

“Jo locks herself in the Balmoral Hotel, Edinburgh to work on the crucial final chapters of Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows. It’s January 11th, 2007 and the end of 17 years of writing.”
![JKR: For years now, I felt like if it all disappeared - and some days I do feel like that. Is it real? Then this is where I would come back to, you know. This would be my baseline. I’d be back in Leith. And obviously if I had known that ten years on I’d come back here with a film crew and there would be my published books in someone else’s bookcase in this room… I mean, it’s really incredible to me. [x]](http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lp7rjyJK321qb0zfoo1_r1_500.png)
JKR: For years now, I felt like if it all disappeared - and some days I do feel like that. Is it real? Then this is where I would come back to, you know. This would be my baseline. I’d be back in Leith. And obviously if I had known that ten years on I’d come back here with a film crew and there would be my published books in someone else’s bookcase in this room… I mean, it’s really incredible to me. [x]
This film is going to be amazing! Help support this film by passing this on and creating a buzz about it.
It is truly a good film and is being made for a good cause!
AND ALSO! I’m working on this film!
Spread the word!
WATCH IT NOW.
![lettersandsongs:
Anne Rowling died in 1990, she never knew about Harry Potter, or the phenomenal success her daughter was about to enjoy. The death of Joanne Rowling’s mother was to have a profound effect on her writing, in many ways the whole of Harry Potter is one giant attempt to reclaim a childhood.“I’ve been writing for 6 months before she died. The weird thing is the essential plot didn’t change after my mother died, but everything deepened and darkened […] it seeped into every part of the books. I think in retrospect, now I finished I see just how much it formed everything.”
J.K. Rowling: A Year in a Life
For me, this combination of images and phrases is extremely powerful. Forgive me if I read far too much into this, but they (both creator and character) are essentially asking the same thing of the people they loved in their own worlds. In addition to that, due to the combination of the pictures and the sentences, Harry is asking his creator, his God, if you will, to stay with him. She didn’t give up on him throughout all of the other six books, and she will see him through the most tumultuous time in his life. In a way, they have one another - Harry holds the hand of the God that created him, and Jo holds the hand of one of the few (though fictional) people who really knows what it’s like to lose someone and to want them back, and to ask someone you love to stay with you, and to have someone who loves you promise to stay. Again, maybe I’m reading too much into this, but they are each asking the other this question: “You’ll stay with me?” and each responding “Until the very end.”
I think this is true with writers in general - your characters never leave you, and you essentially never leave them. It’s just a thought, but I wanted to explain why this makes me cry every time I see it without simply saying that I tear up. :)](http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lc2kp5SjGe1qavxvko1_500.png)
Anne Rowling died in 1990, she never knew about Harry Potter, or the phenomenal success her daughter was about to enjoy. The death of Joanne Rowling’s mother was to have a profound effect on her writing, in many ways the whole of Harry Potter is one giant attempt to reclaim a childhood.
“I’ve been writing for 6 months before she died. The weird thing is the essential plot didn’t change after my mother died, but everything deepened and darkened […] it seeped into every part of the books. I think in retrospect, now I finished I see just how much it formed everything.”J.K. Rowling: A Year in a Life
For me, this combination of images and phrases is extremely powerful. Forgive me if I read far too much into this, but they (both creator and character) are essentially asking the same thing of the people they loved in their own worlds. In addition to that, due to the combination of the pictures and the sentences, Harry is asking his creator, his God, if you will, to stay with him. She didn’t give up on him throughout all of the other six books, and she will see him through the most tumultuous time in his life. In a way, they have one another - Harry holds the hand of the God that created him, and Jo holds the hand of one of the few (though fictional) people who really knows what it’s like to lose someone and to want them back, and to ask someone you love to stay with you, and to have someone who loves you promise to stay. Again, maybe I’m reading too much into this, but they are each asking the other this question: “You’ll stay with me?” and each responding “Until the very end.”
I think this is true with writers in general - your characters never leave you, and you essentially never leave them. It’s just a thought, but I wanted to explain why this makes me cry every time I see it without simply saying that I tear up. :)
Sylvia Plath (via petitefeministe)
(this was a fantastic documentary!)
![[UPON COMPLETING HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS]
J.K. ROWLING: I think I’ve finished.
INTERVIEWER: Hey Jo, well done.
J.K. ROWLING: Thank you. Well, you don’t know it might be rubbish, some people will loathe it. They’ll absolutely loathe it but the thing is that’s as it should be because for some people to love it others must loathe it. That’s just in the nature of the plot; some people won’t be happy because what they wanted to happen hasn’t happened. And to an extent there’s so much expectation from the hardcore fans that I’m not sure I could ever match up to it but um I’m really… [LAUGHS] Well I’m actually really really happy with it. So it’s very odd to think that this will be broadcast after loads of people have read it. People may, right now, be throwing things at the screen but I am… [LAUGHS] I am really happy with it. I like it. And I don’t always feel like that.](http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lerzd8g2Y71qd5ljyo1_500.gif)
[UPON COMPLETING HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS]
J.K. ROWLING: I think I’ve finished.
INTERVIEWER: Hey Jo, well done.
J.K. ROWLING: Thank you. Well, you don’t know it might be rubbish, some people will loathe it. They’ll absolutely loathe it but the thing is that’s as it should be because for some people to love it others must loathe it. That’s just in the nature of the plot; some people won’t be happy because what they wanted to happen hasn’t happened. And to an extent there’s so much expectation from the hardcore fans that I’m not sure I could ever match up to it but um I’m really… [LAUGHS] Well I’m actually really really happy with it. So it’s very odd to think that this will be broadcast after loads of people have read it. People may, right now, be throwing things at the screen but I am… [LAUGHS] I am really happy with it. I like it. And I don’t always feel like that.
That documentary is the funniest thing I’ve ever seen.
So, as Liberals, we’re both Socialists and Nazis?
“You keep on using that word. I don’t think it means what you think it means.”
