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Big bucks for Potter plot
13/12/2002 12:11 - (SA)
Audrey Woods
London - An American collector paid more than $45 000 on Thursday for a card full of clues to the plot of the long-awaited fifth Harry Potter book.
The unidentified buyer paid $45 314 for the card, handwritten by Potter author JK Rowling as a charity fund-raiser. The money will be used to buy more than 18 000 books for schools in Africa.
Whether the buyer chooses to keep the contents secret remains to be seen.
A Harry Potter website operated by the New York-based Leaky, Inc, had hoped to raise enough money to make the winning bid and possibly to post the 93 words on the internet for all to see.
The story of Harry Potter And The Order Of The Phoenix is a closely guarded secret, and Sotheby's auction house in London only revealed that the words "Ron ... broom ... sacked ... house-elf ... new ... teacher ... dies ... sorry" are among the 93 words on the card.
Harry Potter fans, who have waited nearly 2 1/2 years for book five, have grown increasingly curious about the fate of their hero as the author has declined to reveal a release date for The Order of the Phoenix.
The first Harry Potter book, published in 1997, was Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone - released in the United States as Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone. The second and third volumes followed over the next two years, and the fourth, the mammoth Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, appeared in July 2000.
Rowling produced the teaser at a Society Of Authors conference earlier this year when several writers were asked to submit items for auction to help benefit Book Aid International. The charity supports book distribution in 40 of the world's poorest countries.
"It's a wonderful Christmas present for readers in some of the world's poorest countries," Book Aid International director Sara Harrity.
The money from the sale will be used to buy 18 500 books for schools in Eritrea and elsewhere in Africa, Book Aid said.
"This is a really special gift for readers in Eritrea," said Gebrenegus Berhane of the Eritrean Ministry of Education.
"A good book can light up a child's world," he wrote. "It is vital that Eritrean children grow up loving books.
"The Eritrean nation needs to become a nation of readers," he wrote. "We must have literacy skills in order to participate in society, to gain employment and for our economy to grow." - Sapa-AP
- SAPA
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