BEIJING, Feb. 5 (Xinhuanet) -- What a bummer! If
you're an e-book fan and want to download "Harry Potter and the Deathly
Hallows," forget it.
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Women walk past a huge billboard of a Harry Potter movie. (AFP Photo) Photo Gallery>>> | Author J.K. Rowling has said no to the first six
Potter stories being released as e-books and has no plans to change that
policy for the seventh and final work, Neil Blair, a lawyer with Rowling's
literary agency, told The Associated Press on Sunday.
Rowling has cited two reasons over the years: concern
about online piracy (which has never been a major problem for the Potter books),
and the desire for readers to experience the books on paper. E-books, promoted
as the future of publishing during the dot-com craze of the late 1990s, remain a
tiny portion of the multibillion dollar industry.
The author herself writes in longhand, a preference
that led to a rather amusing delay in Potter VII last April.
"Why is it so difficult to buy paper in the middle of
town?" the author, a resident of Edinburgh, Scotland, lamented in a diary entry
posted at the time on her website.
"What is a writer who likes to write longhand
supposed to do when she hits her stride and then realizes, to her horror, that
she has covered every bit of blank paper in her bag? Forty-five minutes it took
me, this morning, to find somewhere that would sell me some normal, lined paper.
And there's a university here!" she wrote.
Rowling announced last week that "Deathly Hallows"
would come out July 21. The six previous books have sold more than 325 million
copies.
(Agencies)
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