Entertainment Weekly named J.K. Rowling 2007 Entertainer of this Year
this week. She beat out George Clooney, The Sopanos, Angelina Jolie and
Will Smith, to name a few.
Rowling's feat, Entertainment Weekly's Mark Harris says, is not just
writing the most popular series of books ever, not just numbers
that say "top grossing" and "best selling" and "most lucrative movie
franchise ever". No, her feat is that she brought back the love of
reading. In a world ruled more and more by electronic devices, cells
phones and the like, we still all took time to pick up a book, a book
printed with ink on paper, and, turning actual pages, we read it.
Those books are, to say the least, extraordinary. She created a world,
populated it and made it internally cohesive. She carefully planned
everything out, all seven books, so ideas build on previous ones. She
was able to show us the journey of a child into adulthood, a world
falling into darkness, to go from a mere -but incredibly well told-
story, to an epic battle of good vs evil. EW's Harris says it best in
his article when he says that with the books' "constant book-by-book
recalibration of what their readers were prepared to absorb, they've
proven unlike anything else in a century of children's literature." We
travelled far with Harry, from the giggles at Uncle Vernon's fear of
the Hogwarts letters, to the throat-aching simplicity of Harry's walk
in the forest, the spirits of the dead who loved him most beside him.
There is a timelessness to this story that started out so simply, but
ends in painful, yet hopeful, complexity.
Harry Potter was part of J.K. Rowling's life for 17 years. Now, she's
moving on, working on two other books, one of them for children. We owe
her much.