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 the publisher 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 move to the New York Historical Society next autumn.
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, Defence 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 US versions of the books) – was a real French scribe who died in 1418 and was believed to have been an alchemist.
Mandrakes, which second-year students help plant in Chamber of Secrets, are real as well, 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.