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Rowling fairy tales sell for $4m
Thomas Wagner
LONDON—A book of fairy tales created, handwritten and illustrated by J.K.
Rowling sold for nearly $4 million at auction Thursday. The buyer, Web
retailer Amazon.com Inc., now owns one of only seven copies of “The
Tales of Beedle the Bard,” which is leather bound with silver mounts.
Amazon, in its unaccustomed position as a buyer rather than seller of
books, was represented by London art agent Hazlitt, Gooden and Fox. The
book originally had been expected to sell for about $100,000. The
standing-room-only crowd at Sotheby’s auction house applauded as bidding
topped the $2 million mark.
The money will benefit The Children’s Voice, a charity co-founded in
2005 by Rowling and Baroness Nicholson, a member of Britain’s House of
Lords. Rowling, 42, watched the auction on the Web from her home in
Edinburgh, Scotland, and said she was ecstatic.
“This will mean so much to children in desperate need of help,” she said
in a statement. “It means Christmas has come early to me.” Amazon.com
posted a handful of photos of the book’s contents and said it will
review the tales on its Web site. The company also launched a discussion
board to answer questions about the book’s contents from fans of
Rowling’s Harry Potter series.
Craig Berman, an Amazon spokesman, said the company plans a tour for the
book of libraries and schools. Rowling, whose Harry Potter books have
sold nearly 400 million copies and been translated into 64 languages,
wrote the Beedle tales after finishing the seventh and final work in the
Potter series.
“‘The Tales of Beedle the Bard’ is really a distillation of the themes
found in the Harry Potter books, and writing it has been the most
wonderful way to say goodbye to a world I have loved and lived in for 17
years,” Rowling said. She said the six other copies of the Beedle books
have been given to people who were closely connected to the Harry Potter
collection.
The Children’s Voice campaigns for children’s rights across Europe,
especially in Eastern Europe, where many children and teenagers grow up
in institutions, often in what many activists regard as unacceptable
conditions. |