Rowling Testifies Against 'Potter' Book
By LARRY NEUMEISTER, AP
Posted: 2008-04-14 18:05:40
NEW YORK (April 14) - J.K. Rowling testified before a packed courtroom
in a lawsuit to block publication of a Harry Potter lexicon,
telling a judge that the book amounts to a "wholesale theft" of
nearly 20 years of her hard work.
"We all know I've made enough money. That's absolutely not why
I'm here," Rowling told the judge in U.S. District Court.
Timothy A. Clary, AFP / Getty Images
Rowling on the Stand
J.K. Rowling's lawsuit against RDR Books will finally get its day in court, as the author will testify that their 'Harry Potter Lexicon' book would infringe on her intellectual property rights.
The British author sued Michigan-based RDR Books last year to
stop publication of Steven Vander Ark's "Harry Potter Lexicon,"
claiming copyright infringement. Vander Ark runs the popular Harry
Potter Lexicon Web site, and RDR wants to publish a print version
of the site and charge $24.95.
Rowling claims the book is nothing more than a rearrangement of
her own material and told the judge it copied so much of her work
that it amounted to plagiarism.
"I think it's atrocious. I think it's sloppy. I think there's
very little research," she testified Monday. "This book
constitutes wholesale theft of 17 years of my hard work."
She also said she has recently started work on her own
encyclopedia but does not expect to complete it for two to three
years because she wants to do it right.
RDR's lawyer, Anthony Falzone, has defended the lexicon as a
reference guide, calling it a legitimate effort "to organize and
discuss the complicated and very elaborate world of Harry Potter."
The small publisher is not contesting that the lexicon infringes
upon Rowling's copyright but argues that it is a fair use allowable
by law for reference books.
The nonjury trial will be decided by U.S. District Judge Robert
Patterson Jr., who must determine whether the use of the material
is legal because Vander Ark added his own interpretation,
creativity and analysis. The testimony and arguments could last
most of the week. Rowling will spend her breaks in the seclusion of
a jury room, away from fans of her wildly popular series.
The trial comes eight months after Rowling published her seventh
and final book in the series. The books have been published in 64
languages, sold more than 400 million copies and produced a film
franchise that has pulled in $4.5 billion at the worldwide box
office.
In sometimes emotional testimony, Rowling recalled starting work
on the first book in 1991 when she was 25 and so destitute that she
sometimes had to choose between purchasing typewriter ribbon and
food. She said the Harry Potter characters were a fantasy world to
which she could escape from the hard work of raising a child on
welfare as a single mother.
Rowling choked up when her lawyer, Dale Cendali, asked what
Harry Potter meant to her.
"I really don't want to cry," the mother of three said. Then
she added, "These characters continue to mean so much to me over a
long period of time. The closest you could come is to say, `How do
you feel about your children?' These books, they saved me."
Rowling also testified she had stopped work on a new novel
because the lawsuit has "decimated my creative work over the last
month."
Vander Ark, 50, has said he joined an adult online discussion
group devoted to the "Harry Potter" books in 1999 before
launching his own Web site as a hobby a year later. The Web site
attracts about 1.5 million page views per month and contributions
from people all over the world.
He said he initially declined proposals to convert the Web site
into an encyclopedia, in part because he believed until last August
that in book form, it would represent a copyright violation.
After Rowling released the final chapter in the "Harry Potter"
series last July, Vander Ark was contacted by an RDR Books
employee, who told him that publication of the lexicon would not
violate copyright law, he said. Still, to protect himself, Vander
Ark said he insisted that RDR Books include a clause in his
contract that the publisher would defend and pay any damages that
might result from claims against him.
He said it was decided that the lexicon would include sections
from the Lexicon Web site that give descriptions and commentary on
individual names, places, spells and creatures from Harry Potter
stories.
Rowling acknowledged she once bestowed an award on Vander Ark's
Web site because, she said, she wanted to encourage a very
enthusiastic fan.
But she said she "almost choked on my coffee" one morning when
she realized Vander Ark had warned others not to copy portions of
his Web site. She said she now has second thoughts about all the
encouragement she has given to online discussions and Web sites
devoted to her books.
"I never censored it or wanted to censor it," she said, adding
that if she loses the lawsuit, she will conclude she essentially
gave away her copyrights by encouraging the Web sites.
"Other authors will say, `I need to exercise more control. She
was an idiot. She let it all go,"' Rowling said.
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