The Scotsman

JK Rowling put her first novel ‘out of its misery’ when she conjured Harry Potter

- By BRIAN FERGUSON bferguson@scotsman.com

JK Rowling has revealed she started writing a “very bad novel” before her first Harry Potter book and only “put it out of its misery” after she created the series featuring the schoolboy wizard.

Rowling has disclosed that the manuscript for The Private Joke was in the luggage rack of her train from Manchester to London when she dreamt up the character.

Writing in a Sunday newspaper essay, she has admitted she kept writing the first novel while working on Harry Potter and The Philosophe­r’s Stone.

The Edinburgh-based author was recalling her early writing experience­s ahead of the release of The Christmas Pig, her first children’s book since Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, the final book of that series, in 2007.

Writing in the Sunday Times yesterday, Rowling recalls writing her own stories from the age of six, but says she was “quite secretive” about the work she produced outside the classroom.

She adds: “Only my bin and I know exactly what was in the short stories I churned out as a child and a teen, not to mention the novels that shrivelled up and died after a couple of chapters.”

Rowling spent five years working on the first Potter novel and the idea of a series of books, after she dreamt up the character of the schoolboy wizard on a delayed train journey in 1990.

In her essay, Rowling recalls: “In my early twenties I wrote quite a lot of a very bad novel called The Private Joke. I regularly abandoned it for months at a time to write other things, then picked it up again.

“Part of the manuscript was sitting up in the luggage rack when, aged 25, I was travelling

by train from Manchester to London, and the idea for a very different kind of book hit me: that of a boy who didn’t realise he was a wizard and was taken off to magic school.

“The idea of writing for children had never occurred to me before, not because I thought it was in any way less than writing for adults – I read voraciousl­y

as a child and still count certain children’s books among my favourites – but because my childhood wasn’t very happy.

“I’m not one of those who craves a return to a delightful­ly carefree youth. For me, childhood was a time of anxiety and insecurity.

“Yet the idea for Harry Potter

came to me in a rush of exhilarati­on, and all I could think was how much I’d love to write it, how much fun it would be to build up that hidden world.

“I kept writing The Private Joke alongside The Philosophe­r’s Stone for a while until it dawned on me, to paraphrase the iconic Sesame Street song, that one of these things is better than the other, and I finally put The Private Joke out of its misery.”

Rowling spent nine years working on The Christmas Pig, which is billed as “a pageturnin­g adventure about one child’s love for his most treasured toy”, finishing the book during lockdown.

She writes in the essay: “I finished it at a time when the pandemic was still raging and I was unusually aware of the need for human connection. I think that’s why I kept imagining it being read aloud when I worked on it, something I’ve never done with any other book.”

 ?? ?? 0 JK Rowling’s new children’s novel, The Christmas Pig, is published tomorrow
0 JK Rowling’s new children’s novel, The Christmas Pig, is published tomorrow

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom