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Finish or bust - JK Rowling's unlikely message in an Edinburgh hotel room

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Published Date:
03 February 2007
SHE began her journey to literary fame by scribbling in cafés with a baby in a pram at her elbow, while living on benefits.
Twelve years and £600 million later, JK Rowling finished her Harry Potter series in a luxury room at one of Scotland's most famous hotels.

And the writer celebrated the completion of the seventh and final novel, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallo
ws, in bizarre fashion, by signing a marble bust in her room.

"JK Rowling finished writing Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows in this room (652) on 11th Jan 2007," she wrote.

In the stroke of a marker pen she may have created the most valuable item of Potter memorabilia next to a signed copy of a first edition of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone.

The bust was yesterday in the care of Debbie Taylor, general manager, of the Balmoral in Edinburgh.

The memorable image of Rowling's first steps on the road to fame is of an impoverished single mother escaping her freezing flat to write for hours in the warmth of a cafe with her baby in a pram beside her. Finding shelter in Edinburgh from a former husband, she would nurse one cup of coffee because she couldn't afford more.

Two famous and well-marked venues include Nicolson's restaurant, owned at the time by her brother-in-law and now replaced by a Chinese restaurant. Legend has it that much of the Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone was written there.

She was also a regular at the Elephant House café, on George IV Bridge, writing in long-hand and typing up the work at home on a manual typewriter.

The pressures on JK Rowling are very different now. Ten years after she published her first book, her baby daughter, Jessica, is now a teenager, and the concern is to keep a normal life with two other young children and her husband, Dr Neil Murray.

There are other Edinburgh cafés where she has written, well after her worldwide fame, keeping their names quiet to discourage tourist traffic. "She has just got into the habit of writing in places other than the house. Writers do need locations other than a bedroom," said a friend.

But while Edinburgh residents may respect her privacy, book collectors are not so polite. It has become increasingly difficult for her to be anywhere in public.

It remained a mystery yesterday why JK Rowling chose to scrawl on a statue in black marker pen, in an incident that had some hallmarks of a publicity stunt.

Her note was reportedly spotted by hotel staff.

A spokeswoman for the 188-room Balmoral, where rates run from £290 to £1,575 a night, said: "We can confirm that the author signed a bust, following a recent visit to the hotel."

But there are no plans, apparently, to turn the room into a tourist shrine.

"It was hotel property. We have many different antique artefacts within the hotel," said the spokeswoman. The bust was believed to be of the Greek god Hermes, not Emperor Hadrian as first thought.

A spokesman for the author said: "We can confirm that JK Rowling did write some of the book at the Balmoral last month and did complete the book at that hotel."

Rowling announced on Thursday that the seventh and final instalment in the series, which will follow Harry during his final year at Hogwarts, will be published on 21 July.

• MANY writers work from home, but regularly go in search of inspiration or escape from the pressures of family life. Sir Walter Scott began his early career as a writer in a summer cottage in Lasswade. Ernest Hemingway wrote anywhere he could.

Writer's retreats are always in demand. In the United States, the austere setting of the MacDowell writers' colony in New Hampshire, with 32 its cabin studios, has drawn the likes of Alice Sebold, writer of The Lovely Bones. Author Michel Chabon and his novelist wife Ayelet Waldman are also regular visitors.

In Scotland, one well-known writers' retreat is Hawthornden Castle near Roslin, owned by Drue Heinz. Scottish writers who win the Robert Louis Stevenson Award earn two months near the Forest of Foutainebleau, France, where writers and artists from across Europe converge to work.

The Isle of Jura whisky distiller, meanwhile, is now offering a month-long fellowship for an established writer to travel to Scotland and write and live on the island at the distillery lodge at Craighouse.



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1

KaiPie,

03/02/2007 01:36:50

Is this a new trend. Dan Brown writing on floors , JK on marble busts.
Joe public writes his name on a bus shelter and it's vandalism but if you are a filthy rich author in a posh hotel it's publicity. Hopefully some over-zealous cleaner gets the turps out.

2

Scullion,

Canada 03/02/2007 02:20:53

Hmm, it does smack of a contrived bit of showmanship-though I do seem to recall that Camus, after finishing "L'Etranger", signed a half-eaten hotel crepe with the remnants of the only bottle of HP sauce ever seen in Paris.

3

www.scottwebb.co.uk,

03/02/2007 02:42:29

Comment@1 Kaipie, hehe...nice one dude....anyway..im off to find a single mother :)

4

The Ghost of Sir William Arrol,

The Forthy Bridge 03/02/2007 02:48:38

Doesn't writing the first of seven very successful books while on benefits constitute benefit fraud?

For those who don't get the joke, or have no sense of humour, I'm sure JKR will have paid back her debt to the state many times over!

5

Pete39,

Tassy 03/02/2007 06:32:37

That's it JK, you have done your bit. Let the b*gg*rs find their own entertainment from now on. You do not need more publicity, I would presume less would be better. If the management of the Balmoral is to rude to thank you for that bit of memorabalia, I am quite willing to take it off their hands and stick it onto ebay. Halfers with you of course. Anyway, thanks for the stories and enjoy the rest of your life.

