Chattanooga Times Free Press

New for Harry Potter fans

Book takes readers behind the scenes of J.K. Rowling ’s imaginativ­e world

- BY JEREMY MIKULA CHICAGO TRIBUNE

“HARRY POTTER: A JOURNEY THROUGH A HISTORY OF MAGIC” by British Library; Arthur A. Levine (144 pages, $19.99)

The big, lopsided words written in pencil captured not just the charm and innocence of youth, but a poignant prediction.

“The excitement in this book made me feel warm inside,” Alice Newton, 8, wrote in a note. “I think it is possibly one of the best books an 8/9-year-old could read.”

Alice was writing about the first few chapters from the manuscript of J.K. Rowling’s “Harry Potter and the Philosophe­r’s Stone,” which had been given to Alice’s father, Nigel, the founder and chief executive of Bloomsbury. The young girl’s input proved crucial, and Newton approved editor Barry Cunningham’s proposal to publish the book that would become the first in the blockbuste­r series

that would sell more than 450 million copies worldwide and be translated into 79 languages.

That scene opens “Harry Potter: A Journey Through a History of Magic,” a fun, fact-filled book for young readers that serves as preview to the British Library’s new exhibition, “Harry Potter: A History of Magic.” The exhibit will come to the New York Historical Society next fall.

With activities and illustrati­ons from Rowling, Jim Kay and Olivia Lomenech Gill, the book takes readers on a tour through the Hogwarts curriculum — Potions, Herbology, Charms, Astronomy, Divination, Defense Against the Dark Arts and Care of Magical Creatures — by exploring the subjects in the series, the professors who teach them and some of the historical origins for items and characters.

For instance, Nicholas Flamel — in the books, the creator of the Philosophe­r’s Stone (or Sorcerer’s Stone in the U.S. versions of the books) — was a real French scribe who died in 1418 and was believed to be an alchemist. Mandrakes, which second-year students help plant in “Chamber of Secrets,” are real, too, but instead of helping restore people and ghosts petrified by a basilisk, mandrakes were believed to be a medieval herbal remedy for headaches, earaches and insanity, best harvested by unearthing the human-shaped roots by attaching “one end of a cord to the plant and the other to a dog.”

Harry Potter fans of all ages will enjoy the breezy nature of “A Journey Through a History of Magic.” The book sheds light on the folklore Rowling incorporat­ed into her series without getting bogged down in dry narrative — Professor Binns’ History of Magic class it is not.

Kay’s and Gill’s illustrati­ons lend the book vibrancy, helping characters and creatures alike pop out from the pages. Younger readers in particular might enjoy the book’s activities, such as making a color-changing potion out of lemon-lime soda, but it might be best to make sure they’ve read the series first: “A Journey Through a History of Magic” does feature some minor spoilers.

For older fans, the book’s real magic lies in cataloging items from Rowling’s collection. “A Journey Through a History

Harry Potter fans of all ages will enjoy the breezy nature of “A Journey Through a History of Magic.” The book sheds light on the folklore Rowling incorporat­ed into her series without getting bogged down in dry narrative — Professor Binns’ History of Magic class it is not.

of Magic” features pages upon pages of Rowling’s illustrati­ons, handwritte­n drafts, typed manuscript­s, flow charts and scenes that appeared differentl­y in the final published stories. One draft of “Chamber of Secrets” has Harry and Ron Weasley crashing Mr. Weasley’s flying Ford Anglia into the lake instead of the Whomping Willow; the names of the Order of the Phoenix and Dumbledore’s Army were originally switched; and a manuscript of “Sorcerer’s Stone” has Rubeus Hagrid warning Cornelius Fudge — who is not only a Muggle but the prime minister of England — of the threat of Lord Voldemort. The warning scene would be substantia­lly rewritten with different characters as the first chapter of “HalfBlood Prince.” Fudge, of course, was the minister of magic in the final draft.

Seeing Rowling’s creative process is a treat. Hermione Granger and Neville Longbottom are the same respective characters in a 1991 sketch, but fellow Gryffindor Dean Thomas was originally named Gary. And speaking of Gryffindor, “A Journey Through A History of Magic” features handwritte­n notes on how new students are sorted into houses. Rowling toyed with the idea of a ghost ride, a riddle or statues of the school’s four founders coming to life and picking students before she settled on the famed Sorting Hat.

Much like tapping the right brick to enter Diagon Alley, “Harry Potter: A Journey Through a History of Magic” brings readers back into Rowling’s imaginativ­e world. It’s part history, part nostalgia trip. But more importantl­y, it’ll make you want to pick up the books and relive Harry’s adventures all over again.

Or, as Albus Dumbledore once said, “Nitwit! Blubber! Oddment! Tweak!”

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