J.K.
Rowling
Scotland's
latest superstar writer seems destined to outsell Robert Louis
Stevenson and J.M. Barrie combined.
Like that of her own character, Harry Potter, J.K. Rowling's life
has the luster of a fairy tale. Divorced, living on public assistance
in a tiny Edinburgh flat with her infant daughter, Rowling wrote
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone at a table in an Edinburgh
café during her daughter's naps and it was Harry
Potter that rescued her. First, the Scottish Arts Council gave
her a grant to finish the book. After its sale to Bloomsbury (UK)
and Scholastic Books, the accolades began to pile up. Harry Potter
won The British Book Awards Children's Book of the Year, and the
Smarties Prize, and rave reviews on both sides of the Atlantic.
Book rights have been sold to England, France, Germany, Italy,
Holland, Greece, Finland, Denmark, Spain and Sweden.
A
graduate of Exeter University, a teacher, and then an unemployed
single parent, Rowling wrote Harry Potter when "I was very
low, and I had to achieve something. Without the challenge, I
would have gone stark raving mad." But Rowling has always
written; her first book was called "Rabbit." "I
was about six, and I haven't stopped scribbling since."
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