wizard

December 2, 2005

J.K. Rowling, Pseudonym?


I know I said this wouldn't be a celebrity site, but I've got to blog about this. A Norwegian film director named Nina Grünfeld posits a fascinating theory: "J.K. Rowling" is a pseudonym for a gaggle of writers:

I think the secret behind JK Rowling is guarded more strongly than the entrance to Willy Wonka's chocolate factory," Grünfeld wrote. The truth, she believes, won't emerge until "the market for Harry Potter is saturated, until the actress behind JK Rowling gets tired of her role and not until the real authors behind the pseudonym feel an enormous need for recognition." (Source)

Grünfeld, like many of us, believes the rags-to-riches story is too good to be true. But stranger things have happened…

Others blogging: Sword of Gryffindor

The Leaky Cauldron


by @ 7:22 pm Filed under J.K. Rowling

Trusting Severus Snape


Our favorite "Hogwarts professor," John Granger, has posted an article by H.M. Ketcham titled, 'Good Snape' is not a 'Square Circle'. Ketcham writes:

My hope is to add just enough conjecture, not too wildly unsupported by the text, to the scraps and glimpses we have of Snape’s life to suggest some reasons why Professor Dumbledore persisted, and rightly so, in valuing and trusting him.

I'm firmly in the Snape-is-good camp and look forward to reading Ketcham's article, which I will comment on sometime this weekend. I will also post a belated review of the Goblet of Fire. In the meantime, read Ketcham's article and a new-to-me blog, Quoth the Maven.


by @ 5:11 pm Filed under FFC, Harry Potter

Disney Courts Christian 'Narnia' Fans


It should shock no one that movie studios are interested only in the bottom line when it comes to selling their wares. That Disney is pitching a movie based on a series of books with strong Christian allusions to a Christian audience shouldn't be making headlines. But alas, it is.

From the Associated Press:

While refusing to call it a religious movie, Disney is using the same company that promoted Mel Gibson's "The Passion of the Christ" to publicize "Narnia" through churches across the country. The goal is to create the perfect Christmas blockbuster, appealing to both secular and religious audiences…Rice said only 5 percent of the marketing budget for "Narnia," which opens Dec. 9, targeted faith-based groups. Still, there were eight showings for church groups nationwide, including one in November for about 700 pastors and church staffers at the Colorado Springs headquarters of the conservative Christian group Focus on the Family.

There are Christian allusions throughout, from spiteful brother Edmund (Judas) and his noble brother Peter, a fellow "son of Adam." The heroic lion Aslan, an obvious symbol of Jesus Christ, sacrifices his life to save Edmund and is resurrected the next day in plenty of time to defeat the White Witch and her evil minions.

In October I wrote about "Christian" elements in fiction, one of my favorite new subjects.

Just as "The Passion of the Christ" was well-received in churches across the country, I predict The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe will receive much more support and break box office records. Movie-going and viewing are part of American life, and I'm glad to see stronger spiritual themes emerging.

See related Barna study.

Narnia Resources:


by @ 4:04 pm Filed under Narnia
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe

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