Ms. J K Rowling was born on July 31st, 1965 in Chipping Sodbury,
Gloucestershire, England. Her given name at birth was Joanne Kathleen.
Ms. Rowling has one sister, Di, who was born 2 years after J K.
It is interesting to note that Ms. Rowling claims that she has actually
been writing since she was 5 or 6 years old. Her first story, called
Rabbit, was filled with interesting characters, such as a large
bee called Miss Bee.
Ms. Rowling, along with her parents and sister, moved twice while
J K was growing up. While at one of their homes, close to Bristol
and in Winterbourne, she had friends next door whose last name was
Potter. J K never forgot the children, or the last name, which she
liked very much.
When she was nine years old her family moved again to Tutshill.
Ms. Rowling attended a primary (grade) school in Tutshill, and later
attended Wyedean Comprehensive. Ms. Rowling describes herself as
being shy, freckly, with no natural athletic ability but a great
love of literature. Later, when she graduated from Wyedean Comprehensive,
she attended Exeter University. Here Ms. Rowling studied French
after her parents encouraged her into what they believed would be
a wonderful career as a bilingual secretary. After graduation, however,
it didt take Ms. Rowling long to realize that she was not meant
to be a secretary. Self described asthe worst secretary ever,
very disorganized, she found it increasingly hard to remain attentive
during meetings, actually writing story ideas instead of taking
notes as she had been instructed.
When Ms. Rowling was 26 years old she moved to Portugal to be an
English teacher. Ms. Rowling has been quoted many times as saying
she loved teaching English, often teaching in the afternoons and
evenings so that she could be free to work on her writing during
the mornings. It was during this period that she began working on
a story about a wizard.
Ms. Rowling met and married a journalist in Portugal (he was Portuguese),
and her daughter Jessica was born in 1993. Shortly after the birth
of her daughter, the marriage ended in divorce and Ms. Rowling,
along with her infant daughter, moved to Edinburgh, Scotland so
that J K could be near her younger sister, Di. It was during this
time that Ms. Rowling became determined to not only finish her Harry
Potter wizar novel, but to get it published. Often she would
write in restaurants, where she and her daughter could stay warm
while she wrote. Ms. Rowling requested a grant from the Scottish
Arts Council, which she eventually received, in order to complete
her book. When it was completed and after several rejections, Ms.
Rowling sold the novel, Harry Potter and The Philosopher's Stone,
to Bloomsbury in the UK for the equivalent of about $4,000.
To support her daughter and herself, Ms. Rowling began working as
a French teacher. After several months Arthur A Levine Books/Scholastic
Press bought the American rights to the firstHarry Potter, and
Ms. Rowling received enough money to give up teaching and write
full time. Ms. Rowling has described this moment as the happiest
of her life.
After Bloomsbury Children's Books published the book in June 1997,
it wast long before Ms. Rowling was recognized as a major discovery.
The awards and accolades grew quickly for both Harry Potter and
Ms. Rowling. In 1997 the book won The British Book Awards Children's
Book of the Year, and the Smarties Prize.
When published in the US, in September of 1998, the book was renamed
and released by Arthur A Levine Books / Scholastic Press; the new
title was Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
Ms. Rowling quickly wrote a sequel, Harry Potter and The Chamber
of Secrets, which was published July of 1998 in the UK, and in June
1999 in the USA. Immediately after this successful sequel a third
book, Harry Potter and The Prisoner of Azkaban, was published in
July and September of 1999, in the UK and the USA, respectively.
To her amazement, and joy, Ms. Rowling became a household name when
the first three installments of the Harry Potter series took over
the top 3 slots in the New York Times bestsellers list. (Is interesting
to note that the books also did as well, achieving similar results,
in the UK)
By the summer of 2000, Ms. Rowling had reportedly earned over $400
million for her first three Harry Potter books, which have been
printed in 35 languages and sold over 30 million copies. Her fourth
book in the popular series, entitled Harry Potter and the Goblet
of Fire, pre-sold over one million advanced copies, with a first
printing of 5.3 million. Because of her domination and incredible
success on the New York Times bestseller list, the decision was
made to introduce a bestseller list for childrens books, which
would eliminate the dominating factor of these bestsellers on the
current The New York Times bestseller list. This brought a tremendous
amount of relief and happiness to a lot of competing authors - and
a tremendous honor to Ms. J K Rowling.
Writer - Novels include
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (2008) (announced) (novel)
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (2007) (announced) (novel)
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (2005) (filming) (novel)
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (2004) (novel)
Harry Potter: Quidditch World Cup (2003) (VG)
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (2002) (novel)
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone (2001) (novel)