Potter Fans Campaign To Save Harry Potter
Harry Potter fans have launched a campaign to save the boy wizard from being killed off in the seventh and final book of the adventure series.
Aficionados of the novels are hoping for a million signatures on a petition urging author J.K.Rowling to write more Harry Potter books after she confirmed a number of deaths at the end of the final installment.
But the author remains tight-lipped over Harry Potter’s fate. Her spokesman revealed, “Never say never… It’s not saying that she definitely is (going to write another title) and it’s not saying that she definitely isn’t. I cannot comment further.”
http://www.sponkit.com/potter-fans-campaign-to-save-harry-potter/