6

Scaramouche,

03/02/2007 07:59:49

Oh I think the Balmoral will be offered far far more than the bust is worth ..... and Ms Rowling knew that when she did it. Maybe as a thanks for getting the peace and quiet she needed to finish the book.

Wish I could do it. I have had to THROW the family out regularly so I can write up MY weekly reports at home! I've paid out hundreds for pizzas and cinemas! Get's the job done though. Now what do I have in my sad wee garret that I can sign for posterity????

7

Ricardo,

03/02/2007 08:47:00

Ricardo was here

8

Dr Mike,

Edinburgh 03/02/2007 12:01:49

We are all glad to hear that the tortuous, bespectacled, story-telling will soon be at an end.

To think that in a hundred years time, our descendants will all be studying Harry Potter novels for A level English! Arggghhhhh!

9

alex paterson,

embra 03/02/2007 12:34:30

Thank god that this is the end of Potter,And she signs a bust in her hotel room,Wonder how much that will sell for.You try it and you will end up in court.

10

Georgi,

03/02/2007 15:29:30

hah! you lot are being ridiculous. I've had so much enjoyment reading the Harry Potter books, I couldn't care less what J.K signs. She's never tried to make a show of herself to the public, so let's just everybody freak out about it now!

I'd take the "bespectacled story-telling" over....is it possible, a lot of green eyed jealousy?

11

ElmoGal,

My Room 03/02/2007 16:56:08

YAY Harry potter's coming out soon!!!! Congrats on finally finishng the last book. JK never publicises herself - she's allowed to go mad once in a while. Enjoy the rest of your life JK! Hope it's not the last we hear of you.

12

Nix,

Wisconsin 03/02/2007 18:58:16

Personally... I would do the same thing in Jo's position. It's an EXTREMELY hard thing to let something go. Right now, I'm in highschool yet and I signed my locker with a fine sharpie because it's personal for me. You're changing you life drastically and you want to be able to look back on it and remember. Don't ask for a deeper explaination... I don't know. I just wanted a piece of me to be there forever. Now it is. (At least until it is painted over or the school is demolished!)

Thank you for everything, JO!

13

Quibbler,

Richmond, Virginia 03/02/2007 19:22:58

At first I was shocked at this vandalism of others' property. But the circumstances are a bit special: The end of a grand work... I think there was an irresistible mix of hysteria, relief, and mischief. Maybe even a small poke at her intrusive public. And I'm sure she'd not have marked up a Bernini or Michelangelo. The theme of rooms with clues or special purposes is important to her.

14

haruka21,

03/02/2007 20:22:14

I think she just wanted to record the moment she completed her book series. I'm surprised she didn't put the time (I would have).

15

Readerforever,

Kentucky, USA 03/02/2007 20:53:05

I have been an avid reader all my life. I have taught my children to enjoy reading as well. I have also introduced my husband to the joy of reading through the Harry Potter series. I hope to one day meet Jo. I think its wonderful that she marked the end of such a wonderful thing. She has never wanted to be in the public's eye. I don't think it was a publicity stunt, just a little relief and sadness at the end of such a big part of her life.

16

David Cavers,

Ontario, Canada 03/02/2007 21:53:31

#11 Georgi,
#12 ElmoGal,

I couldn't agree with you more. :-)

17

Oliver F,

UK 03/02/2007 23:16:23

#9, #10

While its true that I think JK and the harry potter series has seen far too much hysteria and that she is not as accomplished a writer as somein the genre, it is undoubted that she has inspired a generation of young people to read books and that is a good thing in this electronic age.

18

J. E. H.,

Japan 04/02/2007 00:32:08

I wish that some people would keep in mind that this might all be rubbish, that JK never signed a marble bust (fake signatures for sale on ebay ring any bells?) Until JK herself says that she did it I think everyone should not accept this as fact, but take it with a grain of salt.

19

slightlyfoxed,

Spinner's End 04/02/2007 06:32:45

I don't know. . . that signature looked quite authentic to me. (Have none of you even looked at the signature on your W.O.M.B.A.T.?!)

As for me, JKR walks on water.

20

Alina,

Sofia, Bulgaria 04/02/2007 14:05:44

I think the story about the marble bust has already been confirmed by JKR reps.

If the Hermes rumour is true, that is so awesome and so apt! Hermes is not just the name of Percy's owl, it is a concept that's quite central to the series, I think... what with the god's function as a psychopomp who leads the souls to and fro the Underworld (think of all those times Harry goes on a journey somewhere underground) and Mercury's role in alchemy... And JKR used the messenger god to deliver her message! :-)

I love the fact that the Balmoral hotel is at 1, PRINCES Street. Hee-hee.

I can't see why some people have a problem with JKR's writing on the bust. The completion of "Harry Potter" is a literary and publishing milestone, but also a huge milestone in her own life. I can't even begin to imagine how she must be feeling right now. It's the end of one unthinkably wild and emotional 17-year-long journey.

21

Lindsay D S,

Kentucky 04/02/2007 23:24:42

I love what she did! Sure, it's vandalism, but this is something that is huge to her and many of her fans. J.K. does well with keeping herself out of the spotlight. In a way I agree that it was a publicity stunt, but who cares! She wrote Harry Potter! Finding this out made me happy. I'm glad she made one really good lasting impression.


 

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