Spread the Word ...
del.icio.us Digg Furl Reddit StumbleUpon Help
Workers printing J. K. Rowling’s ”Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows” are apparently being forced to work in total darkness to prevent leaks of the new novel, which is scheduled to be released on July 21.
Some select fans will be invited to attend a midnight reading by Rowling of Harry Potter 7. The reading is said to last until dawn with the book read in its entirety. Fans can enter a sweepstakes with a chance to be included among those select few at the reading.
Barnes & Noble, the largest bookseller in the U.S., said it expects sales volume will be higher in the second quarter because of sales of the new Harry Potter novel.
If all that isn’t enough to convince you that the Harry Potter mania is going full throttle, there’s more:
The Royal Mail is marking the Harry Potter series finale with millions of first-class stamps featuring images from the covers of the seven books. The Royal Mail said it was “proud to commemorate and celebrate an illustrious British author and a true global publishing phenomenon”.
At Lawrence University in Appelton, Wisc., students can actually attend a course titled “Thinking about Harry Potter” during the fall semester. It will be taught by Edmund Kern, author of “The Wisdom of Harry Potter: What Our Favorite Hero Teaches Us About Moral Choices”.
“Today’s college students are like no others in history,” Kern says in an HPANA interview. “They had the chance to grow up right along with Harry Potter. I’d be foolish to pass up the teaching opportunities that those circumstances offer me.”
And, finally, an 86-year-old man’s dying wish is to read the final Harry Potter book. “He accepts what’s coming,” his daughter said. “He just wants to read that book first.” A hospital contacted Rowling, who wrote the man, but no such luck. Rowling says the release rights belong to the publisher. He’ll have to read it when it comes out, too. Hang in there, buddy!
N.Y. Times Book Reviews
The New Yorker Book Reviews
Publishers Weekly Book Reviews
USA Today Book Reviews
- Sister Souljah rejects any labels on her literary output
- Gordon-Reed's 'Hemingses' wins National Book Award
- Book roundup: Fiction, in brief
- Book buzz: Top sellers, 'Suns' shines, warm 'Christmas'
- Five questions for NPR's Bailey White
- Malcolm Gladwell's 'Success' defines 'outlier' achievement
- Add 'Eleventh Man' to Ivan Doig's best yarns
- Christopher Plummer gets wordy, naughty and nice 'In Spite of Myself'
- Neil Gaiman to design a demise for Batman
- Denis Leary: Why we succumb to being 'Fat, Loud, Lazy and Stupid'
Amazon Daily
- Best Way to Make a Garden? Make a Garden Library.
- Graphic Novel Fridays: In a Name, Moresukine
- National Book Awards: GalleyCat on the Floor
- Introducing Toy Whimsy
- The Books of the States: Wisconsin (10 electoral votes; Guest: Daphne Beal)
- Happy Birthday, Professor Gordon-Reed: Questions for NBA Winner Annette Gordon-Reed
- National Book Award Winners: Matthiessen, Gordon-Reed, Doty, Blundell
- YA Wednesday: Hours, Days...Oh, the Waiting!
- Four Erins in One (Guest Blogger: Erin Hunter)
- Costa Shortlists Announced
Bookseller Links:
RSS FEEDS
Recent Posts
- Doctor, Scientist, Author - Michael Crichton Will Be Missed
- Book Review: Dead Heat by Joel C. Rosenberg
- From Oregon to DC: Bookish Bed and Breakfasts Provide Novel Vacations
- Book Review: Messiah - The First Judgement: The Chronicles of Brothers by Wendy Alec
- Book Review: Eat This Not That! by David Zinczenko with Matt Goulding
- Book Review: Mountain Top by Robert Whitlow
- Book Review: The 12 Second Sequence by Jorge Cruise
- Book Review: The Shack by William P. Young
- Book Review: Deceptively Delicious by Jessica Seinfeld
- Book Review: How Not To Look Old by Charla Krupp
SF Gate Book Reviews
- San Francisco Chronicle Best-Sellers Nov. 23 /
- 'Somebody': Brando bio discusses actor's pain
- Review: 'Chagall: A Biography' cites innovation
- Nonfiction review: 'Steaks' as cattle showbiz
- 'Songs for the Missing,' by Stewart O'Nan
- Interview with William Least Heat-Moon
- 'Thames: The Biography'
- 'Salmonella Men on Planet Porno'
- 'Outliers,' by Malcolm Gladwell
Author/Book Review Podcasts from NPR
Seattle Times Book Reviews
L.A. Times Book Reviews
Powell's
- Bend, Not Break
- From the Rise of Civil Rights to the Debate over Affirmative Action
- On Memory and Fiction: Part Eight
- Book News for Thursday, November 20, 2008
- Taking the Special Bus to the Apocalypse
- Welcome to the Party
- What Would Wilsey Say?
- Report from Wordstock
- Read It Before They Screen It: Vibes and The Lucky One
- Book News for Wednesday, November 19, 2008




Leave a Comment
trackback address